An Accumulator, But No Lincoln Yet

by James D. Bales

This is one of my Dad's many short articles (of which he left hundreds!) that was written in 1994 less than a year before his death. Published in the Gospel Light after his death, my sister Methel sent me a copy with the handwritten note: "I think we should write our own version of this article!" 

In lieu of that, I thought I'd post it here and add some pictures to illustrate... 

We live in a world in which far too many people think that by changing the label they change reality.  Some folks call me a clutterer par excellence. At seventy-nine it seems that my cluttering nature (my second nature) is set in concrete.  So it is easier to change the label (although I am confident it will not deceive my wife) to an accumulator but not yet an Abraham Lincoln.  To understand this one has to understand something about Lincoln's office. 

File Cabinets & Stack Trays in the Back Office (9KB)"Mrs. Lincoln seldom went to the office; but when she did, she was shocked. She had reason to be:  the place had no order, no system things were piled about everywhere. Lincoln tied up one bundle of papers and labeled it thus: 'When you can't find it anywhere else, look in here.' 

"As Speed said, Lincoln's habits were 'regularly irregular'. 

"On one wall loomed a huge black stain, marking the place where one law student had hurled an inkstand at another one's head - and missed.

Stacks of Papers in the Side Office (10KB)"The office was seldom swept and almost never scrubbed. Some garden seeds that were lying on top of the bookcase had started to sprout and grow there, in the dust and dirt." (Dale Carnegie, Lincoln the Unknown, Forest Hills, N.Y.; Forest Hills Publishing Co., 1932, p.80)

I have books all over the house.  Mary's mother said that if she married J.D. she would sit on books, eat on books and sleep on books. I sometimes reshuffle chaos. The way I locate something I have mislaid is to cease looking for it and look for something else. Often I then find it. 

I have a box labeled "File Soon: 1966."  Today is November 19, 1994. I think I know what room this box is in but I may be mistaken. I have many filing cabinets full of materials, but for years I have had no office help and I put some materials in different stack trays of which I have many. In at least one case, there are 17 trays in one stack. As far as I know no seeds have sprouted anywhere in any of my offices.  Papa's Office area in the Front Room... As he left it... (12KB) Lincoln sometimes had some of his law papers in his hat which he wore to the court house when a trial was in process. If I ever become Lincolnized more than I am now, I don't think I shall "wear" documents in my hat since the only had I have is a straw hat I bought this summer in case I was in the sun for a long time at a flea market. I don't think the total time I've worn it amounts to 45 minutes. 


Stacked to the Ceiling In the Back Office (11KB)

This is the same aisle of the back office before and after about a week of sorting through papers, clippings and files.  In this back office alone I cleared out over 200 stack trays. All of these files have been  taken by the University of Arkansas. 

After about 40 hours of sorting and cleaning... (12KB)

Photos were taken around the house in the three office areas after J.D. Bales death.



Papers, papers and more papers (6KB)
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Last Updated July 9, 1999 by Jonathan Bales