Lincoln Discussion Symposium
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Lincoln Immortelles - L Verge - 06-09-2016 11:43 AM

If you are not familiar with the term "immortelles," it refers to popular 19th- and early-20th century items of remembrance. I have been trekking the information highway trying to find a particular form of one for display at Surratt House. It is possible that, upon the death of Mr. Surratt in 1862, his family saved flowers from a funeral display (if he had any), had them preserved in wax, arranged, and placed under a glass dome for display. We have a center hall table that begs to exhibit one!

Immortelles came in other forms also. The standard ones were floral or evergreens, shaped into crosses or wreaths and placed on graves or mausoleum entrances. But they could also take the form of written text and tributes to the deceased. In my journey through the cloud, I found this mention of immortelles related to Abraham Lincoln:

In the United States, resignation [acceptance of death] was made much more difficult by the devastation of the Civil War and the assassination of U.S. President Abraham Lincoln (1809-65). In both countries [England being the other], immortelles, in the form of tribute poems, prose pieces, and even illustrations, were often written, compiled, and composed for fallen soldiers and national leaders. These were print counterparts to the wreaths of immortelles laid at soldiers’ tombs. A May 6, 1865 illustration in Punch entitled “Britannia Sympathises with Columbia,” for instance, shows a sorrowful Britannia laying a wreath of immortelles on the corpse of Lincoln, with the figures of Columbia and an unshackled, freed slave weeping beside his body. Nearly two decades after the assassination of Lincoln, a memorial album was compiled by Osborn Hamiline Oldroyd that solicited contributions from prominent Americans and Europeans regarding the deceased president. The Lincoln Memorial; Album Immortelles (1882) interwove these solicitations and Lincoln’s own speeches with the explicit purpose of preserving the president’s life and political influence for future generations. The album is a “who’s who” of nineteenth-century American and, to a lesser extent, European life. Tributes—from members of parliament and former U.S. governors to authors and poets such as Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, and farmers and inventors such as Thomas Edison—all express enduring admiration for the fallen statesman.

The text, dedicated to the American people, performs the necessary genealogical function of aligning Lincoln with great leaders of the past as well. Samuel Wells Williams, an important figure in U.S.-Chinese relations in the mid nineteenth century, wrote for the album that Lincoln’s “name is hereafter identified with the cause of Emancipation, while his patriotism, integrity, and other virtues, and his untimely death, render him not unworthy of mention with William of Orange and Washington.” And he suggested that the increased study of the president’s life would lead to an increased appreciation and admiration for his “character of mercy and firmness”. By linking the assassinated president to William III and George Washington, Wells Williams inserts the traditionally nationalist formula of war (or revolution) and reconciliation into the memorial process.


RE: Lincoln Immortelles - Eva Elisabeth - 06-10-2016 06:30 AM

(06-09-2016 11:43 AM)L Verge Wrote:  If you are not familiar with the term "immortelles," it refers to popular 19th- and early-20th century items of remembrance.
Would such as preserved, stored brains count as that, too? Or the many clipped locks or bloodstains (in whatever fabric)?


RE: Lincoln Immortelles - L Verge - 06-10-2016 10:11 AM

Not sure how a family's parlor décor could handle a jar of pickled brains under a glass dome...

As for locks of hair, remember hair jewelry and hair wreaths have often been fashioned around locks of beloved dead ones. George Washington left notice to make hair rings (I think) to distribute among several of his contemporaries.

Bloodstained swatches of fabric might be a bit weird used as an immortelle also. The idea was to honor and have a visual memento of the deceased where visitors as well as family could view them. The written tributes mentioned above were usually placed into a book form that could be read if someone wanted to, but they mainly were there for show.

Speaking of the hair jewelry, I had a visitor to the museum on Wednesday tell me that he went to college with the great-great-great grandson of Gen. Hartranft. First, he was surprised that I knew who Hartranft was and that he had gone on to be governor of Pennsylvania. He did tell me something that I did not know about the General -- he was evidently a hopeless alcoholic.

Anyhow, this gentleman had visited with the Hartranft descendants and had been shown a hair brooch that supposedly had been given to Gen. Hartranft by Mary Surratt as a thank-you for the kindness that he showed to her and Anna during the "unpleasantness." Sure would love to know what happened to that brooch!


RE: Lincoln Immortelles - RJNorton - 06-10-2016 12:43 PM

(06-10-2016 10:11 AM)L Verge Wrote:  George Washington left notice to make hair rings (I think) to distribute among several of his contemporaries.

For some reason the thing I remember the most about George Washington's wishes were these instructions:

"Have me decently buried; and do not let my body be put into the vault in less than three days after I am dead."


RE: Lincoln Immortelles - L Verge - 06-10-2016 03:01 PM

(06-10-2016 12:43 PM)RJNorton Wrote:  
(06-10-2016 10:11 AM)L Verge Wrote:  George Washington left notice to make hair rings (I think) to distribute among several of his contemporaries.

For some reason the thing I remember the most about George Washington's wishes were these instructions:

"Have me decently buried; and do not let my body be put into the vault in less than three days after I am dead."

Just to make sure that he was really dead, I assume. Remember a previous posting here about Gen. Lee's mother's premature burial?


RE: Lincoln Immortelles - RJNorton - 06-10-2016 04:30 PM

(06-10-2016 03:01 PM)L Verge Wrote:  Just to make sure that he was really dead, I assume.

Yes.

Another one was Mary Lincoln. She desired "that my body, shall remain for two days (48) hours, without the lid of the coffin being screwed down."


RE: Lincoln Immortelles - Eva Elisabeth - 06-10-2016 04:55 PM

I wonder how often this happened (someone who being buried alive)?

Thanks, Laurie - while I do get the idea of "immortelles" it seems the "souvenirs" (e.g. brains in a jar, locks of hair) partly overlap (locks matching both?)?


RE: Lincoln Immortelles - Gene C - 06-10-2016 06:11 PM

(06-10-2016 04:55 PM)Eva Elisabeth Wrote:  I wonder how often this happened (someone who being buried alive)?

Don't know, but they have made more than one movie about it.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D7ps8uu_q-w


RE: Lincoln Immortelles - L Verge - 06-10-2016 08:02 PM

http://mentalfloss.com/uk/history/30797/8-collections-featuring-hair-as-art-and-souvenir

Interesting link on collections of hair - note the one on John Reznikof, with whom several of us are familiar.