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President
Abraham Lincoln |
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February
12, 1809 - April 15, 1865.
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"And
Jesus knew their thoughts, and said unto them, Every kingdom divided
against itself is brought to desolation; and every city or house divided
against itself shall not stand" (Matthew
12:25). |
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President
Lincoln was highly resolved that the brave men who died to save the Union
did not die in vain:
".
. . and that this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom—and
that government of the people, by the people, for the people, shall
not perish from the earth." (Gettysburg
Address).
In 1861,
11 states out of a total of 33 left the Union. This is no marvel because
according to the Bible, 1/3 of the angels were dissatisfied with the perfect
environment of Heaven and joined Lucifer in a failed rebellion
against the Almighty:
"And
there was (civil) war in heaven: Michael and his angels fought against
the dragon; and the dragon fought and his angels,
And prevailed not; neither was their place found any more in heaven.
And the great dragon was cast out, that old serpent, called the Devil,
and Satan, which deceiveth the whole world: he was cast out into the
earth, and his angels were cast out with him." (Revelation
12:7-9).
None
of the leaders of the rebellious states dared to let the PEOPLE decide
by vote or referendum if they should leave the Union.
These
rebellious states did not want to live under the God-given Constitution
but rather desired to be annexed to Mexico and live under an emperor!!
To the
newly elected President Lincoln devolved the herculean task of ending
the insurrection and restoring the rebellious states to the Union.

President
Abraham Lincoln (1819-1865).
President from 1861 to 1865.
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The conflict
know as the "U.S." Civil War would have developed into
a WORLD WAR but for the timely intervention of Albert, Prince
Consort of Queen Victoria.
This international
conflict would have involved Great Britain, France, Mexico, Russia
and Prussia
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Inauguration
of Lincoln on March 4, 1861.
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The
Vatican was insanely jealous of the growth of the U.S. and Russia!!
By 1850,
the United States had fulfilled its Manifest Destiny by stretching from
the Atlantic to the Pacific Oceans, and from Canada to the Rio Grande.
Russia stretched from the Arctic Circle in the north to the Black Sea
in the south; and from Poland in the west to Vladivostok on the Pacific
Ocean. Russia also included the vast territory of Alaska in its possessions.
The Vatican
viewed the growth of these 2 great countries with alarm and jealousy.
Russia was the main bastion of the Orthodox Congregation which the Vatican
had been vainly fighting for almost 1,000 years.... The U.S. was the home
of Protestant Christianity, republicanism and . . . liberty!!
Here
is a quote from the book Democracy in America written by the
renowned French historian Alexis de Tocqueville in 1834:
"There
are two great peoples on the earth today who, starting from different
points, seem to advance toward the same goal: these are the Russians
and the Anglo-Americans.
Both have grown largely in obscurity; and while men's regards were occupied
elsewhere, they have suddenly taken their place in the first rank of
nations, and the world has learned of their birth and of their greatness
almost at the same time.
All other peoples appear to have nearly reached the limits that nature
has drawn and to have nothing more to do than preserve themselves; but
these are growing: all the others have halted or advance only with a
thousand efforts; these alone march ahead at an easy and rapid pace
on a course whose bounds the eye cannot yet perceive.
The American struggles against the obstacles that nature opposes to
him; the Russian grapples with men. The one combats the wilderness and
barbarism, the other, civilization vested with all its arms: thus the
conquests of the American are made with the plowshare of the laborer,
those of the Russian, with the sword of the soldier.
To attain his goal, the first relies on personal interest and allows
the force and the reason of individuals to act, without directing them.
The second in a way concentrates all the power of society in one man.
The one has freedom for his principal means of action; the other servitude.
Their point of departure is different, their ways are diverse; nonetheless,
each of them seem called by a secret design of Providence to hold the
destinies of half the world in its hands one day."
(Alexis de Tocqueville, Democracy in America, pp. 395-396).
The
Crimean War was precursor to U.S. Civil War!!
The first shots of
the Civil War were actually fired in the Crimea in 1854.
Great Britain and
France—normally bitter enemies—united in a military alliance
against Russia. They were joined by
the Moslem Turks and the war was called the Crimean War. It lasted from
1854 to 1856.
Great Britain and
France knew that Russia would be the only friendly power to the
young U.S. Republic in the coming invasion of that country.
As a result, they
declared war on Czar Nicholas I and attacked the Russian Black Sea port
of Sebastopol. Sebastopol was the principal Russian naval base, and the
major outlet for their ships to the Mediterranean Sea and Atlantic Ocean.
In 1855, Czar Nicholas
I died of poisoning, and his son, Alexander II, inherited the disastrous
Crimean War.

