Lincoln Discussion Symposium
Who is this lady? - Printable Version

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RE: Who is this lady? - RJNorton - 01-29-2014 12:16 PM

Hint #2: She remarried after her first husband died. She is buried next to her first husband.


RE: Who is this lady? - RJNorton - 01-29-2014 02:12 PM

Hint #3: Another strange one that goes with Hint #1. After she touched his back Abraham Lincoln touched her foot or ankle.


RE: Who is this lady? - Eva Elisabeth - 01-29-2014 06:31 PM

I've racked my brain all day long over this. Somehow it seems to ring a bell - but not loud enough. Well, although I'm sure this can't be right: Rebecca Pomroy?


RE: Who is this lady? - RJNorton - 01-29-2014 06:57 PM

Another good try, Eva. But it's not her.

Hint #4: The incident described in the hints has no exact date (at least as far as I know), but it probably happened sometime between 1820-1825.


RE: Who is this lady? - Houmes - 01-29-2014 07:39 PM

(01-29-2014 06:57 PM)RJNorton Wrote:  Another good try, Eva. But it's not her.

Hint #4: The incident described in the hints has no exact date (at least as far as I know), but it probably happened sometime between 1820-1825.

Sarah Bush Johnston Lincoln's daughter Matilda. She looks like her mother.


RE: Who is this lady? - RJNorton - 01-29-2014 07:50 PM

Splendid, Blaine. You are correct! I have read a variety of versions of this incident cited in the hints about the back and ankle, and here is just one.

One day Abraham's stepsister, Matilda Johnston, playfully tried to knee young Abe in the back just as he was swinging an ax to cut down a tree. The joke backfired because it caused Abraham to fall backwards, and the ax cut a deep gash in Matilda's ankle. Young Abe quickly cut his shirt into strips and tied them tight around Matilda's bleeding ankle. She was scared and crying. Abe did not question her; rather he realized it had been a childish prank. He picked up the young girl and carried her on his shoulder all the way from the woods to the Lincolns' cabin. Matilda wanted to tell her mother that she was cut by Abe's ax, but not exactly how it happened, as she was embarrassed. Abe advised her to tell the "whole truth" about how she got injured.

Growing up, Abraham and Matilda were very close. In 1865 Matilda wrote Herndon that the two "grew up together loving one another as brother and sister."


RE: Who is this lady? - RJNorton - 02-17-2014 09:42 AM

Who is this lady?

[Image: femaleperson23.jpg]



RE: Who is this lady? - L Verge - 02-17-2014 11:31 AM

Clara Barton?


RE: Who is this lady? - RJNorton - 02-17-2014 01:26 PM

Very good, Laurie. This isn't the photo of her that I am generally used to seeing in books, so I thought it might be a challenge. You win best wishes for a wonderful Presidents' Day.


RE: Who is this lady? - L Verge - 02-17-2014 07:12 PM

I had to think twice also. Anyone visiting the Washington, D.C. area should make an effort to tour her unusual home in Glen Echo, just outside the city in Montgomery County, Maryland. Our conference tour into D.C. on March 14 will include her downtown office where she assisted soldiers and families after the Civil War. A great lady, who got the support she needed for the American Red Cross after announcing to Senator Conger that she had tended to his badly wounded brother, Everton Conger (as in Garretts' Farm Patrol), during the war.


RE: Who is this lady? - Gene C - 02-24-2014 09:21 PM

This lady was 60 years old when her book about Abraham Lincoln was first published. Previously, she had been a public school teacher. Who is she?


RE: Who is this lady? - Eva Elisabeth - 02-25-2014 02:18 AM

Ruth Painter Randall?


RE: Who is this lady? - Gene C - 02-25-2014 11:15 AM

Good guess, but it's not her.

Hint #1. Her last book was published when she was 96


RE: Who is this lady? - RJNorton - 02-25-2014 11:28 AM

Dorothy Kunhardt?


RE: Who is this lady? - Gene C - 02-25-2014 06:26 PM

Not her either.

Hint #2
Her work on Abraham Lincoln was first printed in 1932.
Her books have been translated in 14 different languages