By David Mark on 4.17.09 @ 6:05AM
Why the president's political legacy outlived his descendants.
The Last Lincolns: The Rise and Fall of a Great American
Family
By Charles Lachman
(Union Square Press, 484 pages, $24.95)
Abraham Lincoln's last descendant died in 1985. But were Robert
Todd Lincoln Beckwith still alive, it's unlikely he would have
enjoyed the elaborate commemoration the 200th anniversary of the
Great Emancipator's birth.
Beckwith was an ornery, reclusive, self-described "spoiled brat"
who lived off a trust fund inherited from his tycoon grandfather,
presidential son Robert Todd Lincoln, as author Charles Lachman
describes in vivid and often morose detail in his new book,
The Last Lincolns. The Lincolns Lachman portrays are
nothing like our public-spirited, wise, forward-looking,
strategically brilliant 16th president.
It's unfair to judge an individual by the accomplishments of a
forebear. Yet the Lincolns' behavior would be depressing under
almost any circumstances.
The Last Lincolns follows the path of Beckwith and the
other two Lincoln great-grandchildren, each of whom lived
pampered, largely wasted lives, a striking departure from the
president's public service and martyrdom for his country.
The story actually begins in the chaotic waning days of Abraham
Lincoln's life. With the Civil War having just ended and the
arduous work of Reconstruction ahead, the president and his wife
Mary Todd Lincoln take in a Friday night show at Ford's
Theater.
That night the first presidential assassination in the nation's
history not only rocks the budding post-war calm setting over
America after Robert E. Lee's surrender. Mary Todd Lincoln never
gets over the horrific act of violence committed literally in
front of her face.
Watching a spouse's murder would be enough to send any sane
person spiraling into depression. The widow Lincoln, however,
could not find a way to forge an independent identity absent her
husband. She wore black garb of mourning every day of the rest of
her life until she passed away in 1882.
She fretted constantly over money, tainting the family legacy by
trying to sell the president's clothes and other belongings.
After considerable haggling Congress granted Mrs. Lincoln a
limited pension, but even that was not enough to ease her
financial and emotional pain. She twice fled to Europe to escape
what she considered harsh treatment by an American public that
she said should have better appreciated her role in her husband's
accomplishments.
Tragedy was never far behind. Her 18-year-old son Tad died of
what was likely tuberculosis in 1871 -- the third Lincoln boy to
pass prematurely. Mary Todd Lincoln had the misfortune of living
in Frankfurt, Germany, when the Franco-Prussian War broke out,
forcing her return to the U.S. She was a Chicago resident when
the great fire ravaged the city.
Through these ordeals Mary bickered constantly with son Robert.
Relations between her and daughter-in-law Mary Harlan Lincoln
quickly deteriorated. Things got so bad that Robert briefly had
his mother institutionalized on insanity charges. She spent her
lonely last days at her sister's Springfield, Ill., home.
Robert Todd Lincoln could be considered a financial, and to an
extent a political, success. He may have been the most prosperous
presidential kin in American history. Robert had avoided combat
in the Civil War while attending Harvard. After graduation the
president wrangled him a low-level position on General Ulysses S.
Grant's staff, and he witnessed Lee's surrender at Appomattox
Court House.
After Abraham Lincoln's murder Robert moved to Chicago and built
a lucrative law practice. He dabbled in politics, serving as
secretary of war under Presidents James Garfield and Chester
Arthur, and minister to Great Britain under President Benjamin
Harrison.
Politics was never Robert's passion, though. His stiff and
pompous personality and almost manic desire for privacy meant the
life of a glad-handling politician like his father was not to
be.
Following his mother's death and his second stint in government
service, Robert became a top executive with the Pullman Palace
Car Company, ultimately making a fortune. He earned a reputation
as a hard-nosed, ruthless businessman because he used harsh
tactics to help break the 1894 railroad workers strike of the
company's largely African-American workforce.
Robert lived long enough to see the dedication of the Lincoln
Memorial in 1922 and died at his family's Vermont estate four
years later, at age 83. It's here that the Lincoln story takes a
bad turn. Two of his three children lived to adulthood, daughters
both. Neither Mamie nor the younger Jessie seemed particularly
inclined toward education, public service, or much beyond their
immediate gratification.
Jessie married three times and her son Robert would live the life
of a 1960s hedonist, shacking up with women less than half his
age. Sister Mary Lincoln "Peggy' Beckwith became an eccentric
recluse on the family estate in Vermont (called Hildene, which
Peggy inherited following the death of her grandmother, Mary
Harlan Lincoln). A first cousin, Lincoln Isham also lived off the
family's wealth, content as a Virginia gentleman farmer,
strumming his guitar and writing musical ditties not good enough
to be published.
Lachman's book is gripping and accessible to the general public
without being dumbed-down. The only problem with The Last
Lincolns is its subtitle, "The Rise and Fall of a Great
American Family." Other than President Abraham, there was nothing
particularly great about the Lincoln clan.