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President Abraham Lincoln's wife Mary Todd would serve him this cake while the couple courted. It would go on to become one ...
Mary’s getting a new cabinet! The Tony-winning production of Oh, Mary! has just announced that joining Jinkx Monsoon in her ...
University of Kentucky Police tells WKYT the car in a July 6th vehicle fire belonged to UK PD.At the scene, police found two ...
Cole Escola has revealed their picks for an Oh, Mary! film adaptation, including Linda Hunt, Cherry Jones, and Miss Piggy ...
By Jason Emerson Mary Ann Todd was born in Lexington, Ky., in 1818. She was raised in an aristocratic, slave-owning family and traveled in exclusive social circles. When she was a young woman and ...
The Insanity File: The Case of Mary Todd Lincoln By Mark E. Neely and R. Gerald McMurtry Southern Illinois University Press, 217 pages, $19.95 The Trials of Mrs. Lincoln By Samuel A. Schreiner Dona… ...
Chicago judges retried Mary Todd Lincoln under 2012 Illinois law and asked the audience to decide if she should have been involuntarily committed to an asylum. In 1875, ten years after she left ...
Three years ago, Candace O’Donnell put on a one-woman show about Mary Todd Lincoln at the Ware Center. Hoping for an audience of 50 or 60 people, she ended up selling out its 350-seat Steinman ...
Just after President Abraham Lincoln was elected in 1861 and his edgy wife Mary Todd returned to The White House in Washington from an exorbitant shopping blitz that included waltzing into Philly ...
For 32 years, a portrait of a serene Mary Todd Lincoln hung in the governor’s mansion in Springfield, Ill., signed by Francis Bicknell Carpenter, a celebrated painter who lived at the White ...
By Jason Emerson Mary Ann Todd was born in Lexington, Ky., in 1818. She was raised in an aristocratic, slave-owning family and traveled in exclusive social circles. When she was a young woman and ...
Executive Director Gwen Thompson gave a tour of the house in which first lady Mary Todd Lincoln was raised. Born in Lexington, Kentucky, in 1818, Mary Todd Lincoln was the fourth of sixteen children.