I'm tired of people refering to Mary Todd Lincoln as being unstable. She suffered the loss of THREE of her four children ...was holding her husband's hand when his head was blown off ...AND was in a carriage accident that left her with TBI/PTSD. the head injury alone changes a personality and memory. who can handle just ONE of these tragedies?
..... nobody saying that she wasn’t mad because of all the things that happened to her BUT she was unstable towards the end most likely due to the reasons you just specified. She WAS unstable. It is written in her memoirs and many of her servants memoirs. It’s written that she used to want to jump out her window because she feared that the house was on fire constantly, she was terrified to walk into the kitchen because she was afraid it was going to burst into flame and she tried to stab Lincoln several times once on the street in front of their Illinois home. If she had been alive today she would most certainly be hospitalized.
you are my sunshine ..... nobody saying that she wasn’t mad because of all the things that happened to her BUT she was unstable towards the end most likely due to the reasons you just specified. She WAS unstable. It is written in her memoirs and many of her servants memoirs. It’s written that she used to want to jump out her window because she feared that the house was on fire constantly, she was terrified to walk into the kitchen because she was afraid it was going to burst into flame and she tried to stab Lincoln several times once on the street in front of their Illinois home. If she had been alive today she would most certainly be hospitalized.
Jayne Mansfield even though as we all know she was spoiled by Lincoln but she loved him deeply and it showed when she remained in mourning for him and of grief resistance.
Jayne Mansfield.....and a very intelligent woman. From what I've read and seen on PBS, she could have lively political debates with the men, which was quite unorthodox for a woman at that time in history.
Back then there were no pensions for the wives of Presidents so when Lincoln was murdered his wife Mary had no income at all. She lost three children and saw her husband killed right beside her. The one remaining son was horrible to her and was a cold, uncaring person. Mary was a southerner who married a union man who became President and that caused all sorts of criticism to flow her way. She had a very difficult life filled with loss and grief. She wasn't insane or unstable - just reacting to what happened to her.
Your incredibly wrong. Robert Todd was very successful. He was president of The Pullman car company at the end of his life. He had his mother hospitalized because she lost touch with realty. She did not die a pauper.
Allison Holly nope, not an excuse! A reason, a cause, a trigger, a precipitating factor, a “final straw,” etc. But you seem to infer that what you define as “erratic behavior” is something a person always chooses to undertake, rather than a manifestation of an illness or difficulty coping with external factors. Perhaps you’ll learn compassion when life deals you a crippling blow someday. That’s usually all it takes for an unforgiving bitch to become a whining victim.
good idea I am sure that how the fabric was crafted is known they could literally remake it just like it was so long ago. That would be a truly amazing project for someone.
I agree 100% with the choice not to restore. Keep it original. For truly historic items, don't mess with it. And this is a truly historic item. Beside's, the dress doesn't look that bad considering it's age.
without restoration this dress will disentigrate anyway.... so why not restore it and keep it around for 100 more years. without restoration, kept in some cabinet in that box, it will be gone in 20 or 30 years, completely shattered.
Bad thing about silk is it does come to pieces over time. Rather than trying to "restore" and thus destroy the original, it'd be much cheaper to reproduce it for those that would like to see it in its full glory.
Thank you for sharing this historical item....you did a super job and it's a great dress. Even better, we have photos of Mrs. Lincoln wearing the dress!!
Mary Todd Lincoln suffered from migraine headaches The headaches made her seem crazy at times. And she was anemic With both of those illnesses it would have been difficult for anyone to live with.
@@keetahbrough I am not a NAZI. I don't understand why you would say that. I have studied history, the Lincoln family are a beloved historical family. Some would say a "colorful" or "difficult" family, I would say a family with many difficulties to overcome. The death of children, and the angast of her husbands assassination and her health problems. It was her own son that tried to keep her intuitionalized. Migraine headaches cause many different symptoms that mimic other illnesses. I suffer from migraine headaches. Not that it makes me an expert, I can imagine the pain and her actions during such "manic"episodes. I AM NOT A NAZI.
@@dmstevens7133 KB is an idiot. He cannot define nazi. He has never had the vicious pain of migraine. He is glad we are neither King nor God to give him a taste of either. In the meantime he is living a horrid life recognized by everyone as an idiot.
It’s been proven trauma including incredibly intimate losses can change ones brain chemistry resulting in mental illness. When Mary met Abe they shared not only the tragedy of losing their mothers young, but each also had mental illness. The loss of their boys one after the other years later greatly compounded their respective mental states. He was prone to profound depressive episodes and she seemed more likely bipolar. Her expensive shopping sprees for example, of which the politicians were very critical, is very common bipolar behavior. Anyone who comments that she was was not ill is very wrong. She became terribly unstable after his death and as you all know, was eventually committed. We really can’t say that her son didn’t care because he committed her, one would only have grown up with a mentally ill mom especially in her later years, to know what he had been through.
@@maxtest it was a series of losses that included his mother AND his fiance and probably more, possibly combined with genetic factors. I mention the mother because that was a loss both he and Mary knew intimately. I am bipolar and I know even the strongest of us cannot remain unchanged through loss after loss.
I think she was very depressed she lost all her children at a young age and only one lives that is the one that testified against her because he wanted her Money what she had and her home. This man was greedy and treated his mom really unfair. She gave him money for years but he didn't care how he spent it. He told her he'd see her in a place she couldn't get out of for the rest of her life. He kept his word on that. She was very lonely after losing her husband she was even more depressed then she was. Yes she may have said something things that didn't make since but who did she have to talk to nobody. She was left all alone after Mr Lincoln was shot. Her son was not good to her. Because he was a spoiled brat that always got his way. I fell that she was alone all her life because no one liked her. Because they didn't take time to know her. What a sad lonely live she had. RIP Ms.Mary I think you was a wonderful beautiful first lady of the United States of America.
