Mary Todd Lincoln

@Former First Lady of the United States, Timeline and Childhood

Mary Todd Lincoln was the wife of America’s 16th president, Abraham Lincoln

Dec 13, 1818

KentuckyDepressionAmericanMiscellaneousFirst LadiesFamily MembersSagittarius Celebrities
Biography

Personal Details

  • Birthday: December 13, 1818
  • Died on: July 16, 1882
  • Nationality: American
  • Famous: Former First Lady of the United States, Miscellaneous, First Ladies, Family Members
  • City/State: Kentucky
  • Spouses: Abraham Lincoln
  • Siblings: Alexander Todd, Ann Todd Smith, David H. Todd, Elizabeth Edwards, Elodie Todd Dawson, Emilie Todd Helm, Frances Jane Todd Wallace, George Rogers Clark Todd, Katherine Todd Herr, Levi O. Todd, Margaret Todd Kellogg, Martha Todd White, Robert P. Todd, Robert S. Todd, Samuel Briggs Todd

Mary Todd Lincoln born at

Lexington, Kentucky

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Birth Place

Mary Todd was a social person in her youth and was popular among the gentry of Springfield. She was outspoken in her views and could debate on any contemporary subject.

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Personal Life

She married Abraham Lincoln, a fellow Whig, on November 4, 1842, in Springfield, Illinois, when she was 23 years old.

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Personal Life

They had four sons of whom only Robert Todd Lincoln outlived her. Thomas Lincoln died at the age of 18 due to pneumonia, while Edward Baker Lincoln and William Wallace Lincoln died of tuberculosis and typhoid respectively before adulthood.

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Personal Life

Mary Todd was born Mary Ann Todd on December 13, 1818, in Lexington, Kentucky, US to Robert Smith Todd and Elizabeth Todd. Her father was a well to do banker and politician who could afford to bring up his children in luxury. She was the fourth of seven children of her parents. She was of Irish, Scottish and English ancestry.

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Childhood & Early Life

Her mother died in childbirth, when Mary was six years old and her father remarried two years later. He had nine children from his second marriage. Mary did not get on well with her stepmother. Her elder sister, Elizabeth, stepped in to fill in the void left by her mother. Though her father was not very involved in bringing up his children, he ensured they were given the best possible education.

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Childhood & Early Life

She was sent to Madame Mantelle’s finishing School at an early age. She studied French and learnt dance, drama, music, and social etiquette. She excelled in academics, which was quite uncommon for girls in those days. She also had a good grasp of politics and was a supporter of the Whig Party.

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Childhood & Early Life

In October 1839, she moved to Springfield, Illinois, to live with her sister Elizabeth, who was married to the son of a former governor. She was courted by a young lawyer named Stephen A. Douglas, who supported the Democratic Party. However, she ultimately chose to marry Abraham Lincoln even though her parents did not approve of the marriage because Lincoln came from a relatively poor background and was nine years older than her.

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Childhood & Early Life

Abraham Lincoln and Stephen A. Douglas became political rivals. Though Douglas won the seat representing Illinois, Lincoln became a successful lawyer and became famous for his views on slavery. During his years as a lawyer, Mary devoted her time running the house in Springfield and raising up the children.

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Life As The First Lady

When her husband became the 16th President of America and moved to the White House, she supported her husband and the Republican Party in their efforts to save the Union. Though she was a ‘Westerner,’ she made an effort to blend with the ‘Eastern’ culture of Washington D.C. as the First Lady. Her task was all the more difficult because her relatives, including her half brothers, were fighting for the Confederacy.

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Life As The First Lady

She had trouble dealing with politics in the White House. However, she remained loyal to her husband’s policies. She refurbished the White House, and came under criticism for overspending, but ultimately gained her husband’s approval.

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Life As The First Lady

She visited the sick and wounded in hospitals and distributed fruits and flowers to cheer them up. She also wrote letters personally to the relatives of soldiers, who were either killed or wounded in battles.

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Life As The First Lady

She hosted several social functions in the White House to maintain the traditions of the establishment and looked forward to a more pleasant stay at the White House when the Civil War ended. However, fate had thought otherwise.

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Life As The First Lady

After her husband’s death she moved to Illinois and lived in Chicago with her children. She was granted an annual pension of $ 3,000 by the United States Congress, which had no past precedence. Her former dressmaker and close confidante, Elizabeth Keckley, published a book titled ‘Behind the Scenes, or, Thirty Years a Slave and Four Years in the White House’ that gives insight into the personal life of Mary Todd Lincoln. The book has been criticised for breach of trust but went on to become a subject for many films and television serials.

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Later Years

Despite sufficient money in her name and a regular pension, she always harboured a fear of poverty that made her behave irrationally. She went to the extent of attempting suicide due to which she was ultimately confined to a private asylum in Batavia, Illinois.

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Later Years

After three months of being confined at the asylum, she managed to get permission to live with her sister, Elizabeth, in Springfield with the help of lawyer James B Bradwell, who could assure the jury that she was not a danger to society.

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Later Years

She was subsequently declared competent enough to manage her own financial affairs that brought about a distance between her and her only surviving son.

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Later Years

She travelled to Europe and lived in France during the later part of her life. Her health deteriorated during her final years and she had several falls due to weak eyesight that added to her problems.

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Later Years