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Thanks TSgt Joe C. for reminding us that on May 18, 1861 an obscure California newspaper casts first lady Mary Todd Lincoln in an unflattering light. Tabloid journalism's inauspicious beginning on the left coast :-)
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Mary Todd Lincoln was held to distrust because she was a Southerner with many relatives fighting for the Confederacy. Newspapers carried on with a lot of stories concerning a rebel in the White House but President Lincoln answered that he had a right to have anyone he wished in the White House. The newspapers largely overlooked POTUS Lincoln's home state of Kentucky which as a border state had many of its people on both sides of the war. Mrs. Lincoln was held to scorn by many of the capital city's social sets which still carried a diminished social calendar in war time. The executive mansion had been the principal setting for social parties but war time necessity greatly diminished all social events. The death of the Lincoln's son Tad happened while the parents were attending a new year's party in their house but the party died after the son's passing. Fevers, pneumonia, scarlet fever thrived in Washington D.C. both from the swamps around the city plus the large number of decomposing human remains all throughout the city.
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