Love this library, museum. If anyone has a chance it's worth a visit. My ancestor, Rev. Jesse Head married Lincoln's parents in Kentucky. I love learning about Lincoln.
A few years back I bought a small Swatch of a dress worn by Mary Todd Lincoln on eBay. I enjoyed my visit to the Lincoln Museum in Springfield Illinois in 2016 so much!!!!
I really enjoy the presentation here. IMO the dress looks more elegant in the black and white photo than in color. I thought he said the pattern was printed? It looks like it was woven. I think it would be almost impossible to restore the dress but it would be possible to reproduce it and the design could be hand embroidered.
Its fantastic that the original dress was kept in such great shape! I am always amazed when i think about how much stress & drama Abe was under at that point in time. The poor guy had to wake up every day and deal with a bi-polar mental wife, the Cival War, a very unsupportive Congress, constant barrage of threats from slave owners, etc. I honestly dont know how this man was able to emotionally & mentally keep it together for so long leading up to his assassination. His levels of posterity, strength and understanding is truly something everyone should always envy.
@Craig Colby By the look of the dress , they clearly have no idea what they are doing . You might be american and i forgive you for your idea of what , "So long" means to you , coming from a country that is barely 300 years old, but this piece is a 100 years old , My great grand mother wedding dress is older than it, and is still hanging in a closet protected from sunlight and insect and in pristine condition . The Beijing museum has pieces over a 1000 years old on display , same with the Cairo museum, while the Louvre and the British museum have Renaissance, Edwardian , Georgian , Tudor pieces dating back hundreds of years . Let's be honest here..This dress was mishandled and damaged due to lack of knowledge on how to store and preserve clothing . Then a terrible restoration work was done to it which furthered the damage . IYou either preserve a garment or restore it . But it you are going to restore it , have it done by true professionals , because the work done on that piece is a disaster . I was watching this with my Japanese mother in law and she was horrified . Whoever did that restoration work on the silk needs a few lessons . these guys must ask more skilled people to do the job , for such valuable and important pieces. Have the dress sent to Japanese craftspeople who traditionally restore silk Kimono and other closing, Their skills are unsurpassed and the dress will come back as beautiful as new and preserved for another 200 years . ua-cam.com/video/W23oJY-2Xk0/v-deo.html ua-cam.com/video/BeuFg8UJNE8/v-deo.html They have clients such as the Louvre museum, the British museum and all Haute Couture fashion houses . And they are not expensive .
@@morganolfursson2560 If you are so all knowing on how to restore a garment, then instead of saying what an awful job the restorers did, why not put your money where your mouth is, and pay the tens of thousands of dollars to restore it. If you are unable to do that, then STFU! (that stands for shut the fuck up!)
Laura Y., I could be wrong (and I know this comment was from a year ago, haha), but it sounded as though the family had kept it for some time, so maybe the damage was already done and the museum has just been keeping the dress folded the same way along the lines that are already damaged. He mentioned the family had likely added the purple piece as well in the 1960s. Wouldn't it have been amazing to see this dress when it was new? I'm hoping a dressmaker creates a replica or an artist does a rendering. So curious about the original shades of the print before the colors faded!
If anything we should have compassion for Mrs. Lincoln. Lost three children, think about that three children, her husband assasinated right next to her, if my mental wasn't affected by all that something would be wrong with me! My compassion goes out to Mrs. Lincoln, so sorry for all of your loses! I would like to see how other women would have coped! You did the best you could! God bless you Mary, I hope that you have been reunited with your family in heaven! Love to you, wendy
Interesting dress and nice introduction. From the details shown while illustrating the split silk it is clear that the design was woven with extra wefts, not printed as said earlier in the talk. As for the lace collar more detail would be nessecary to see if it dates from the period of the dress. It would have been lovely for dress and textile historians to have had more close ups.
To all those below arguing about ptsd, Mary didn't just watch most of her children and her husband die, she also had to endure the effects that the stress of war and the responsibilities of office had on Lincoln's mental and physical health. And, there was no treatment for, or even a condition such as ptsd recognised back then. They both need to be approached from a realistic perspective, Mother and Son, I mean, both suffered, as did many others, in those times.
By machine he’s referring to an early type of sowing machine as those had begun to circulate and some companies had several with women employed to make clothing. This process was faster and cheaper, so it began to spread rather quickly.
#ThursdayThoughts 💭#ThursdayFeeling ☕️ #History #MaryLincoln #MyNonFictionAddiction📚 #MyBookedWknd📚 #My3LbOpinion🧠 IF my hospital experience goes well, I sure hope to visit the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum in the Spring!
Very boring camera angle for 90 percent of the video. We don’t need to see the curator’s face that much. Seeing more of the garment’s details would have been nice.
just want to remind you, the video is from 2011. youtube was not necessarily interesting at the time. btw they wanted to promote an exhibition so you had to go there to see it closely :))
Mary Todd Lincoln suffered from migraine headaches. It is a proven fact the meds the doctor gave her caused more damage than help. Thank goodness a very smart lady (married to a popular lawyer and understood the law very well herself) was able to rescue Mary Lincoln from the asylum where her son put her. She suffered greatly at the hands of her son and just for the fact she was a southern. The loss of her other 3 sons and brutal death of her husband was enough to put anyone into a tailspin.