The Russian
navy was cut off from access to the Mediterranean by Turkey, Britain
and France.
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The
Crimean War was the precursor to the Civil War.
Britain
and France—normally bitter rivals—united to block Russian
access to the Mediterranean Sea.
The
Pentagon is trying to do the very same thing today by forcing Russia
out of the Crimea!! |

Czar Alexander
II (1818-1881).
Czar
of all the Russias from 1855 to 1881.
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This history is repeating
itself today with the CONfederates at the Pentagon intent on destroying
Russia FIRST before they renew the Civil War and destroy the Union.

The Charge
of the Light Brigade.
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This war is
mainly known for the disastrous Charge of the Light Brigade and
the work of Florence Nightingale.
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Florence Nightingale
nursing injured soldiers.
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In the peace treaty
signed in 1856, Russia had to agree to give up use of her Black Sea fleet
entirely, and their greatly devastated navy had only the Baltic and Pacific
ports left.
This war was to be
a replay of the War of 1812, only this time an internal insurrection would
aid the invasion force. The Prime Minister of Great Britain at that time
was Lord Palmerston—and he was just itching for a fight....Even
before the first battle of Bull Run commenced in July 1861, Palmerston
recognized the Confederacy as belligerents:
"On May 6,
in answer to a question put to him in the House of Commons concerning
the proposed policy of Great Britain toward the Confederacy, his lordship
said "The attorney and solicitor-general, and the queen's advocate,
and the government have come to the opinion that the Southern Confederacy
of America, according to those principles which seem to be just, must
be treated as a belligerent." On May 13, the very day that Mr.
Adams landed at Liverpool and only a few hours before he arrived in
London, as if to exhibit the greatest possible lack of courtesy toward
him and the government which he represented, the queen's neutrality
proclamation was issued. It forbade the enlistment of all British subjects
on land or sea in the service of either of the contending parties and
also warned her majesty's subjects not to carry officers, soldiers,
dispatches, or any article of the nature of contraband of war for the
use or service of either the Federals or Confederates. This constituted
a complete recognition of the Confederacy as a belligerent power, that
is, as entitled, so far as England was concerned, to all those exceptional
rights and privileges that international law assigns to sovereign states
which are at war with each other."
(Harris, The Trent Affair, pp. 38-39).
Lord Palmerston referred
to the Battle of Bull Run as the Battle of Yankee run. All Palmerston
now needed was a excuse to declare war on the United states.
The
Trent Affair
The Trent
Affair almost led to another war between Great Britain
and the United States.
In August
1861, CONfederate president Jefferson Davis, appointed James M. Mason,
former senator of Virginia, as a special commissioner to Great Britain.
John Slidell, former Senator of Louisiana, was appointed special commissioner
to France.

John Slidell
(1793-1871).
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2 CONfederates
were sent to Europe as part of a plan to provoke a war with Great
Britain.
They were
arrested during the Atlantic crossing and this almost led to a
declaration of war by Great Britain.
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James M. Mason
(1798-1871).
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Their appointments
were announced in the rebel newspapers weeks in advance.
As they were crossing
the ocean in the British steamer Trent, a certain Captain Charles
Wilkes (without consulting anyone in his government), stopped the steamer
on the high seas and took Mason and Slidell and their 2 assistants by
force to the San Jacinto.
They allowed the steamer
to proceed on its way to Liverpool, and as expected, the incident caused
a furor in Great Britain.
Had the San Jacinto
taken the Trent steamer to a U.S. port it would have been OK
under international law as Great Britain had recognized the Confederacy
as belligerents.

Captain Charles
Wilkes U.S.N.
(1798-1877).
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Wilkes
was a secret agent working for the CONfederacy and he almost succeeded
in starting a war between Great Britain and the U.S. |

