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  1. 21 de nov. de 2012 · Thomas “Tad” Lincoln was just 8 years old when he arrived in Washington, D.C., to live at the White House after his father was sworn into office in March 1861. The youngest of four sons born ...

  2. 13 de nov. de 2009 · Tad Lincoln died from illness at age 18 in 1871. The Lincoln’s second son, Eddie, died shortly before his fourth birthday, in 1850. Only the Lincoln’s first child, Robert, lived to an advanced ...

  3. 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.”

  4. modifier - modifier le code - modifier Wikidata Thomas « Tad » Lincoln (4 avril 1853 – 15 juillet 1871) était le quatrième et le plus jeune fils du président Abraham Lincoln et de Mary Todd Lincoln . Biographie [modifier | modifier le code] 1853 - 1865 [modifier | modifier le code] Du vivant de son père, Tad était impulsif, indiscipliné et n'allait pas à l'école. John Hay , alors ...

  5. Created c. 1864. This photograph of President Abraham Lincoln's youngest son, Thomas "Tad" Lincoln, was taken around 1864. In the portrait photograph, Tad is wearing a Union officer's uniform given to him as a courtesy commission by President Lincoln's Secretary of War, Edwin M. Stanton. Stanton served as Secretary of War through the Civil War ...

  6. 6 de mar. de 2022 · The Lincoln and Tad portrait was one of seven photographs made by Berger on February 9. Getting out from under Brady’s shadow proved a difficult, if not impossible, task for Berger. When his portrait of Lincoln and Tad appeared on the cover of the May 5, 1865, edition of Harper’s Weekly, Brady received the attribution.

  7. 1 de jul. de 2022 · In 1865, the men of Company “K” of the 150th Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry Regiment, who had been the official Army Presidential guards since their regiment arrived in Washington in 1862, gave President Lincoln’s son Tad (Thomas) a unique gift. A photo album with ninety-seven posed studio photographs of each member off the company. Obviously, the soldiers, known as “Bucktails” for ...