Geese Louise. So many comments are critical of the sound, photography, narration, curator and lighting. Next time you drop by maybe you’d like to make a monetary donation for better equipment- if that’s how you’d like to spend your money. I’ve never had the pleasure of seeing Springfield’s museum but I would think (duh) budgets are tight. Appears that they also lack a rich clientele to lavish money on them. Give ‘em a break people. This isn’t Hollywood and I for one am thankful for that. BTW, betcha they have volunteer work at the museum too. All talk, no action?
These dresses are worn all the time at Civil War re-enactments and in Living History museums. I see no reason you couldn't wear one on a daily basis if you really wanted to. I went through a phase in my life where I hardly ever wore anything that wasn't CW era and I never allowed my picture to be taken unless I was in my CW uniform. I had a friend named George who was a park ranger at Fort Clinch and he was ALWAYS in his CW uniform. He could go through an entire day without ever saying or doing anything that would let you know he wasn't a time traveler from 1863.
Rich Tube ....It’s not a coronation dress and it’s not an inauguration dress. I think it should be displayed in a flat case but I wouldn’t exactly call it a national treasure.
Dal V If you mean on a mannequin clothing cannot be on permanent display. It has to be taken down every few months and supported, layed in flat pattern. Otherwise gravity is going to pull the pieces down inch by inch each year until they start falling apart. They also need to come down for dusting and polishing and deterrence put on them. This dress Mary Todd Lincoln dress would also need to come down for dusting and polishing and deterrents put applied to them. Lastly, this dress, unless restored, will never be put on display unless it is laid flat and in a temperature controlled display case otherwise it’s going to start deteriorating rapidly. Fabric does not hold up especially fabric over 90 years old.
The woman who made most of the dresses for Albraham Lincolm was once a slave who bought her own freedom. She wrote a book "Behind the Scene." Her English so refined, she writes like black Jane Austen. In her book, I was impressed by a shopkeeper's sudden trust in her. On first day, he allowed her credit, as he thought she had a honest face. He judged her at face value.
I’ve never heard that Mary was unstable. In fact I’ve heard quite the opposite. I’ve heard she was a strong woman, the backbone to her husband and a powerful matriarch of her family. Maybe I missed something here. 🤔
The Lincolns were supposed to be accompanied by Ulysses and Julia Grant that night at Ford's theater. Ms Lincoln had a violent - and very public - outburst earlier towards some of her friends, so that Julia Grant chose to politely decline the invitation. This kind of behavior was not unusual.
Rob's Relics You would thoroughly enjoy the book 'Mrs Lincoln's Dressmaker' by Jennifer Chiaverini of Madison, WI. Ms Chiaverini did EXTENSIVE research to write the book as she does with all her writings. It was VERY interesting and a great history lesson as well. Quite fascinating to say the least!!
Mary Lincoln was very fashion conscious and always enjoyed good taste, despite the constant tragedy that marked her life. She did not deserve to have been comitted to the insane asylum that her son Robert Todd Lincoln sent her to. She was a proud, genteel Southern woman by culture and upbringing and this betrayal by her first-born son humiliated and devastated her.
Edwin Milan .....I have done several Civil War reenactment’s as I grew up right here in middle Tennessee in Franklin but, I don’t know where you’re getting all the opinionated Information on her from because in her memoirs and her servants memoirs she went immediately from a socialite( she was unstable before her husband became president) to a clinically insane woman due to her husband’s assassination,losing several of her children and many more things. She would only sit by the window all day long because she was terrified the house was going to catch on fire and she tried to jump out of that window several times, she tried to stab Lincoln in the street in Illinois when they were newlyweds she would never walk into her kitchen because she was terrified it was gonna burst into flames. She spent money on dresses and clothing like it was nothing, by the time she died in 1882 she had racked up $150,000 in debt(inflated to 2018)on clothing alone. And lastly she used to throw all out fits or rag, temper tantrum‘s and pick fights with restaurants and shop owners here in the south because they would not let Berkeley, her African-American dress maker into said stores with her (rightfully so) however this coincided with everything else, turning her into a person that nobody, not even her servants wanted to deal with.
I'm from Chicago and been to Springfield Illinois many times. Mary Todd Lincoln was very short Abe was over six feet tall. They slept in different beds and different rooms because of his height.
Gerri Petress I’m 5’2, my husband is 6’ + and yet we manage just fine in one room, one bed. Unless he messes up, of course, then he’s on his own someplace... Should anything as trivial as height be a directive for something as important as marital togetherness? Sex isn’t even the main issue (albeit an important part), but that section of a couple’s life is vital. Talking together becomes impossible if the two kids are never alone.
Did this dress have a label or signature on it. I know Elizabeth Keckley was her personal dressmaker/seamstress I wish she would feature some of the spectacular gowns that she sewed.
Very nice video. This reminds us that Mary Lincoln was a real person who (like most women) love beautiful clothes to wear. Poor husband Abe had a lot on his plate with her since I don't believe she was, as they say, "low maintenance."
+David Lyle Strong Mary Lincoln had neuroses, migraines, very high strung. On the positive, she could be kind-hearted and she helped a former (beaten) slave woman get a good job as her personal couturier. I believe in today's world, a woman like M. Lincoln could be medicated and function better.
Very interesting, thats the thing about restoration, when the item becomes too restored, the replacement parts end up being the majority and then the history you are looking at is basically a new item that just looks the same with almost nothing left of the original connection. Its ashame things deteriorate but would rather see something worn away and original than a replica.
Wow, that is such an old piece of clothing I'd almost be afraid to touch it lol. Seems like the silk is in wonderful condition for it being so damn old.
