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  1. Mary Harlan Lincoln (née Harlan; September 25, 1846 – March 31, 1937) was the daughter of United States Senator James Harlan and the wife of Robert Todd Lincoln. Life and family. The eldest child of James Harlan and Ann Eliza Peck, Mary Eunice Harlan was born in Iowa City, Iowa on September 25, 1846.

  2. Mary Harlan Lincoln (née Harlan; September 25, 1846 – March 31, 1937) was the daughter of United States Senator James Harlan and the wife of Robert Todd Lincoln. The eldest child of James Harlan and Ann Eliza Peck, Mary Eunice Harlan was born in Iowa City, Iowa on September 25, 1846.

    • Female
    • Robert Todd Lincoln
  3. Sister of William Aaron Harlan. Wife of Robert Todd Lincoln — married 24 Sep 1868 in Washington DC. Descendants. Mother of Mary Todd (Lincoln) Isham , Abraham Lincoln II and Jessie Harlan (Lincoln) Randolph. Died 31 Mar 1937 in Manchester, Bennington, Vermont, USA.

    • Female
    • September 25, 1846
    • Robert Todd Lincoln
    • March 31, 1937
  4. Mary Eunice Harlan fue una mujer inteligente y educada que desempeñó un papel importante en la sociedad y en la política de su tiempo. Su fama, sin embargo, está vinculada a su matrimonio con uno de los hijos del presidente más queridos de los Estados Unidos.

  5. 21 de may. de 2023 · Her name was Mary Eunice Harlan. She was the daughter of Iowa’s U.S. Sen. James Harlan and his wife, Ann Harlan. The senator was a close friend and political ally of President Abraham Lincoln. Lincoln chose him to be his secretary of the Interior during his second term, but was assassinated before Harlan could begin serving in the ...

  6. Jessie's brother, Abraham Lincoln II, died on March 5, 1890, in London at the age of 16, and three years later, the family returned to America, ultimately to Mary Eunice Harlan's mother's residence in Mount Pleasant, Iowa. Jessie and her sister were piano students in the summer session of Iowa Wesleyan in 1886.

  7. Their first child, Mary Eunice, arrived in 1846. An influential Methodist, Harlan worked as an educator, merchant, surveyor, and lawyer before beginning a national political career. Once a member of the Whig Party, he joined the newly formed Republican Party in 1854 and represented Iowa in the Senate intermittently from 1855 to 1873.