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Mary Todd Lincoln

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Mary Todd Lincoln
<tr valign="top"><th style="text-align:right;">Died</th> <td>July 16, 1882
Springfield, Illinois, USA</td></tr><tr valign="top"><th style="text-align:right;">Occupation</th> <td>First Lady of the United States</td></tr><tr valign="top"><th style="text-align:right;">Spouse</th> <td>Abraham Lincoln</td></tr>
Mary Todd Lincoln
Born December 13, 1818
Lexington, Kentucky, USA

Mary Ann Todd Lincoln (December 13, 1818July 16, 1882) was the First Lady of the United States when her husband, Abraham Lincoln, served as the sixteenth President, from 1861 until 1865.

Born in Lexington, Kentucky, she was the daughter of Robert Smith Todd and Eliza Parker, prominent residents of the city. They were slaveholders, as were most of her relatives. At the age of twenty, Mary Todd moved to Illinois where her sister Elizabeth was living. Elizabeth introduced Mary to the young lawyer who would later become her husband; she was also courted by Stephen A. Douglas. Abraham and Mary Lincoln were married on November 4, 1842.

Mary Todd Lincoln

Their children were:

  1. Robert Todd Lincoln : Springfield, Illinois August 1, 1843July 26, 1926 in Manchester, Vermont
  2. Edward (Eddie) Baker Lincoln : Springfield March 10, 1846February 1 1850 in Springfield
  3. William (Willie) Wallace Lincoln : Springfield December 21, 1850February 20, 1862 in Washington, D.C.
  4. Thomas (Tad) Lincoln : Springfield April 4, 1853July 16, 1871 in Chicago, Illinois.
The assassination of Abraham Lincoln. From left to right: Henry Rathbone, Clara Harris, Mary Todd Lincoln, Abraham Lincoln and John Wilkes Booth.

The Lincolns deeply loved one another, but it was a troubled marriage at times. Of their four sons, only Robert and Tad survived into adulthood, and only Robert outlived his mother.

Mary Lincoln was well-educated and interested in public affairs, and shared her husband's fierce ambition. However, she was high-strung and touchy, and sometimes acted irrationally. She was almost instantly unpopular upon her arrival in the capital.

Newspapers at the time criticized her for using taxpayers' money to refurnish the White House (which had become quite worn and shabby) as well as to fund her personal shopping sprees. During the Civil War, there were persistent rumors that she was a Confederate sympathizer, and even a confederate spy (several relatives served in the Confederate forces). Popular legend states that President Lincoln, upon hearing the rumors, personally vouched for her loyalty to the United States in a surprise appearance before the Committee on the Conduct of the War. Her visits with Union soldiers in the numerous hospitals in and around Washington went largely unnoticed by her contemporaries. <ref>Doris Kearns Goodwin, Team of Rivals: The Political Genius of Abraham Lincoln, Simon & Schuster, 2005 (ISBN 0-684-82490-6).</ref>

After the President's assassination in April 1865, her reputation was further besmirched as former Lincoln aides and Cabinet members openly attacked her for being a spendthrift, difficult and arrogant (Lincoln's wartimes aides John Nicolay and John Hay privately referred to her as "the hell-cat").

In 1868, a former seamstress and confidante, Elizabeth Keckley, published Behind the Scenes, (or, Thirty years a slave, and four years in the White House). When the book proved controversial, Robert Todd Lincoln had it suppressed.

The deaths of her husband and her sons, Willie and Thomas (Tad), in time led to an overpowering sense of grief and the gradual onset of depression.

Mary Lincoln's "spend-thrift" ways and eccentric behavior concerned her son Robert. To gain control of his mother's finances, Robert had Mary Lincoln committed to an insane asylum in Batavia, Illinois in 1875, but she was free to move about the grounds and was released three months later. She never forgave her eldest son for what she regarded as his betrayal.

Mary Todd Lincoln spent the next fours years abroad taking up residence in Pau, France. She spent much of this time travelling in Europe.

Lincoln's late years were marked by declining health. In 1879, she suffered spinal cord injuries in a fall from a step ladder. On her return to the US aboard an ocean liner in 1880, actress Sarah Bernhardt prevented Lincoln from falling down a staircase and sustaining further injury. Lincoln also suffered from cataracts that severely affected her eyesight. This may have contributed to her falls.

Mary Todd Lincoln died at the Springfield, Illinois home of her sister Elizabeth on July 16, 1882, aged 63. She was interred within the Lincoln Tomb in Oak Ridge Cemetery in Springfield.

Of Robert's children, Jessie Harlan Lincoln Beckwith (1875 - 1948) had two children (Mary Lincoln Beckwith ["Peggy," 1898 - 1975] and Robert ("Bud") Todd Lincoln Beckwith (1904 - 1985), neither of whom had children of their own. Robert's other daughter, Mary Todd Lincoln ("Mamie") (1869 - 1938) married Charles Bradley Isham in 1891. They had one son, Lincoln Isham (1892 - 1971). Lincoln Isham married Leahalma Correa in 1919, but died without children.

The last person known to be of direct Lincoln lineage, Robert's grandson "Bud" Beckwith died in 1985. <ref>Mark E. Neely, Jr., The Abraham Lincoln Encyclopedia, McGraw-Hill Book Co., 1982 (ISBN 0-07-046145-7).</ref>

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Preceded by:
Harriet Lane
First Lady of the United States
1861 – 1865
Succeeded by:
Eliza McCardle Johnson


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