Dr Cornelius . This box is way too small . Can't you have a box made large enough to keep the dress perfectly flat and unfolded . You can't have creases on old silk. Silk is made from animal protein (literally worm saliva ) and it breaks when creased for too long . You need to have the folds only following the seam lines , nowhere else, and place layers and layers of silk paper between the layers of fabrics to avoid direct contact and friction . Also make sure the box is made of unvarnished and untreated paulownia wood, with a perfectly fitted lid. Paulownia is breathy and naturally insect repellent . If you store the piece in it after display, you can keep it without extra care . Also never display silk when the weather is humid and never store it away unless it has been made to dry thoroughly first , whether naturally or artificially . And it would still need to be aired once or twice a year . Silk is organic and biodegrades very easily if not properly taken care of . This is not like cotton or wool which is as dead a fabric as cut hair or clipped nails . Silk is a protein fiber such as Fibroin so basically an enzyme . You can't store it like cotton , wool, or even leather .
Teri Wells You're assuming the author is factual - if she wrote in reverse - your would embrace his memories? People never know that which they don't observe...
This historical reference is nice, however, I've come to know when a historian talks about a piece in Fashion, they tend to dismiss allot. First thing, she most likely didn't travel for this dress, given the transportation and the time it will take to complete it especially for the time period. Also, she diffently spent allot of money on the dress, even in today's standard, a silk brocade dress will cost you, especially given the length and fullness of the gown.
The garment is made out of silk and is easily prone to shredding as it ages. Exposure to light has a tendency to fade the fabric even in indirect light. If you will notice the garment was more than likely stored in a acid free box with acid free tissue. The conservator also wore gloves so that the fabric would not receive any further damage from grime and naturally occurring oils in the skin and not to mention air pollution.. Many museums limit the time frequencies that a garment can be placed on display.
Karen Smith No not really. In that period Queen Victoria of England I believe died and the fashion in them days was to wear dark color clothes and dark jewelry.
Gerri Petress During that period, it wasn't Queen Victoria who died. Prince Albert, her husband, died in Dec.1861. Victoria wore mourning clothing until her death, 40 years later, in 1901.
What pretty clothes they had back then! However, women did not go through their closets for what to wear. They wore their closets. Corsets, hoop skirt, etc.
My Great Grand Mother born in 1861 in Key West taught my Grand mother to preserve gowns , Wedding Dresses . Were to be covered in deep black Velvet so no lite would distort color or texture of the gown. So surprise to see her dress in a cardboard box with white tissues believe or not light still will inflate. That box.
Ocilia Canton US TOO!! I think this has to be a southern or coastal thing to do. My grandmother told me when we would move the winter clothing upstairs and take the summer clothing out. To wrap everything in tissue paper or rice paper then wrap the garment or garments in green velvet, burgundy velvet or black velvet then tie that off with twine or string and place it folded in the cedar chest.
Yes all that .and remember all this was passed down from the 1800 or maybe further back, the clothes were supposed to be passed on down, clothes were very expensive and some handmade.
I thought gloves eye out because they make fingers more clumsy...esp with fragile silk...also more time should have been spent on filming the dress while the man was talking...the dress should be the focus not the historian
The gloves may make the fingers more clumsy but they also protect the delicate fabric from the oils on the skin transferring to the fabric so they do this to save the fabric from deteriorating.
I'm grateful to have the opportunity to be able to look at it I'm thankful because it may be another 26 years before it's taken out of the box We must appreciate and not misuse our words of distaste
I'm tired of people refering to Mary Todd Lincoln as being unstable. She suffered the loss of THREE of her four children ...was holding her husband's hand when his head was blown off ...AND was in a carriage accident that left her with TBI/PTSD. the head injury alone changes a personality and memory. who can handle just ONE of these tragedies?
..... nobody saying that she wasn’t mad because of all the things that happened to her BUT she was unstable towards the end most likely due to the reasons you just specified. She WAS unstable. It is written in her memoirs and many of her servants memoirs. It’s written that she used to want to jump out her window because she feared that the house was on fire constantly, she was terrified to walk into the kitchen because she was afraid it was going to burst into flame and she tried to stab Lincoln several times once on the street in front of their Illinois home.
If she had been alive today she would most certainly be hospitalized.
you are my sunshine ..... nobody saying that she wasn’t mad because of all the things that happened to her BUT she was unstable towards the end most likely due to the reasons you just specified. She WAS unstable. It is written in her memoirs and many of her servants memoirs. It’s written that she used to want to jump out her window because she feared that the house was on fire constantly, she was terrified to walk into the kitchen because she was afraid it was going to burst into flame and she tried to stab Lincoln several times once on the street in front of their Illinois home.
If she had been alive today she would most certainly be hospitalized.
Jessica Lake that comment wasn’t directed towards you. Sorry.
Very valid points.
President Lincoln’s head was not blown off.
Mary lost a lot in her life....children, husband...difficult life.
Mary got what she deserved...she married a corrupt, bloody politician who was owned by corporate interests...the railroads.
uhlijohn You are a jerk who has done no research on the history of our nation!
Poor Mary. Such a tragic figure in American history. And very misunderstood.
Jayne Mansfield even though as we all know she was spoiled by Lincoln but she loved him deeply and it showed when she remained in mourning for him and of grief resistance.
Jayne Mansfield.....and a very intelligent woman. From what I've read and seen on PBS, she could have lively political debates with the men, which was quite unorthodox for a woman at that time in history.
That Jayne Mansfield had big breasts.
