Thank you, Roger, good wishes of any kind are always most appreciated prizes
(08-24-2015 09:10 AM)RJNorton Wrote: [ -> ]Excellent, Eva! That is correct. Apparently she slept on one side of the bed leaving space for her husband, and she asked visitors if they could hear his voice when they were in her room.
You win very best wishes for good late-summer weather in Germany!
YIKES...I know about her saving her husband's "spot" for him but I never heard about Mary actually asking visitors if they could hear old Abe?! Roger, please tell me where you read that...I want to read about it in more detail. Poor Mary!
Way to go Eva, you are unbelievably good at this stuff!
(08-27-2015 06:43 PM)LincolnToddFan Wrote: [ -> ]YIKES...I know about her saving her husband's "spot" for him but I never heard about Mary actually asking visitors if they could hear old Abe?! Roger, please tell me where you read that...
Hi Toia. Do you have
The Insanity File: The Case of Mary Todd Lincoln by Mark Neely and R. Gerald McMurtry? It's at the bottom of p. 122.
It's also on p.130 in Jason Emerson's "Madness of ML".
Okay...got it. I have read both books but must have forgotten that, poor Mary!
Thanks Roger and Eva!
Who wrote this:
"In the evening I was at Lincoln’s for supper. His lady had decked herself out very prettily and already knows very well how to wave a fan."
A very smart guess, Roger, but it was not Henry Villard.
Another excellent guess, but he didn't say this either.
Wisconsin politician Carl Schurz, who, I believe, seconded Seward's nomination for the Republican party candidate for president in 1860. Or he may have drawn the Peanuts comic strip. He did something, that's for sure.
--Jim
Another outstanding guess, Roger, but kudos to Jim, Carl Schurz is correct! He also wrote: "She chats quite nicely and will be able to adapt herself to the White House without difficulty."
Jim, you win the fan Mary waved at Ford's on April 14. As soon as you succeed in waving it gracefully, please deck yourself out likewise prettily and post a video!
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(10-18-2015 12:02 PM)Eva Elisabeth Wrote: [ -> ]Jim, you win the fan Mary waved at Ford's on April 14.
Wow! This is a wonderful present, but I'll re-gift that to someone who would treasure it more. I'm not a big "fan" of Mary Todd Lincoln's!
--Jim
(10-18-2015 02:29 PM)Jim Page Wrote: [ -> ] (10-18-2015 12:02 PM)Eva Elisabeth Wrote: [ -> ]Jim, you win the fan Mary waved at Ford's on April 14.
Wow! This is a wonderful present, but I'll re-gift that to someone who would treasure it more. I'm not a big "fan" of Mary Todd Lincoln's!
--Jim
That must have been a very popular style of fan in the 1860s. I have my great-grandmother's fan of the same period, which is identical except for being originally a burgundy color. It may have been her wedding fan in November of 1860.