Grant and Lincoln's invitation
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10-21-2014, 06:46 PM
Post: #151
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RE: Grant and Lincoln's invitation
(10-21-2014 08:53 AM)loetar44 Wrote:I agree 100% on the "food for my brain" - love the comparison! And curiousity is I believe what makes us move the most!(10-21-2014 07:39 AM)Eva Elisabeth Wrote:(10-21-2014 04:06 AM)loetar44 Wrote:That's cool, Kees (love challenging questions) - I guess that reveals the precision of the maths teacher...totally off the topic (sorry), but growing up at the Dutch border, I had a Dutch physics and maths teacher, and I'll never forget how he worded the theory of relativity: if you go somewhere faster than the light you arrive before you left...(10-20-2014 05:35 PM)HerbS Wrote: Loetar44,You certainly know how to"push the envelope"!I always want to find the edge ... the end of what is known. |
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10-21-2014, 10:45 PM
Post: #152
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RE: Grant and Lincoln's invitation
Mary Todd Lincoln: Her Life and Letters, includes a letter that Mary Lincoln wrote to Schuyler Colfax (Speaker of the House) dated April 13, 1865 inviting him to the theater that evening. The footnote to the letter states that, "It has been generally assumed that the performance to which Mrs. Lincoln had invited Speaker Colfax and General Grant was the fateful one at Ford's Theatre, yet the date on the above letter (and the presumed date on the one which follows) is April 13, and Mrs. Lincoln wrote 'this evening.' There is no way of accounting for this discrepancy except Mrs. Lincoln's habit of misdating letters. Neither Grant nor Colfax accepted the invitation: Colfax was about to leave for a trip West, and Mrs. Grant, it has been said, did not, after City Point, choose to spend an evening with Mrs. Lincoln."
The first letter to Schuyler Colfax dated April 13, 1865: "It appears to have been arranged, (without Mr. Lincoln's knowledge, that you were to accompany us, to the theatre this evening) that Gen. Grant & staff, were to occupy the box usually assigned to us, therefore I shall have to waive, all ceremony & request you to accompany us some other evening soon..." The second letter to Schuyler Colfax: "Since sending you my note, I have found that Gen Grant's staff will not be seated with him, therefore, with much pleasure, I will send the carriage at 7 o'clock..." Mary Todd Lincoln: Her Life and Letters, Justin G. Turner, Linda Levitt Turner Does this mean that Grant would not have had security with him had he gone to Ford's that night? |
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10-22-2014, 04:13 AM
Post: #153
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RE: Grant and Lincoln's invitation
I don't know, Linda, (it appears he wouldn't, though, if Mary's note is accurate) but this brought another question into my mind. Is there any record of the conversation between Mary and Grant as they rode together in the carriage on the night of the 13th (for the grand illumination)? Did Mary talk to Grant about going to the theater the next night? If she did then Ulysses and Julia might have talked about it when they met back in their room at the Willard later that night. Is it possible the Grants were working on "excuses" as early as the night of April 13th?
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10-22-2014, 08:41 AM
Post: #154
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RE: Grant and Lincoln's invitation
(10-22-2014 04:13 AM)RJNorton Wrote: I don't know, Linda, (it sure appears he wouldn't, though, if Mary's note is accurate) but this brought another question into my mind. Is there any record of the conversation between Mary and Grant as they rode together in the carriage on the night of the 13th (for the grand illumination)? Did Mary talk to Grant about going to the theater the next night? If she did then Ulysses and Julia might have talked about it when they met back in their room at the Willard later that night. Is it possible the Grants were working on "excuses" as early as the night of April 13th? I haven't seen any record of the conversation between Mary and Grant but you bring up a good point about when it was decided that they go to the theater Friday night, Roger. Mary wrote it was arranged that Grant & staff would occupy the box that evening. Since she mentions that Lincoln didn't know that Colfax was already invited, perhaps it was Lincoln who issued the invitation to Grant when he saw him Thursday night. Here's a letter that Mary wrote to Grant on April 13. "General Grant - "Mr. Lincoln is indisposed with quite a severe headache, yet would be very much pleased to see you at the house, this evening about 8 o'clock & I want you to drive around with us to see the illumination!" |
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10-22-2014, 08:53 AM
Post: #155
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RE: Grant and Lincoln's invitation
Thank you, Linda. I am beginning to think it's at least possible the Grants made up their minds on this invitation earlier than books say. I am thinking Mary and Grant probably discussed the Ford's Theatre show during their carriage ride at some point. Then Grant returned to the Willard Hotel after the ride. Julia returned to the Willard from the Stantons' reception. I am wondering if they just might have had a little discussion regarding the invitation the night of the 13th (before they retired for the night).