The
crew from the USS San Jacinto boarded the British mail
ship Trent and took the rebel commissioners Mason and Slidell
as prisoners. |
Wilkes
was born in New York City in 1798; the great nephew of the former Lord
Mayor of London John Wilkes. His mother was Mary Seton who died in 1802
while Charles was three years old. As a result, Charles was raised by
his aunt, Elizabeth Ann Seton, a convert to Roman Catholicism who was
the first American born woman to be canonized a saint by the Catholic
Church. When Elizabeth was left widowed with five children, Charles was
sent to a boarding school. He later went to Columbia College now known
as Columbia University. He entered the United States Navy as a midshipman
in 1818, and became a lieutenant in 1826.
In 1833, for his survey
of Narragansett Bay, he was placed in charge of the Navy's Department
of Charts and Instruments, out of which developed the Naval Observatory
and Hydrographic Office.
Wilkes led an expedition
to the South Seas and Antarctica but was court marshaled for his brutal
conduct to members of his crew.
Captain
Charles Wilkes then proceeded on to Boston where the 2 commissioners were
imprisoned.
War
fever in Great Britain over the Trent Affair!!
When the Trent
reached Liverpool on Nov. 27, word quickly spread about the incident on
the high seas. The dogs of war were immediately unleashed. It was like
the war hysteria in the U.S. following the bombing of Pearl Harbor:
"Preparations
were also made for placing the military forces upon a war footing, and
it was arranged to increase the army in Canada at once by an addition
of thirty thousand men. Recruiting began with unusual vigor. The very
flower of the British standing army were mustered and passed in review,
after which they embarked for Halifax. Among them were all of the most
noted batteries and regiments, among which were the guards, to whom
was accorded the distinguished honor of taking part in all important
wars. These were the first to start to the seat of war. They believed
that they were going to Charleston to help the Confederates. The guards
played the well known American air, "I am off to Charleston,"
while embarking on their vessels.
Thurlow Weed, who was then in England, says: 'I rose early on Friday
morning and went down to St. James's barracks to see a regiment of Guards
take up their line of march for Canada. Nearly fifty years had elapsed
since I had seen 'British red-coats' whose muskets were turned against
us. Something of the old feeling—a feeling which I supposed had
died out, began to rise, and, after a few moments of painful thought,
I turned away."
(Harris, The Trent Affair, pp. 143-144).
Lord
Palmerston conferred with rebel commissioner Mann of Georgia
Rebel
president Jefferson Davis had not waited for the outbreak of hostilities
to make his first overtures to the Great Powers. Scarcely had Southern
secession been consummated by the establishment of the Confederate Government
in Montgomery, Alabama, in February 1861, than he despatched to Europe
a three-man Commission headed by that "Founding Father of Secession,"
William Lowndes Yancey of Alabama, accompanied by Pierre A. Rost of Louisiana
and Judge Dudley Mann of Georgia, charged with the task of seeking recognition
and treaties of commerce and amity from Britain, France, Spain, Belgium
and Russia. It was understood that the most vital of their diplomatic
targets was Britain.
Lord
Palmerston was Prime Minister during the critical period of the U.S. Civil
War. His Foreign Secretary was Lord John Russell:

Lord Palmerston
(1784-1865).
Prime Minister from 1855 to 1865.
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Both
Palmerston and Russell were extremely anxious to send military aid
to the CONfederates.
Palmerston
sent a nasty letter to President Lincoln demanding an apology for
the Trent Affair. |

Lord John
Russell (1792-1878).
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Here
is an excerpt from the book Palmeston by Philip Guedalla:
"There
is little trace in the judicious terms of this confidential document
of that malignant determination to destroy the Republic at all costs,
with which Palmerston is sometimes credited in American fancy. Five
days later he had, if he desired to do so, his opportunity. For it was
known in London that the United States sloop San Jacinto, Captain
Wilkes, had stopped the British steamer Trent one day out from
Havana and removed four Confederate passengers by force. That night
a boy in Suffolk Street saw Palmerston come to the Confederate office
and confer with Judge Mann of Georgia. The two men stood in front of
a large map of the United States. The boy was listening, and their talk
seemed to run on the course of future naval operations. New York and
Philadelphia were mentioned as points of attack for a British squadron;
and there was even talk of some combined operation with General Johnston's
army, which would result in the capture of Washington—and then
(the Prime Minister was speaking) "France and England will be in
a position to demand the immediate cessation of the war and to exercise
a rightful influence in regard to the terms of peace."
(Guedalla, Palmerston, pp. 464-465).
Lord
Palmerston issued a harsh ultimatum to President Lincoln!!
Lord Palmerston, the
Prime Minister of Great Britain, issued a harsh ultimatum to President
Lincoln, and gave him only 7 days to comply:
"The case was
then considered by the cabinet, and, on November 29, only two days after
the news of the boarding of the Trent and seizure of the envoys
had reached England, Lord Palmerston prepared a note to the queen in
which he formulated a statement of a demand to be made at once upon
the American government. He wrote to her majesty as follows: 'The general
outline and tenor which appeared to meet the opinions of the cabinet
would be, that the Washington government should be told that what has
been done is a violation of international law and of the rights of Great
Britain, and that your majesty's government trust that the act will
be disavowed and the prisoners set free and restored to British protection,
and that Lord Lyons should be instructed that, if this demand is refused,
he should retire from the United States."
(Harris, The Trent Affair, pp. 164-165).
German
Prince Consort averted war with the United States!!
Prince
Albert of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha was the husband and consort of Queen Victoria
of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland. He was a MAN OF PEACE
and never favored British participation in the Crimean War.
The belligerent
letter was forwarded to Queen Victoria for her approval, and she showed
it to her husband, Prince Albert:

