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“If I were two-faced, would I be wearing this one?” — A. Lincoln

16 Sunday Jun 2013

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This priceless GEICO commercial tests the limits of Honest Abe: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RPX2cQP8uoI

Those not skinning can hold a leg

15 Saturday Jun 2013

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Quotes from President Lincoln:

Be sure you put your feet in the right place, then stand firm.

Those who look for the bad in people will surely find it.

Those not skinning can hold a leg.

How many legs does a dog have if you call the tail a leg? Four. Calling a tail a leg doesn’t make it a leg.

Whenever I hear anyone arguing for slavery, I feel a strong impulse to see it tried on him personally.

Source: Abraham Lincoln: A History, Volume 8, by John Hay and John Nicolay and Goodreads.com

Death room described

14 Friday Jun 2013

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deathbed

Death room on Saturday, April 15, 1865

In 1908, author Harriet Eunice Hawley described the room where President Lincoln died at 7:22 a.m. on April 15, 1865:

“A feeling of reverence and awe steals over one as he steps across the threshold of this room. The sadness of those last moments seem almost to linger here still.”

The death room is now part of the Ford’s Theatre museum complex, run by the National Park Service. It is on the second floor of Petersen House, located directly across Tenth Street from Ford’s Theatre. Free tickets available at the Ford’s Theatre box office allow visitors admission to Ford’s Theatre, a park ranger presentation inside the theatre, the museum in the basement of Ford’s, Petersen House and the Center for Education and Leadership next to Petersen House.

Among the many artifacts at Ford’s are John Wilkes Booth’s palm-sized Deringer pistol, the clothes the president wore to Ford’s, and John Wilkes Booth’s riding boots.  The artifacts at the Center for Education and Leadership include John Wilkes Booth’s key ring and one of the guns he took on the run.

 

Travelling before first-class air

13 Thursday Jun 2013

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The Pullman sleeper car or “palace car,” the plush train car that carried the rich and famous after the Civil War, was just an idea in the back of George Pullman’s head until 1864.

The first palace car was completed then, designed after boats that traveled the Erie Canal when Pullman was a boy.

In 1867 Pullman introduced a sleeper car with an attached kitchen and dining car. The food and service rivaled the best restaurants of the day. In 1868, he offered the Delmonico, a railroad car with food prepared by chefs from Delmonico’s Restaurant in New York.

Source: Great Hoteliers: Pioneers of the Hotel Industry by Stanley Turkel

 

In-law problem

12 Wednesday Jun 2013

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Confederate General J.E.B. Stuart was pitted against a member of his own family this week in 1862.

Gen. Robert E. Lee assigned Stuart to check the Army of the Potomac’s right flank. Instead, the dashing young general circled the entire Yankee force. He did glean information that helped Lee.

Stuart was pursued by Union cavalry commanded by his own father-in-law Philip St. George Cooke.

Sad return to America

11 Tuesday Jun 2013

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maj. rathbone

Maj. Henry R. Rathbone

Henry R. Rathbone, the man who couldn’t hold on to John Wilkes Booth after the assassin shot the president, gradually grew despondent over his failure. Friends said he relived the theater scene in his mind repeatedly.

At Christmastime 1883, while living in Germany, Rathbone fatally shot and stabbed Clara Harris Rathbone, his wife and also his step-sister.

He then attempted suicide but was unsuccessful. He lived out his days in a luxury asylum in Hanover, Germany, where he was attended by servants and was allowed to drive a car through the surrounding countryside.

Six weeks after the murder, the couple’s three young children boarded the White Star steamship Britannic for the voyage to New York, where their mother’s siblings were waiting to take them in.

An uncle, Hamilton Harris of Albany, N.Y.,  met Henry Riggs, Gerald and Pauline at the dock.

Henry Riggs, who was called “Harry,” grew devoted to President Lincoln.

rathbone

Rep. Henry Riggs Rathbone

Lean and tall, he developed a stoop in his carriage similar to the president’s, and those who knew him said it pleased him to hear people remark on the resemblance.

