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Mar 14, 2020 9 tweets 2 min read Read on X
On April 29, 1865, Mary Lincoln received correspondence from Victoria, Queen of the United Kingdom. The letter came weeks after the assassination of President Lincoln at Ford’s Theatre, when Mary suddenly became a widow and single mother. 1/9

Image Credit: Library of Congress Image
Queen Victoria’s letter was an unexpected condolence, as the two had never met nor corresponded. 2/9
“Though a stranger to you,” she wrote, “I cannot remain silent when so terrible a calamity has fallen upon you and your country, and must personally express my deep and heartfelt sympathy with you under the shocking circumstance of your present, dreadful misfortune.” 3/9
Though urged by her advisors to write to the newly widowed Mrs. Lincoln, the Queen’s impetus for writing to the First Lady was personal in many ways. 4/9
Victoria had lost her beloved husband, Prince Albert, only four years earlier in 1861, and her profound grief became part of her identity. As such, the sympathy Queen Victoria felt for the grieving American first lady must have been deep and genuine. 5/9
She went on to write Mary Lincoln, “No one can better appreciate than I can, who am myself utterly broken hearted by the loss of my own beloved husband, who was the light of my life—my stay—my all.” The letter’s envelope was bordered in black, as was mourning custom. 6/9
Later that summer, Mary Lincoln responded to the Queen with gratitude, emphasizing: “I am deeply grateful for its expressions of tender sympathy, coming as they do, from a heart which, from its own sorrow, can appreciate the intense grief I now endure.” 7/9
Both Queen Victoria and Mary Lincoln would spend the rest of their lives mourning the loss of their beloved husbands. Though they would never meet in person, their shared trials made them kindred spirits. #WomensHistoryMonth 8/9
Learn more about Death in the White House in this episode of our podcast, The #1600Sessions 9/9: whitehousehistory.org/1600-sessions/…

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More from @WhiteHouseHstry

Dec 19, 2024
Meet Abby Gunn Baker – the woman responsible for the creation of the White House China Collection. In 1901, Baker was tasked with turning public opinion toward preservation by Colonel Theodore A. Bingham after he discovered previous presidential State Services had been discarded.

📷: White House Historical AssociationImage
To combat the poor preservation of the State Services, Colonel Bingham asked Baker to write a scholarly article on the subject, which led her to spend four months studying the remaining presidential china in the White House.
By 1903, Abby Baker’s first article on the preservation of the services was published in Munsey’s Magazine. First Lady Edith Roosevelt (pictured) took great interest in Baker’s article and formed the White House china collection.

🖼️: White House Historical Association/White House CollectionImage
Read 6 tweets
Dec 18, 2024
First Lady Mamie Eisenhower’s iconic hairdo was the work of renowned salon owner Elizabeth Arden. Though Mrs. Eisenhower sported the hairstyle since the 1920s, it was perfected at Arden’s Paris salon while she and General Dwight Eisenhower lived abroad during the 1940s. Image
Image
When Eisenhower won the 1952 presidential election, Arden offered to dispatch a hairdresser to Washington to help the new first lady style her “precious, much discussed bangs.” Mrs. Eisenhower graciously accepted the offer. Image
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In order to preserve the first lady’s signature look, Arden suggested that one of her stylists make a structural diagram to give any hairdresser a guide to recreating Mrs. Eisenhower’s look. It worked: the first lady wore bangs for the rest of her life. Image
Read 4 tweets
Oct 18, 2024
Since 1817, President James Monroe's gilded bronze and mirrored plateau has impressed White House visitors.

Image: White House Historical Association Image
After the British burned the White House in 1814, President Monroe purchased Parisian furniture to refurbish the scorched Executive Mansion. Among the newly acquired furniture was the gilded centerpiece, made by the Parisian firm Denière et Matelin.

Image: White House Collection/WHHAImage
Described as "mat gilt with garlands of fruit and vines," Monroe's plateau featured 16 figures presenting wreaths and pedestals. It is accompanied by three baskets, a pair of urns, and stands, which remain today.

Image: White House Historical Association Image
Read 10 tweets
Jun 10, 2024
One of First Lady Edith Roosevelt’s White House legacies was the introduction of garden parties (pictured). Before becoming first lady, she held extravagant garden parties at the Roosevelt’s family home in Oyster Bay, New York.

📷: @SagamoreHillNHS Image
@SagamoreHillNHS Mrs. Roosevelt’s White House garden parties gained such traction that local papers announced that her inaugural party as “the first time in the history of the White House that the mistress of the mansion has given this kind of function.”

🖼️: White House Collection/WHHA Image
@SagamoreHillNHS With hundreds of guests attending her inaugural party, she wore an elegant white taffeta and organdy dress, trimmed with ruffles and lace. Pictured is Mrs. Roosevelt’s 1905 garden party on the South Lawn of the White House. 

📷: @librarycongress Image
Read 8 tweets
Mar 12, 2021
It’s #FirstLadyFriday, and today we’re highlighting the life of First Lady Jane Pierce, born in New Hampshire on this day in 1806.

Image: Library of Congress

1/7
Jane Appleton married Franklin Pierce in 1834, though she was uninterested in politics and the spotlight that came with it.

Image: White House Collection/White House Historical Association

2/7
Their marriage was marked by tragedy, as they had lost two young children before Pierce’s election to the presidency in 1852. Unfortunately, death followed them to the White House.

3/7
Read 7 tweets
Feb 27, 2021
Salvadore Catalano, a Sicilian-born sailor, became an American naval hero as a critical player in a secret mission during the First Barbary War.

A native of Sicily, his composure and knowledge of Tripoli Harbor were essential to the mission.

Image: Library of Congress

1/7
In one of the most courageous actions in American naval history, Catalano piloted the Intrepid for Lieutenant Stephen Decatur’s destruction of the captured USS Philadelphia in Tripoli Harbor in 1804.

Image: U.S. Naval Academy Museum Collection/U.S. Navy Photograph

2/7
The mission to destroy the USS Philadelphia was perilous. Pirates (also called Corsairs) on board the Philadelphia hailed Decatur, but it was Catalano who answered, buying time for the Intrepid crew to attach ropes to the Philadelphia to pull the vessels together.

3/7
Read 7 tweets

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