Your personal choice of "most tragic" character in the assassination story
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08-08-2012, 07:26 AM
Post: #42
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RE: Your personal choice of "most tragic" character in the assassination story
(07-24-2012 01:52 PM)Linda Anderson Wrote: I agree with Fanny and Frances Seward but in a way I think Tad Lincoln had it harder than Fanny because Tad lost his beloved father, his home and became the caretaker of his already emotionally disturbed mother, Mary, when he was only twelve years old. "In December 1869 Mary wrote to her friend, Sally B. Orne, 'Taddie is like some old woman with regard to his care of me...' On Saturday morning, July 15, 1871, Tad passed away at the age of 18. The cause of death was most likely tuberculosis." The quotes are from Roger Norton's Abraham Lincoln Research Site. Fanny did lose her mother but the Seward family was very close-knit and they tried to help her as much as they could. I have not hard that Reverend Powell drank. Here is what I found out: "Powell was a tough leader for the Orlando church. He had several members 'turned out' for not attending services, according to historian E.H. Gore. 'The church became tired of his strict discipline, and in October 1872 they called Rev. A.C. Tindall as pastor' Gore writes in History of Orlando Baptists: First Baptist Church. Tindall was 'a drinking preacher,' Gore writes. He was replaced after a year." From - "Hanged Son Didn't Dent Pastor's Faith", Florida Sentinel, December 12, 1996 "The Past is a foreign country...they do things differently there" - L. P. Hartley |
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