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  1. Tad Lincoln could now slip out of the story, since his father was striding alone through Richmond toward martyrdom, glowing already with a special, solitary purity. The reason Lincoln’s “triumphal entry into Richmond” carried no hint of pretension, according to the Unitarian preacher Henry Clay Badger, was that like Jesus, he had grown “more humble as he was more exalted.”

  2. Thomas Lincoln — ‘Tad ‘ — and my brother Halsey Cook Taft — ‘Hally’—were dark-eyed, lively, mischievous lads of eight. The resemblance of the two pairs of boys was often remarked.

  3. 31 de ene. de 2012 · What did rambunctious little boys living in the White House do for fun during the 1860s? Well, Tad and Willie Lincoln liked to cause mischief! Watch as Senio...

    • 2 min
    • 9.2K
    • IndianaStateMuseum
  4. Thomas "Tad" Lincoln (1853–1871), the fourth son of the sixteenth president, had a speech problem. This came to my attention shortly after assuming the presidency of Lincoln College. In an effort to find out more about the man for whom the college is named, I visited the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum in Springfield, Illinois.

  5. Thomas "Tad" Lincoln III was the fourth and youngest son of Abraham and Mary Todd Lincoln. The nickname "Tad" was given to him by his father, who observed that he had a large head and was "as wiggly as a tadpole" when he was a baby. Tad Lincoln was known to be impulsive and unrestrained, and he did not attend school during his father's lifetime.

  6. William Wallace Lincoln. Washington D. C., Estados Unidos. William Wallace "Willie" Lincoln (21 de diciembre de 1850 – 20 de febrero de 1862) fue el tercer hijo de Abraham Lincoln y Mary Todd Lincoln. Fue llamado así en honor al cuñado de Mary, el Dr. William Wallace.

  7. Robert Todd Lincoln murió mientras dormía en Hildene, su hogar en Vermont el 26 de julio de 1926. Tenía 82 años. La causa de su muerte dada por su médico personal fue "hemorragia cerebral inducida por arteriosclerosis". Fue sepultado en el Cementerio Nacional de Arlington, en un sarcófago diseñado por el escultor James Earle Fraser.