Prince Albert
(1819-1861), was the beloved husband of Queen Victoria.
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Prince Albert—beloved
husband of Queen Victoria—changed a belligerent letter from
the British government to President Lincoln.
That act of
human kindness cost him his life, and made Queen Victoria a grieving
widow for the remainder of her long life.
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Queen Victoria
(1819-1901).
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The letter was forwarded
to Queen Victoria for her approval. Her trusted advisor was her then sick
husband: Prince Albert of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha. He was born in the land
of Saint Martin Luther and was only
42 years old at the time of his death in December 1861:
"A
copy of the proposed dispatch to Lord Lyons was also forwarded to her
majesty, who, with Prince Albert, carefully examined it. Both were profoundly
impressed by the fact that the communication indicated a crisis in the
affairs of the two countries and that a speedy rupture and war were
not improbable. Illness and the serious character of this new political
question made it impossible for the prince to sleep during the following
night. Upon getting up, although scarcely able to hold a pen while writing,
he prepared a memorandum of the changes which her majesty desired to
have made in the dispatch to America. The queen preferred that language
should be used which was less harsh and offensive in character than
that contained in the first draft of the note to the American government.
In its uncorrected form the draft of the note not only charged the violation
of international law but added an accusation of "wanton insult,"
although the belief was asserted that it was not intentional. Prince
Albert's memorandum, corrected with the queen's own hand, was returned,
and the dispatch which was subsequently forwarded to Lord Lyons shows
that her majesty's suggestions were fully observed. This was the prince's
last political writing. His illness grew worse and he died before the
communication which he and the queen had aided in preparing was answered
by the American government."
(Harris, The
Trent Affair, pp. 164-165).
The letter, as amended
by the Prince Consort, gave the U.S. an opportunity to settle the incident
peacefully . . . and with honor to both countries. The
Prince Consort was poisoned for changing the letter!!
Queen Victoria, even
though she was Queen of Great Britain, believed that a woman's place was
in the home having children.
Queen Victoria believed
that the "rough and tumble" of politics was a man's world and
she deferred to her husband in most matters of state.
Prince Albert was
a loving husband and father, highly intelligent, patriotic, and he knew
that unjust wars always lead to the ruin of a country.
Just 2 years prior
to the Trent Affair, Prince Albert began to suffer from a mysterious
disease. Queen Victoria's private physician, Dr. William Baly, met a very
timely death in 1861:
"A
further stroke of misfortune was the death, on the night of 28th January
in a railway accident at Wimbledon, of Dr William Baly, who had recently
been appointed Royal Physician and was to take the place of Sir James
Clark. Both the Queen and the Prince Consort had already become attached
to him and the Prince was distressed and upset. Dr William Jenner, a well-known
doctor who had done experimental work on typhoid and typhus fevers, was
appointed in his place.The name is classical,'. . . remarked the Prince,'
alluding to the famous Dr Edward Jenner whose name is identified with
vaccination."
(Woodham-Smith, Queen Victoria, p. 410).
The new physicians,
Sir James Clark and Dr. William Jenner, poisoned the Prince, and left
Queen Victoria a grieving widow for the remainder of her long life.
Prince Albert left
a grieving widow and 9 children. Queen Victoria never recovered from the
loss of her angel and she remained a widow until her death in 1901.
The British
Royal Family was devastated by the U.S. Civil War. Prince Albert was a
loving husband and father to his 9 children, as well as confidant and
advisor to the Queen.
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The
loving family of Victoria and Albert was devastated by the CONfederates.
|
Warmongers
Palmerston and Russell were jealous of the influence that the Prince
Consort had with his wife Queen Victoria. |

