An American Marriage: The Untold Story of Abraham Lincoln and Mary Todd by Michael Burlingame

An American Marriage: The Untold Story of Abraham Lincoln and Mary Todd by Michael Burlingame

Author:Michael Burlingame [Burlingame, Michael]
Language: eng
Format: epub
Tags: history, United States, 19th Century, Biography & Autobiography, Historical, General
ISBN: 9781643137353
Google: _PEDEAAAQBAJ
Publisher: Simon and Schuster
Published: 2021-06-01T23:36:05.252442+00:00


MRS. LINCOLN’S EMOTIONAL FRAGILITY

Herndon could have added that Lincoln placated his wife because he feared she was teetering on the verge a nervous breakdown. In 1862, after the death of their son Willie, he told her that he might have to have her committed to an insane asylum. Once in conversation with Phineas Gurley, pastor of the Washington church where the First Family worshipped, Lincoln indirectly alluded to his willingness to meet the First Lady’s unreasonable demands. Dr. Gurley had appealed on behalf of a parishioner seeking a full pardon for his adolescent son whose death sentence Lincoln had already reduced to a prison term. Therefore Dr. Gurley warned against bothering Lincoln with a further plea. The father “replied that he felt so himself but he feared” that his wife “would lose her mind if something were not done.” So he submitted his appeal to Lincoln, who responded angrily: “I saved the life of your son after he had been condemned to be shot; and now you come here so soon when you know I am overwhelmed with care and anxiety, asking for his pardon. You should have been content with what I have done. Go; and if you annoy me any more, I shall feel it to be my duty to consider whether I ought not to recall what I have already done.” A few days later, Lincoln apologized to the father and pardoned his son. To Dr. Gurley, the president explained that he was induced to change his mind “only by the statement of the father that he feared his wife would lose her mind if something were not done to relieve her.” Lincoln then smiled and said: “Ah, Doctor! these wives of ours have the inside track on us, don’t they?”

Lincoln also expressed anxiety about his wife’s psychological well-being in 1863. While urging Emilie Todd Helm to spend the summer with his family at the Soldiers’ Home, he explained: “you and Mary love each other—it is good for her to have you with her—I feel worried about Mary, her nerves have gone to pieces; she cannot hide from me that the strain she has been under has been too much for her mental as well as her physical health. What do you think?”

Mrs. Helm replied that her sister “seems very nervous and excitable and once or twice when I have come into the room suddenly the frightened look in her eyes has appalled me. She seems to fear that other sorrows may be added to those we already have to bear.”

In response, Lincoln pleaded: “Stay with her as long as you can.” But Mrs. Helm remained only a few days before returning to Kentucky.

When William P. Wood, superintendent of the Old Capitol Prison, informed the president that the First Lady was selling “trading permits, favors and government secrets,” Lincoln attributed her behavior to “partial insanity.”

Lincoln may well have worried about his wife’s mental health long before he became president. In 1844, while stumping for Henry Clay in



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