Looking
back at a ‘Southern Girl, Northern Woman’
Author of new Mary Lincoln biography to
speak Jan. 29 at Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum
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[January 28, 2015]
SPRINGFIELD
– Mary Lincoln grew up a daughter of the South, where slavery was
embraced and women were expected to focus quietly on home and
hearth. She died as the unconventional widow of a president who led
the nation to abolish slavery. The author of a new Mary Lincoln
biography discusses that historic life Jan. 29 at the Abraham
Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum.
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Stacy Pratt McDermott will sign copies of “Mary Lincoln: Southern
Girl, Northern Woman” at 6 p.m. before speaking in the museum’s
Union Theater at 6:30. The event is free, but reservations are
required. Please visit
www.president lincoln.gov and click “Special event
reservations,” or call (217) 558-8934.
McDermott argues Abraham Lincoln’s biographers have focused on the
negative when discussing Mary Lincoln, failing to go beyond a few
“infamous stories” about her temper, spending and mental health.
“The juxtaposition of Lincoln’s good and Mary’s evil has been far
too irresistible for some biographers to resist.”
Even her name
has been a source of confusion and misunderstanding, McDermott says.
Historians often write of “Mary Todd Lincoln,” but Mary never called
herself that. Once she was married, she was known exclusively as
“Mary Lincoln” and thought of herself as a wife and mother, not a
public figure. “Mary Lincoln: Southern Girl, Northern Woman”
attempts to go beyond the caricatures of Mary Lincoln and put her
life into context, particularly as someone coping with 19th-century
ideas of proper behavior for women. “We are drawn to Mary Lincoln
because of the extraordinary circumstances of her life, but her life
can also be an interesting focal point for understanding the lives
of women more broadly,” McDermott writes.
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Eileen Mackevich, executive director of the Abraham Lincoln
Presidential Library and Museum, said, “While we know that Stacy
Pratt McDermott offers an even-handed assessment of Mary Lincoln
and her tumultuous life, we’re certain that Mary’s fans will not
be disappointed.”
McDermott is assistant director and associate editor of The
Papers of Abraham Lincoln, a project devoted to locating all
Lincoln letters and documents from his lifetime. She is also the
author of “The Jury in Lincoln’s America.”
[Chris Wills, Abraham Lincoln Library
& Museum]
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