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10-22-2014, 10:00 AM
(This post was last modified: 10-22-2014 10:43 AM by L Verge.)
Post: #156
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RE: Grant and Lincoln's invitation
If the report is true that Mary Lincoln was ready to depart the carriage during the Illumination ride because Gen Grant was getting too much attention, maybe it was the General who made the decision to avoid any further engagements with the First Lady.
While looking up Adam Badeau, Gen. Grant's aide and journalist (and friend of the Booths), I found his reminiscences on the ordeals with Mrs. Lincoln at City Point in March of 1865: http://www.physical-lincoln.com/wiki/Mar...oint,_1865 |
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11-02-2014, 01:35 PM
Post: #157
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RE: Grant and Lincoln's invitation
Just returning from a short vacation I saw that there are no further comments on this topic. Is all said already?
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11-04-2014, 07:45 PM
Post: #158
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RE: Grant and Lincoln's invitation
(11-02-2014 01:35 PM)loetar44 Wrote: Just returning from a short vacation I saw that there are no further comments on this topic. Is all said already?You didn't miss much Kees with the exception of us had some technical problems. One day, I pulled up the symposium and it said "Welcome back Roger Norton"! I was going to take the opportunity to make some comments as Roger such as "Lincoln deserved it!", but I didn't want to risk running afoul with the "man behind the curtain". |
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11-25-2014, 03:40 PM
Post: #159
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RE: Grant and Lincoln's invitation
William S. McFeely writes in “Grant, A Biography” on page 211:
“Robert Lincoln was already at City Point. His father had asked Grant if his son , who had just graduated from Harvard, might not have a chance to see a bit of the war, and Robert was serving on Grant’s staff. He brought the word to the Grant’s cabin at City Point that his parents and brother had arrived on the River Queen, which stood off the point in the James River. The Grants went at once to call on the Lincolns, and as the men went off together, Julia Grant feeling ill at ease, was left alone in small quarters with Mary Lincoln. Mrs. Lincoln had gotten up to greet her, and now Julia, as unobtrusively as possible, sat down on the small sofa on which Mrs. Lincoln had been sitting. Only when she looked up and saw the disapproval on Mrs. Lincoln’s face did she realize, too late, that she should not have seated herself while the president’s wife was standing. She started up with a apology, but was beckoned back with belated graciousness by Mrs. Lincoln, who sat down on the sofa as well. The two women were jammed together in discomfort and silence. After an eternal second or two, Julia rose and “quietly took a chair near her.” Julia and Mary were indeed no friends. |
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11-25-2014, 06:14 PM
Post: #160
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RE: Grant and Lincoln's invitation
Loetar44,your account of MTL+JG speaks volumes about thier relationship!
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12-08-2016, 08:18 PM
Post: #161
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RE: Grant and Lincoln's invitation
(10-09-2014 02:41 PM)loetar44 Wrote: General Horace Porter described in “Campaigning with Grant” (1897) how John Wilkes Booth observed Julia Grant in the dining room of the Willard Hotel, how Booth shadowed Grant , how an assassin (???) was foiled by the locked door of Grant’s railcar, how Grant received the message of the assassination of Lincoln and how Grant’s journey was interrupted : Kees: The Battle of the Wilderness was fought from May 5 to May 7, 1864, and was no Union victory. This was the first time Grant went head-to-head with Lee and he lost. He took 17,500 casualties to Lee's 11,500. The Battle of Spotsylvania Court House which followed, however (May 7 through May 19) was a Union victory, though a Pyrrhic one. John |
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