Back then there were no pensions for the wives of Presidents so when Lincoln was murdered his wife Mary had no income at all. She lost three children and saw her husband killed right beside her. The one remaining son was horrible to her and was a cold, uncaring person. Mary was a southerner who married a union man who became President and that caused all sorts of criticism to flow her way. She had a very difficult life filled with loss and grief. She wasn't insane or unstable - just reacting to what happened to her.
Nancy Desch
Actually congress voted to give her an annual pension for as long as she lived.
Your incredibly wrong. Robert Todd was very successful. He was president of The Pullman car company at the end of his life. He had his mother hospitalized because she lost touch with realty. She did not die a pauper.
Nancy Desch So Sad I Always Heard that.
Thank You!
Mrs Lincoln You are a Hero
Your circumstances aren’t an excuse for erratic behavior.
Allison Holly nope, not an excuse! A reason, a cause, a trigger, a precipitating factor, a “final straw,” etc. But you seem to infer that what you define as “erratic behavior” is something a person always chooses to undertake, rather than a manifestation of an illness or difficulty coping with external factors. Perhaps you’ll learn compassion when life deals you a crippling blow someday. That’s usually all it takes for an unforgiving bitch to become a whining victim.
Create a copy so folks can see what it looked like when she wore it.
bass13mary great idea
good idea I am sure that how the fabric was crafted is known they could literally remake it just like it was so long ago. That would be a truly amazing project for someone.
bass13mary 🎈
These style of dresses are beautiful and must take so much fabric. I'm a novice at sewing but hope to make such a big stunning piece someday!
I agree 100% with the choice not to restore. Keep it original. For truly historic items, don't mess with it. And this is a truly historic item. Beside's, the dress doesn't look that bad considering it's age.
A reproduction can be made for display.
without restoration this dress will disentigrate anyway.... so why not restore it and keep it around for 100 more years. without restoration, kept in some cabinet in that box, it will be gone in 20 or 30 years, completely shattered.
Bad thing about silk is it does come to pieces over time. Rather than trying to "restore" and thus destroy the original, it'd be much cheaper to reproduce it for those that would like to see it in its full glory.
RJ Walker p
RJ Wali78
Thank you for sharing this historical item....you did a super job and it's a great dress. Even better, we have photos of Mrs. Lincoln wearing the dress!!
Mary Todd Lincoln suffered from migraine headaches
The headaches made her seem crazy at times. And she was anemic
With both of those illnesses it would have been difficult for anyone to live with.
Migraine headaches are hell. I can relate to that.
spoken like a true nazi.
@@keetahbrough I am not a NAZI. I don't understand why you would say that. I have studied history, the Lincoln family are a beloved historical family. Some would say a "colorful" or "difficult" family, I would say a family with many difficulties to overcome. The death of children, and the angast of her husbands assassination and her health problems. It was her own son that tried to keep her intuitionalized. Migraine headaches cause many different symptoms that mimic other illnesses. I suffer from migraine headaches. Not that it makes me an expert, I can imagine the pain and her actions during such "manic"episodes. I AM NOT A NAZI.
@@dmstevens7133 KB is an idiot. He cannot define nazi. He has never had the vicious pain of migraine. He is glad we are neither King nor God to give him a taste of either. In the meantime he is living a horrid life recognized by everyone as an idiot.
It’s been proven trauma including incredibly intimate losses can change ones brain chemistry resulting in mental illness. When Mary met Abe they shared not only the tragedy of losing their mothers young, but each also had mental illness. The loss of their boys one after the other years later greatly compounded their respective mental states. He was prone to profound depressive episodes and she seemed more likely bipolar. Her expensive shopping sprees for example, of which the politicians were very critical, is very common bipolar behavior. Anyone who comments that she was was not ill is very wrong. She became terribly unstable after his death and as you all know, was eventually committed. We really can’t say that her son didn’t care because he committed her, one would only have grown up with a mentally ill mom especially in her later years, to know what he had been through.
L
@@maxtest it was a series of losses that included his mother AND his fiance and probably more, possibly combined with genetic factors. I mention the mother because that was a loss both he and Mary knew intimately. I am bipolar and I know even the strongest of us cannot remain unchanged through loss after loss.
I think she was very depressed she lost all her children at a young age and only one lives that is the one that testified against her because he wanted her Money what she had and her home. This man was greedy and treated his mom really unfair. She gave him money for years but he didn't care how he spent it. He told her he'd see her in a place she couldn't get out of for the rest of her life. He kept his word on that. She was very lonely after losing her husband she was even more depressed then she was. Yes she may have said something things that didn't make since but who did she have to talk to nobody. She was left all alone after Mr Lincoln was shot. Her son was not good to her. Because he was a spoiled brat that always got his way. I fell that she was alone all her life because no one liked her. Because they didn't take time to know her. What a sad lonely live she had. RIP Ms.Mary I think you was a wonderful beautiful first lady of the United States of America.
wow what a wonderful presentation by Dr Cornelius…..so well spoken…and I agree wholeheartedly that the dress remain true it its history.
I would love to get up close just to look at the stitching
dress is NOT printed~ but brocaded
LRMuseum I noticed that immediately as well. Good eye.
Suggestion: Create a duplicate miniture of it and place it next to it for viewing
I have seen this dress (many years ago) and it Is Gorgeous! Loved the displays.
Ms K THAT beautiful lady Made those dresses, Thank you for being a fashion Trailblazer
Love this library, museum. If anyone has a chance it's worth a visit. My ancestor, Rev. Jesse Head married Lincoln's parents in Kentucky. I love learning about Lincoln.
I would wear that strawberry pattern in a heartbeat! It’s beautiful!
