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Mary Todd Lincoln

As a girlhood companion remembered her, Mary Todd was vivacious and
impulsive, with an interesting personality--but "she now and then could
not restrain a witty, sarcastic speech that cut deeper than she intended...."
A young lawyer summed her up in 1840: "the very creature of excitement."
All of these attributes marked her life, bringing her both happiness and
tragedy.

Daughter of Eliza Parker and Robert Smith Todd, pioneer settlers of
Kentucky, Mary lost her mother before the age of seven. Her father
remarried; and Mary remembered her childhood as "desolate" although she
belonged to the aristocracy of Lexington, with high-spirited social life
and a sound private education.

Just 5 feet 2 inches at maturity, Mary had clear blue eyes, long lashes,
light-brown hair with glints of bronze, and a lovely complexion. She danced
gracefully, she loved finery, and her crisp intelligence polished the
wiles of a Southern coquette.

Nearly 21, she went to Springfield, Illinois, to live with her sister
Mrs. Ninian Edwards. Here she met Abraham Lincoln--in his own words,
"a poor nobody then." Three years later, after a stormy courtship and
broken engagement, they were married. Though opposites in background and
temperament, they were united by an enduring love--by Mary's confidence in
her husband's ability and his gentle consideration of her excitable ways.

Their years in Springfield brought hard work, a family of boys, and
reduced circumstances to the pleasure-loving girl who had never felt
responsibility before. Lincoln's single term in Congress, for 1847-1849,
gave Mary and the boys a winter in Washington, but scant opportunity for
social life. Finally her unwavering faith in her husband won ample
justification with his election as President in 1860.

Though her position fulfilled her high social ambitions, Mrs. Lincoln's
years in the White House mingled misery with triumph. An orgy of spending
stirred resentful comment. While the Civil War dragged on, Southerners
scorned her as a traitor to her birth, and citizens loyal to the Union
suspected her of treason. When she entertained, critics accused her of
unpatriotic extravagance. When, utterly distraught, she curtailed her
entertaining after her son Willie's death in 1862, they accused her of
shirking her social duties.

Yet Lincoln, watching her put her guests at ease during a White House
reception, could say happily: "My wife is as handsome as when she was a
girl, and I...fell in love with her; and what is more, I have never fallen out."

Her husband's assassination in 1865 shattered Mary Todd Lincoln.
The next 17 years held nothing but sorrow. With her son "Tad" she traveled
abroad in search of health, tortured by distorted ideas of her financial
situation. After Tad died in 1871, she slipped into a world of illusion
where poverty and murder pursued her.
A misunderstood and tragic figure, she passed away in 1882 at her
sister's home in Springfield--the same house from which she had walked as
the bride of Abraham Lincoln, 40 years before.
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