Abe Lincoln

Trombonist Abe Lincoln existed within a tiny coterie of jazz musicians who were named after U.S. presidents. The other two members of this unofficial executive branch were New Orleans trumpeter Thomas Jefferson and Georgia-born swing/R&B trombonist George Washington. Lincoln was very active as a hot jazz player in New York City during the 1920s, spent years as an anonymous session man in Hollywood, and enjoyed a colorful resurgence of activity on the West Coast during the Dixieland revival of the 1950s. Abram Lincoln was brought into the world on March 29, 1907, in Lancaster, PA, not far from the Dorsey Brothers' hometown of Shenandoah. His father, John Lincoln, a cornetist in the Iroquois and Lancaster City brass bands, started Abe on that instrument when the boy was only five years old. Subjected to uncommonly strict musical training, little Abe began deviating so artfully from the melodic lines of polkas and marches that it soon became clear that he was a born improviser. He earned his first fee by publicly executing a solo on a peck horn, and switched to the slip horn shortly afterwards.