It would be easier to make a copy of the dress than to restore it. If silk is good quality and properly cared for, it is almost immortal.
A few years back I bought a small Swatch of a dress worn by Mary Todd Lincoln on eBay. I enjoyed my visit to the Lincoln Museum in Springfield Illinois in 2016 so much!!!!
Why don’t they have the dress sealed in airtight box? Like they do with wedding gowns? Preserves them beautifully.
I really enjoy the presentation here. IMO the dress looks more elegant in the black and white photo than in color. I thought he said the pattern was printed? It looks like it was woven. I think it would be almost impossible to restore the dress but it would be possible to reproduce it and the design could be hand embroidered.
Its fantastic that the original dress was kept in such great shape!
I am always amazed when i think about how much stress & drama Abe was under at that point in time. The poor guy had to wake up every day and deal with a bi-polar mental wife, the Cival War, a very unsupportive Congress, constant barrage of threats from slave owners, etc.
I honestly dont know how this man was able to emotionally & mentally keep it together for so long leading up to his assassination. His levels of posterity, strength and understanding is truly something everyone should always envy.
Why not simply store it flat? Why fold it when you know it causes such awful damage?
I was thinking the same thing. Good idea.
Home of jugs
@Craig Colby By the look of the dress , they clearly have no idea what they are doing . You might be american and i forgive you for your idea of what , "So long" means to you , coming from a country that is barely 300 years old, but this piece is a 100 years old , My great grand mother wedding dress is older than it, and is still hanging in a closet protected from sunlight and insect and in pristine condition . The Beijing museum has pieces over a 1000 years old on display , same with the Cairo museum, while the Louvre and the British museum have Renaissance, Edwardian , Georgian , Tudor pieces dating back hundreds of years .
Let's be honest here..This dress was mishandled and damaged due to lack of knowledge on how to store and preserve clothing . Then a terrible restoration work was done to it which furthered the damage .
IYou either preserve a garment or restore it . But it you are going to restore it , have it done by true professionals , because the work done on that piece is a disaster .
I was watching this with my Japanese mother in law and she was horrified . Whoever did that restoration work on the silk needs a few lessons . these guys must ask more skilled people to do the job , for such valuable and important pieces. Have the dress sent to Japanese craftspeople who traditionally restore silk Kimono and other closing, Their skills are unsurpassed and the dress will come back as beautiful as new and preserved for another 200 years .
ua-cam.com/video/W23oJY-2Xk0/v-deo.html
ua-cam.com/video/BeuFg8UJNE8/v-deo.html
They have clients such as the Louvre museum, the British museum and all Haute Couture fashion houses . And they are not expensive .
@@morganolfursson2560 If you are so all knowing on how to restore a garment, then instead of saying what an awful job the restorers did, why not put your money where your mouth is, and pay the tens of thousands of dollars to restore it. If you are unable to do that, then STFU! (that stands for shut the fuck up!)
Laura Y., I could be wrong (and I know this comment was from a year ago, haha), but it sounded as though the family had kept it for some time, so maybe the damage was already done and the museum has just been keeping the dress folded the same way along the lines that are already damaged. He mentioned the family had likely added the purple piece as well in the 1960s.
Wouldn't it have been amazing to see this dress when it was new? I'm hoping a dressmaker creates a replica or an artist does a rendering. So curious about the original shades of the print before the colors faded!
If anything we should have compassion for Mrs. Lincoln. Lost three children, think about that three children, her husband assasinated right next to her, if my mental wasn't affected by all that something would be wrong with me! My compassion goes out to Mrs. Lincoln, so sorry for all of your loses! I would like to see how other women would have coped! You did the best you could! God bless you Mary, I hope that you have been reunited with your family in heaven! Love to you, wendy
Interesting dress and nice introduction. From the details shown while illustrating the split silk it is clear that the design was woven with extra wefts, not printed as said earlier in the talk. As for the lace collar more detail would be nessecary to see if it dates from the period of the dress. It would have been lovely for dress and textile historians to have had more close ups.
To all those below arguing about ptsd, Mary didn't just watch most of her children and her husband die, she also had to endure the effects that the stress of war and the responsibilities of office had on Lincoln's mental and physical health. And, there was no treatment for, or even a condition such as ptsd recognised back then. They both need to be approached from a realistic perspective, Mother and Son, I mean, both suffered, as did many others, in those times.
Yes, before prozac too.
He has such a cool job!
I know I'm a history buff n would like a job like this
What a treasure! Fascinating to see this piece of history. - T
By machine he’s referring to an early type of sowing machine as those had begun to circulate and some companies had several with women employed to make clothing. This process was faster and cheaper, so it began to spread rather quickly.
One hundred and fifty year old 👗 dress is unbelievable. What a treasure. Wishing goodwill and 💕 love.
#ThursdayThoughts 💭#ThursdayFeeling ☕️ #History #MaryLincoln #MyNonFictionAddiction📚 #MyBookedWknd📚 #My3LbOpinion🧠
IF my hospital experience goes well, I sure hope to visit the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum in the Spring!
Should make a good repro and put that one on display. At some point her orig dress will just fall apart.
Lovely 👗. Great you'll are preserving it.
Very boring camera angle for 90 percent of the video. We don’t need to see the curator’s face that much. Seeing more of the garment’s details would have been nice.
just want to remind you, the video is from 2011. youtube was not necessarily interesting at the time. btw they wanted to promote an exhibition so you had to go there to see it closely :))
Mary Todd Lincoln suffered from migraine headaches. It is a proven fact the meds the doctor gave her caused more damage than help. Thank goodness a very smart lady (married to a popular lawyer and understood the law very well herself) was able to rescue Mary Lincoln from the asylum where her son put her. She suffered greatly at the hands of her son and just for the fact she was a southern. The loss of her other 3 sons and brutal death of her husband was enough to put anyone into a tailspin.