He was elected to Congress in 1922 and pushed for the preservation of Petersen House and Ford’s Theatre.

Source: Washington Post, Proquest Historical Newspapers

Frank Lloyd Wright designed half of Chicago’s defunct Lincoln Center

10 Monday Jun 2013

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Abraham Lincoln Center

Architect Frank Lloyd Wright’s uncle was a Chicago minister with thick white hair and a long white beard reminiscent of a Biblical figure. The Rev. Jenkin Lloyd Jones’ devotion to President Lincoln may have led to Wright’s first architectural commission.

Jones, a Civil War veteran and a Unitarian-turned-nondenominational minister, decided to build an Abraham Lincoln Center just down East Oakwood Boulevard from his All Souls Church.

His nephew, still in his 30s, was the original architect for the $200,000, seven-story building. After he and his uncle quarreled over the design. Wright eventually resigned. He wrote on the blueprints: “Building completed over protest of the architect.” The building opened in 1905.

Some think the plain brick building, which now houses Northeastern Illinois University’s Center for City Studies, shows Wright’s design imprint.

Wright’s son said the center should be included in lists of his father’s works, and said the design should be dated 1888, making it his father’s first architectural work.

Source: True Lincoln by Geoffrey Johnson, Chicago Magazine, December 2004 and Citywide Services Chicago Real Estate Appraisers

 

 

Liked him, not his politics

09 Sunday Jun 2013

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Dr. Robert K. Stone, Lincoln’s personal physician, was considered the dean of Washington, D.C.’s medical community.

The pro-slavery physician was wholly unsympathetic to the Union cause, although he did ask occasional favors of the president for his wife’s family in Richmond.

While he disliked Lincoln’s politics, Stone felt the opposite about the man himself.

“Lincoln is the purest-hearted man with whom I ever came in contact,” he said.

Cities grieve Mr. Lincoln’s death

08 Saturday Jun 2013

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On Monday, April 17, newspapers reported citizen reaction to President Lincoln’s death:

From Council Bluffs, Iowa: “Old men are weeping on the streets for the death of Abraham Lincoln.”

From Henry, Ill.: “The deepest feeling of indignation at the unprovoked and cowardly deed was everywhere manifested.”

From Des Moines, Iowa: “The Des Moines artillery continued the firing of minute guns throughout the day.”

From Indianapolis, Ind.: “The feelings of citizens were stirred to their innermost depths. Old men shed tears, and there was, among all, a deep-seated feeling of indignation, which boded no good to sympathizers with the rebellion.”

Source: Chicago Tribune.

 

Booth seemed normal enough

06 Thursday Jun 2013

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Lt. John Bolton was assigned to Ford’s Theatre to check officers’ passes on the evening of April 14. When he finished work, Bolton took a seat to enjoy the play.

He had seen John Wilkes Booth pass in and out several times while he was standing at the door examining passes, but he noticed nothing peculiar about the actor’s face or his actions. At least not until he heard a shot during the play’s third act.

Bolton saw a man lower himself by his left hand from the plush cushioned railing in front of the presidential box, but he thought it was part of the play. He said everyone sat still when Booth shouted, “Sic semper tyrannis!” and crossed the stage.

He said the audience’s first inkling that something was awry came when Bill Ferguson, who ran a saloon next door to the theater, rose from his orchestra seat and pointed to the presidential box shouting, “My God. The president’s shot!”

Actually Ferguson was sitting in the front row of the dress circle. He secured a seat early in the afternoon after one of the Ford’s tipped him off that the president would be attending that night’s performance. Ferguson wanted to see the president more than he wanted to see the play, so he booked a seat on the same level as the presidential box and brought his binoculars.

Source: We Saw Lincoln Shot: One Hundred Eyewitness Accounts by Timothy S. Good

 

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