Skating on
thin ice. This political cartoon appeared in a British newspaper
and warned the Prince against advising Victoria to pursue peace.
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Official
cause of the Prince's death was typhoid fever!!
The official
cause of death was TYPHOID FEVER—a very infectious disease.
"The cause
of Prince Albert's death was officially given as "typhoid",
doubtless attributable to "the noxious effluvia" which escaped
from the drains at Windsor. As one courtier put it, "There are
more stinks in royal residences than anywhere else". Nevertheless,
there are grounds for supposing that the Prince may have died from some
other cause. In the first place, Sir James was notorious for errors
in diagnosis. Indeed, most of the royal physicians, according to Lord
Clarendon, were unfit "to attend a sick cat". Secondly, the
doctors were plainly puzzled by some of their patient's symptoms. Thirdly,
it is rare to find solitary victims of typhoid. It is possible therefore
that the Prince's fatal illness was the terminal episode of a chronic
disease, such as cancer of the bowels."
(St. Aubyn, Queen Victoria, p. 328).

The happy
couple Victoria and Albert in 1860.
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Doctors
can be very deadly— especially royal doctors—who hold
the power of life and death over rulers.
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Bedroom scene
at the death of Prince Albert. Nobody else caught this "highly
infectious" typhoid disease.
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Victoria and Albert sleep together in the
royal mausoleum at Frogmore Estate, Windsor Castle, in the English countryside
of Berkshire.

Victoria and Albert mausoleum.
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"Victoria
and Albert were lovely and pleasant in their lives, and in their
death they are not divided"
(II Samuel I:23).
They
both await the great Resurrection Day in the royal mausoleum in
Frogmore, Windsor. |

Victoria and
Albert's final resting place.
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Prince
Consort averted a world war!!
Prince Albert not
only averted a war between the U.S. and Great Britain, but he also prevented
a world war. Immediately upon hearing of the Trent Affair
and the warlike preparations of Great Britain, Czar Nicholas II of Russia
dispatched a fleet of warships to New York and San Francisco. The Czar
had a score to settle after the humiliation of the Crimean War and the
assassination of his father, Czar Nicholas I, in 1855.
The admirals of the
Russian fleets had sealed orders and were told to report to
President Lincoln in the event of a declaration of war by England or France:
"It is worthy
of special notice that, during the entire period of the American Civil
War, the most powerful ruler in all Europe was an outspoken and steadfast
friend of the United States. If a war had occurred between England and
the northern states of America as a result of the affair of the Trent,
it is well-nigh certain that the Federal government would have had a
powerful ally in the Czar, Alexander of Russia, who, doubtless, remembered
the losses he had recently sustained in the Crimean war. In this war
England had been his most powerful enemy. In a few weeks after the capture
of the Confederate commissioners, a fleet of Russian war vessels appeared
in New York harbor and remained there for several months. At the same
time a number of Russian men-of-war were stationed at San Francisco.
No official explanation was ever given for the long-continued presence
of these war vessels in American waters. Their extended visit caused
much comment, but their purpose was easily divined and their presence
was not unwelcome while a war between England and the northern states
was imminent."
(Harris, The Trent Affair, pp. 208-208).
Had Russia declared
war on England, France would have sided with England. Prussia undoubtedly
would have attacked France and before long a world war would be in progress.
President Lincoln's
assassin found a refuge in Rome!!
The great emancipator
guided the ship of state through the most terrible storms ever to confront
a nation. Traitors lurked everywhere both at home and abroad....John Surratt—the
associate of assassin John Wilkes Booth—found a refuge in Rome before
his arrest and return to the U.S.

John Wilkes
Booth (1838-1865).
|
John Wilkes
Booth fired the fatal shot that killed President Lincoln.
John Surratt
was the overall coordinator of the assassination.
Surratt fled
to Rome where he enlisted as a soldier or Zouave in the Papal
army.
|

John Surratt
(1844-1916).
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The
Lincoln dynasty that never was!!
Imagine if the United
States had a Lincoln DYNASTY dedicated to the propositions that guided
the great President....The CONfederates would never have been able to
hijack the nation with their Roosevelts and Rockefellers.
President Lincoln's
lone surviving son, Robert Todd Lincoln, had a son who was the very image
of his grandfather. His name was called Abraham Lincoln II. One Lincoln
was more than the CONfederates could bear, so he had a timely demise at
the young age of 16.