"Machine printed"? The strawberries are clearly embroidered, SMH....
Yep. There is a difference between a printed image and embroidery.
birtsmom A big difference.
The dress maker did a WONDER job of it
Obviously you know more about the dress then they people that have actually touch it.....SMDH
@@tonyd9455 the dress maker put her heart and soul into designing it and now to this day everyone still love it
I hope you will display one or both of Mary Todd Lincoln's remaining dresses again. I would love to drive to Springfield to see them.
Geese Louise. So many comments are critical of the sound, photography, narration, curator and lighting. Next time you drop by maybe you’d like to make a monetary donation for better equipment- if that’s how you’d like to spend your money. I’ve never had the pleasure of seeing Springfield’s museum but I would think (duh) budgets are tight. Appears that they also lack a rich clientele to lavish money on them. Give ‘em a break people. This isn’t Hollywood and I for one am thankful for that. BTW, betcha they have volunteer work at the museum too. All talk, no action?
The dress at 0:28 is so stunning! I would love to slip into that number. It is a shame that these dresses cannot be worn on a daily basis anymore.
These dresses are worn all the time at Civil War re-enactments and in Living History museums. I see no reason you couldn't wear one on a daily basis if you really wanted to. I went through a phase in my life where I hardly ever wore anything that wasn't CW era and I never allowed my picture to be taken unless I was in my CW uniform. I had a friend named George who was a park ranger at Fort Clinch and he was ALWAYS in his CW uniform. He could go through an entire day without ever saying or doing anything that would let you know he wasn't a time traveler from 1863.
Stephen O'Shea, your welcome to wear the corsets.
I believe corporal Klinger is first in line,cupcake
That item is a national treasure. It should be restored for the nation’s heritage.
Rich Tube ....It’s not a coronation dress and it’s not an inauguration dress. I think it should be displayed in a flat case but I wouldn’t exactly call it a national treasure.
These artifacts belong to the people and should be on permanent display
Dal V If you mean on a mannequin clothing cannot be on permanent display. It has to be taken down every few months and supported, layed in flat pattern. Otherwise gravity is going to pull the pieces down inch by inch each year until they start falling apart.
They also need to come down for dusting and polishing and deterrence put on them. This dress Mary Todd Lincoln dress would also need to come down for dusting and polishing and deterrents put applied to them.
Lastly, this dress, unless restored, will never be put on display unless it is laid flat and in a temperature controlled display case otherwise it’s going to start deteriorating rapidly. Fabric does not hold up especially fabric over 90 years old.
Omg, fascinating. Absolutely fascinating.
The woman who made most of the dresses for Albraham Lincolm was once a slave who bought her own freedom. She wrote a book "Behind the Scene." Her English so refined, she writes like black Jane Austen. In her book, I was impressed by a shopkeeper's sudden trust in her. On first day, he allowed her credit, as he thought she had a honest face. He judged her at face value.
Of course you know she was seamstress to Jefferson Davis's wife first.
Lincoln was the best president and his wife was lovely
She looks very elegant in that dress. Classey
Mothers day weekend is a terrible day to have put this on display.
I’ve never heard that Mary was unstable. In fact I’ve heard quite the opposite. I’ve heard she was a strong woman, the backbone to her husband and a powerful matriarch of her family. Maybe I missed something here. 🤔
The Lincolns were supposed to be accompanied by Ulysses and Julia Grant that night at Ford's theater. Ms Lincoln had a violent - and very public - outburst earlier towards some of her friends, so that Julia Grant chose to politely decline the invitation. This kind of behavior was not unusual.
Elizabeth Keckley was her seamstress.
Rob's Relics You would thoroughly enjoy the book 'Mrs Lincoln's Dressmaker' by Jennifer Chiaverini of Madison, WI. Ms Chiaverini did EXTENSIVE research to write the book as she does with all her writings. It was VERY interesting and a great history lesson as well. Quite fascinating to say the least!!
Dang your hot! Lol
A former slave. And I'm not sure if she was Varina Davis' dressmaker. Anybody know?
I just did a video on the House in Hillsborough NC that Elizabeth was enslaved if you want to check it out.
Mary Lincoln was very fashion conscious and always enjoyed good taste, despite the constant tragedy that marked her life. She did not deserve to have been comitted to the insane asylum that her son Robert Todd Lincoln sent her to. She was a proud, genteel Southern woman by culture and upbringing and this betrayal by her first-born son humiliated and devastated her.
Edwin Milan .....I have done several Civil War reenactment’s as I grew up right here in middle Tennessee in Franklin but, I don’t know where you’re getting all the opinionated Information on her from because in her memoirs and her servants memoirs she went immediately from a socialite( she was unstable before her husband became president) to a clinically insane woman due to her husband’s assassination,losing several of her children and many more things.
She would only sit by the window all day long because she was terrified the house was going to catch on fire and she tried to jump out of that window several times, she tried to stab Lincoln in the street in Illinois when they were newlyweds she would never walk into her kitchen because she was terrified it was gonna burst into flames.
She spent money on dresses and clothing like it was nothing, by the time she died in 1882 she had racked up $150,000 in debt(inflated to 2018)on clothing alone.
And lastly she used to throw all out fits or rag, temper tantrum‘s and pick fights with restaurants and shop owners here in the south because they would not let Berkeley, her African-American dress maker into said stores with her (rightfully so) however this coincided with everything else, turning her into a person that nobody, not even her servants wanted to deal with.
