The Lincolns in the White House: Four Years That Shattered a Family

Front Cover
Macmillan, 2005 - Biography & Autobiography - 290 pages
From the day of Abraham Lincoln's inauguration, a nation divided by savage conflict confronted the new president. But what many don't know was that within the White House's walls, the Lincoln's family would soon find itself suffering turmoil mirroring that of the nation he led.

Savagely criticized for her extravagance by the American public and widely distrusted because of her southern roots, first lady Mary Lincoln's increasing instability would deeply strain her marriage and eventually end in her mental collapse. The couple was devastated when eleven-year-old Willie died in the White House of typhoid fever. Tad, the youngest son, remained the family joy despite his physical impairments. Though their son Robert's success at Harvard made his parents proud, his relationship with them was troubled and would result in a painful estrangement, one which would eventually permanently separate him from his mother. The president's assassination brutally crushed Mary's always-fragile spirits. After leaving the White House and following Tad's early death, the former first lady retreated into increasing eccentricity and seclusion until her death in 1882. A moving and poignant portrait of the family life of America's greatest president.

From inside the book

Contents

TWO Settling In
31
THREE Calamity in War Calamity at Home
74
FOUR Death in the White House
109
FIVE Shadows Everywhere
136
SIX Victories
171
SEVEN An Unfinished Work
212
EPILOGUE The Flying Dutchman
254
NOTES
267
BIBLIOGRAPHY
273
Copyright

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About the author (2005)

Jerrold Packard is the author of the best-selling "Victoria's Daughters," and most recently "American Nightmare." Mr. Packard lives in Vermont.

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