Robert Todd
Lincoln (1843-1926).
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Robert
Todd Lincoln was the father of Abraham Lincoln II.
His
son died in London, England, in 1890 after contacting an illness
in France. |

Abraham Lincoln
II with his sisters Mary and Jesse.
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Robert Todd Lincoln
was U.S. Minister to Great Britain from 1889 to 1893. While in London,
he sent his son to Versailles to learn French, as preparation for entrance
to Harvard University to study law. Father and son had plans to open a
law practice named: LINCOLN & LINCOLN.
Just the name ALONE
would have assured Abraham Lincoln II the White House.
"As Minister
to the Court of St. James, Robert Lincoln established his family at
2 Cromwell House, S. W. The Lincolns had two daughters, Mary and Jessie,
and an idolized son named Abraham Lincoln, II, whom they called "Jack."
He had been born on August 14, 1873, in Chicago. In the fall of 1889,
they sent him to a school in Versailles, France, so that he might learn
French and prepare himself for Harvard. Unfortunately, he became afflicted
with a malignant carbuncle under one of his arms. A French surgeon removed
the growth on November 6. However, Jack contracted blood poisoning (septicemia)
and was returned to London for treatment. There, he died at just a few
minutes after 11:00 a.m. on March 5, 1890, as his father sat at his
side in their home. Like Tad's illness, "Jack's" lungs filled
with fluid and he struggled to breathe until death finally came. Although
blood poisoning has been given repeatedly as the cause of his demise,
the official death record states simply that pleurisy killed him."
(Temple, Abraham Lincoln: From Skeptic to Prophet, p. 414).
France and England
was the last place for a Lincoln after their great defeat and
disappointment at the outcome of the Civil War.
President
Lincoln's 200th anniversary is February 12, 2009.
President
Lincoln was born in a humble log cabin in Hodgenville, Kentucky, on February
12, 1809.
President
Lincoln, his wife Mary, and 3 young sons await the Resurrection Day in
Lincoln's hometown of Springfield, Illinois.

Abraham Lincoln
was born in a humble log cabin in Hodgenville, Kentucky, on February
12, 1809.
|
President
Lincoln was born in a humble log cabin in Kentucky.
President
Lincoln, his wife Mary, and 3 young sons await the glorious Resurrection
Day in Lincoln's hometown of Springfield, Illinois. |

President
Lincoln's tomb in Springfield, Illinois. |
Another
Abraham Lincoln was just too much for the CONfederates, so President Lincoln's
grandson had a timely demise at the young age of 16.

Tomb of Robert
Todd Lincoln.
|
Robert
Todd Lincoln and his son, Abraham II, are buried in the same tomb
in Arlington National Cemetery in Virginia. |

Tomb of Abraham
Lincoln II.
|
Vital
Links
Abraham
Lincoln Bicentennial Commission
Czar
Alexander II of Russia pledges support for the Union
Flight
and Capture of John Surratt
The
Trent Affair: How the Prince Consort Saved the United States
References
Bennett,
Daphne. King without a Crown: Albert, Prince Consort of England
1819-1861. J. B. Lippincott & Co., Philadelphia & New York, 1977.
De Tocqueville,
Alexis, Democracy in America. (in 2 volumes), The University
of Chicago Press, Chicago, 2000, (First published in 1835).
Ferris,
Norman B. The Trent Affair: a Diplomatic Crisis. University of
Tennessee Press, Knoxville, 1977
Guedalla,
Philip, Palmerston. G. P. Putnam's Sons, New York & London,
1927.
Harris, Thomas L.
The Trent Affair. The Bowen-Merrill Co, Indianapolis, 1896.
Ridley, Jasper. Lord
Palmerston. E. P. Dutton & Co., New York, 1971.
Temple, Wayne C. Abraham
Lincoln: From Skeptic to Prophet. Mayhaven Publishing, Mahomet, Illinois,
1995.
Thomas, Benjamin P.
Abraham Lincoln, A Biography, Alfred A. Knopf, New York, 1952.
Roscoe, Theadore.
The Trent Affair, November, 1861. Franklin Watts, Inc. New York,
1972.
Strachey, Lytton.
The Illustrated Queen Victoria. Weidenfeld & Nicolson, New
York, 1987.
St. Aubyn, Giles,
Victoria, A Portrait. Atheneum, New York, 1992.
Woodham-Smith, Cecil.
Queen Victoria. Alfred A. Knopf, New York, 1973.
Weintraub, Stanley.
Uncrowned King: The Life of Prince Albert. The Free Press, New
York, 1997.
Copyright
© 2008 by Niall Kilkenny
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