Mary Todd Lincoln
Infobox_Officeholder
name = Mary Todd Lincoln
|thumb|Mary Lincoln
caption = Mary Todd Lincoln
imagesize = 200px
birth_date = birth date|1818|12|13
birth_place =Lexington,
death_date = death date and age|1882|07|16|1818|12|13
death_place =
occupation =
order=16th
term_start =
term_end =
predecessor =
successor =
religion=
spouse =
children =
relations =
Mary Ann Todd Lincoln (
Life Before the White House
Her father married Elizabeth "Betsy" Humphreys Todd in 1826. [ [http://www.firstladies.org/biographies/firstladies.aspx?biography=17 Mary Todd Biography] ] Mary Todd had a difficult relationship with her stepmother. Beginning in 1832, Mary Todd's home was what is now known as the
At the age of twenty, in 1839, Mary Todd left the family home and moved to Springfield, Illinois, where her sister Elizabeth was already living. [ [http://www.lkwdpl.org/WIHOHIO/linc-mar.htm Mary Todd Lincoln biography ] ] Although the flirtatious and intelligent Mary Todd was courted by the rising young lawyer and politician
Abraham Lincoln pursued his increasingly successful career as a Springfield lawyer, and Mary Todd supervised their growing household. Their home together from 1844 until 1861 survives in Springfield, and is now the
Their children, all born in Springfield, were:
#
#Edward (Eddie) Baker Lincoln : (1846 – 1850)
#William (Willie) Wallace Lincoln : (1850 – 1862)
#Thomas (Tad) Lincoln : (1853 – 1871).
Of these four sons, only Robert and Tad survived into adulthood, and only Robert outlived his mother.
Mary Todd Lincoln was deeply in love with her husband, and sometimes resented his absence from their home as he practiced law and campaigned for political office. During the 1850s, however, Mrs. Lincoln staunchly supported her husband as he faced the growing crisis caused by
Lincoln's election caused eleven Southern states to secede from the Union. Anti-Union sentiment was very strong in Mrs. Lincoln's home state of Kentucky, one of the four slave states that did not secede. Many upper-class Kentuckians, members of the social stratum into which Mrs. Lincoln had been born, supported the Southern cause. Mary Lincoln was remembered as a hero for her bravery to help the prisoners and other countries.
First Lady
Mary Lincoln was well educated and interested in public affairs, and shared her husband's fierce ambition. However, her Southern heritage created obstacles for her that became apparent almost immediately after she took on her new duties as First Lady in March 1861. Some facets of Mrs. Lincoln's character did not help her in facing these challenges. She was temperamentally high-strung and touchy, and sometimes acted irrationally. (She may have suffered from bipolar disorder.) She was almost instantly unpopular upon her arrival in the capital.
Mr. Lincoln's predecessor,
As the Civil War continued, persistent rumors began to circulate against Mary Todd Lincoln's personal loyalty and integrity. One rumor claimed that Mrs. Lincoln was a Confederate sympathizer, and even a Confederate spy (many of her relatives served in the Confederate forces, and two of her stepbrothers and a brother-in-law died fighting for the South). In reality, Mary Todd was a fervent and tireless supporter of the Union cause. Her visits with Union soldiers in the numerous hospitals in and around Washington went largely unnoticed by her enemies and contemporaries. [Doris Kearns Goodwin, "Team of Rivals: The Political Genius of Abraham Lincoln", Simon & Schuster, 2005 (ISBN 0-684-82490-6).]
Mr. Lincoln staunchly supported his wife against the vicious attacks disseminated by their enemies. One uncorroborated legend states that President Lincoln, upon hearing the rumors, personally vouched for her loyalty to the
During the Civil War, loyal Americans of Southern heritage, such as Mary Todd Lincoln, faced the dilemma of how to reconcile their cradle education in
Mrs. Lincoln's personal trials continued and worsened in February 1862 with the death of their 11-year-old son Willie. When the boy died of typhoid fever within the walls of the White House, the psychologically battered First Lady almost gave way entirely to her grief. She paid mediums and spiritualists to try to contact the dead boy, only to lose another small fortune the Lincolns could not afford. [ [http://home.att.net/~rjnorton/Lincoln44.html Mary Todd & Abraham Lincoln Research Site] ]
Some Lincoln aides and Cabinet members privately considered Mrs. Lincoln to be a liability to the administration. She was ruthlessly criticized, especially behind her back, as a free-spending, overemotional First Lady who tried to climb out of the constraints that were viewed as essential elements of the roles of women in public life. For example,
Assassination survivor and later life
In April 1865, as the Civil War came to an end, Mrs. Lincoln hoped to renew her happiness as the First Lady of a nation at peace. However, on
As a widow, Mrs. Lincoln returned to Illinois. In 1868, Mrs. Lincoln's former confidante,
In an act approved July 14, 1870, the United States Congress granted Mrs. Lincoln a life pension for being the widow of President Lincoln, in the amount of $3,000 a year. [ [http://memory.loc.gov/cgi-bin/ampage?collId=llsl&fileName=016/llsl016.db&recNum=688 Acts of 1870, Chapter 277] ]
For Mary Todd Lincoln, the death of her son Thomas (Tad), in July
Mrs. Lincoln spent the next four years abroad taking up residence in
Death
During the early 1880s, Mary Todd Lincoln lived, housebound, in the Springfield, Illinois residence of her sister Elizabeth Edwards. She died there on
Of the Lincoln children, only Robert lived to marry and produce children.
Trivia
*Her great uncle John Todd was killed in the last battle of the
*Her sister Elizabeth Todd was the daughter-in-law of Illinois Governor
*Her half sister Emilie Todd married CS General
*A cousin was Kentucky Congressman/US General
*Another cousin, William L. Todd, [ [http://members.aol.com/beaufait/biography/geneology.htm Mary Todd Genealogy] See Generation 5, Child "C" Grandchild 3 for William L (WLT), Generation 5 Child "G" = Generation 6 (grand) Child D for Mary (MATL) Shorthand Common Ancestor 5 WLT = 5C3, MATL= 5G4 = 6D = 7. 5C & 5G are brothers, which makes their children first cousins. The Revolutionary William is generation 3 child "I" The MATL/WLT line follows 3B to 4D to 5' ] created the original
* Cello-punk band
* In
* Lincoln was the subject of one of
ee also
*
*
*
*
References
External links
* [http://www.physical-lincoln.com/wiki/Mary_Todd_Lincoln_photographs Photographs of Mary Todd Lincoln]
* [http://www.cr.nps.gov/nr/travel/lexington/mtl.htm Mary Todd Lincoln House (National Park Service)]
* [http://www.mtlhouse.org/ Mary Todd Lincoln House (Official Home Page)]
* [http://home.att.net/~rjnorton/Lincoln15.html Mary Todd Lincoln Research Site]
* [http://www.sonofthesouth.net/leefoundation/civil-war/1862/november/mary-todd-lincoln.htm Mary Todd Lincoln] in 1862 Harper's Weekly Newspaper
* [http://home.att.net/~rjnorton/Lincoln76.html Especially for students - An Overview of Mary Todd Lincoln's Life]
* [http://www.mlwh.org/inside.asp?ID=15&subjectID=2 Mr. Lincoln's White House: Mary Todd Lincoln]
* [http://www.chicagohistory.org/wetwithblood/index.htm "Wet with Blood," Research Project on Mary Todd Lincoln's Cloak, Chicago History Museum (formerly Chicago Historical Society)]
* [http://www.familytales.org/results.php?tla=mtl Collection of Mary Todd Lincoln Letters]