Lincoln's embalmment
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06-01-2016, 10:13 AM
Post: #99
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RE: Lincoln's embalmment
(05-30-2016 10:00 PM)ReignetteC Wrote: [quote='L Verge' pid='42436' dateline='1420499254'] I've always been leery of Lincoln blood relics, as there's frequently a shady provenance, an explanation more legend then fact, and/or a lack of scientific analysis. Lincoln's black frock coat (a suit or body coat with a tail) and other clothing were obtained by the National Park Service in 1968 from the descendants of Alphonso Donn, a doorkeeper at the White House. It was a gift to him from Mary Todd Lincoln. In a letter dated 1977 Harold Peterson (former Chief Curator of the National Park Service) reported how he helped clean and treat the President's clothing, including the Brooks Brothers overcoat. His letter mentioned blood stains only on the collar, but did not specify whether it was the frock coat or the overcoat. In a 2007 Washington Post article there was mention that both coats had blood stains, but not where the stains were located. There was mention that the president's pants also had blood stains, on both knees. He was slumped over when Dr. Leale arrived in the box, and was immediately placed on the on the floor to be examined and treated. Newton Ferree, a discharged soldier, went into the theatre box after Lincoln had been carried over to the Petersen house and found Mr. Lincoln's shirt collar "in a pool of blood." I have only ever seen one assessment of a blood relic--by the then-named Armed Forces Institute of Pathology--after assessing a blood-stained sheet from Lincoln's deathbed. Blood could have come from Lincoln's head wound, but it also could have been from Major Rathbone's knife wound. The gloves from President Lincoln's pockets certainly have distinctive stains, but unless they fell out of his coat at same point I would question : Is it blood? If so, which victim did it come from? |
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