I'm from Chicago and been to Springfield Illinois many times. Mary Todd Lincoln was very short Abe was over six feet tall. They slept in different beds and different rooms because of his height.
Gerri Petress
I’m 5’2, my husband is 6’ + and yet we manage just fine in one room, one bed. Unless he messes up, of course, then he’s on his own someplace... Should anything as trivial as height be a directive for something as important as marital togetherness? Sex isn’t even the main issue (albeit an important part), but that section of a couple’s life is vital. Talking together becomes impossible if the two kids are never alone.
Did this dress have a label or signature on it. I know Elizabeth Keckley was her personal dressmaker/seamstress I wish she would feature some of the spectacular gowns that she sewed.
Hopefully, Monika's blue dress will hold a similar place of honor.
You think they would keep it in a larger box that would not require a lot of folding.
Robert right? just have it laid out in a huge box and just flip it over ever now and then i guess
or a climate controlled case...
Thanks for posting this informative video.
Very nice video. This reminds us that Mary Lincoln was a real person who (like most women) love beautiful clothes to wear. Poor husband Abe had a lot on his plate with her since I don't believe she was, as they say, "low maintenance."
+David Lyle Strong Mary Lincoln had neuroses, migraines, very high strung. On the positive, she could be kind-hearted and she helped a former (beaten) slave woman get a good job as her personal couturier. I believe in today's world, a woman like M. Lincoln could be medicated and function better.
Henry Weston: That may have been Elizabeth Keckley who became her couturier/seamstress and sort of companion. Elizabeth Keckley was a Black woman.
That beautiful dress maker Ms K did wonders with needle and thread, I wonder what became of her life, I do so HOPE she became RICH
Better to hope she was happy and healthy throughout her life.....☺
Beautiful!
Very interesting, thats the thing about restoration, when the item becomes too restored, the replacement parts end up being the majority and then the history you are looking at is basically a new item that just looks the same with almost nothing left of the original connection. Its ashame things deteriorate but would rather see something worn away and original than a replica.
So Good to see History Preserved
Wow, that is such an old piece of clothing I'd almost be afraid to touch it lol. Seems like the silk is in wonderful condition for it being so damn old.
Dr Cornelius . This box is way too small . Can't you have a box made large enough to keep the dress perfectly flat and unfolded . You can't have creases on old silk. Silk is made from animal protein (literally worm saliva ) and it breaks when creased for too long . You need to have the folds only following the seam lines , nowhere else, and place layers and layers of silk paper between the layers of fabrics to avoid direct contact and friction .
Also make sure the box is made of unvarnished and untreated paulownia wood, with a perfectly fitted lid. Paulownia is breathy and naturally insect repellent . If you store the piece in it after display, you can keep it without extra care .
Also never display silk when the weather is humid and never store it away unless it has been made to dry thoroughly first , whether naturally or artificially . And it would still need to be aired once or twice a year .
Silk is organic and biodegrades very easily if not properly taken care of . This is not like cotton or wool which is as dead a fabric as cut hair or clipped nails . Silk is a protein fiber such as Fibroin so basically an enzyme . You can't store it like cotton , wool, or even leather .
Exactly! And he's the curator of the museum?
@@ellendolber2765 Yes, that's alarming.
Amazing.
Would love to see it displayed.
Oooh! You people are so lucky! I desire to live in the land of Lincoln so much! I really want to see these...
I'm reading the Jean H Baker book and am now where her son is pulling all sorts of dirty tricks to have her committed . What a greedy viper he was
Teri Wells i
Teri Wells
You're assuming the author is factual - if she wrote in reverse - your would embrace his memories?
People never know that which they don't observe...
Wow. Astounding.
I love it. Beautiful history!! Did Elizabeth Keckley make the dress?
I had the same question.
Also I go you film the dress when fully displayed...I live in Maryland and can't come to see it... I was very disappointed not to see it on a model
Awww what happened to her other dresses
Mary Todd Lincoln is my 9th Cousin.
gorgeous.
Ladies and gentleman....this is 'the original' strawberry dress
Nah
How much can a person really hear? This video sound is so freaking low. You do know you can edit the volume right?
Fascinating!
I cannot hear a word that is being said.
Thank you.
Why is it in storage for 26 years!? That’s absurd! Display it!
interesting piece of history
That is so cool.
I agree that the dress should not be restored, but it would be nice to see a replica with the original colors of the strawberries and leaves.
Fascinating and tragic person. Thankfully, people have thought to preserve their memories.
This historical reference is nice, however, I've come to know when a historian talks about a piece in Fashion, they tend to dismiss allot. First thing, she most likely didn't travel for this dress, given the transportation and the time it will take to complete it especially for the time period. Also, she diffently spent allot of money on the dress, even in today's standard, a silk brocade dress will cost you, especially given the length and fullness of the gown.
“Dismiss allot”? WTF are you talking about? Did you ever go to school?
What is the point of having all these historical artifacts if they are always kept in storage? They should be in museums where people can see them!
@Shayne Punim Interesting explanation! Thank you!
The garment is made out of silk and is easily prone to shredding as it ages. Exposure to light has a tendency to fade the fabric even in indirect light. If you will notice the garment was more than likely stored in a acid free box with acid free tissue. The conservator also wore gloves so that the fabric would not receive any further damage from grime and naturally occurring oils in the skin and not to mention air pollution.. Many museums limit the time frequencies that a garment can be placed on display.
Shayne Putnam thank you for your thorough and insightful knowledge of vintage clothing.
Victorian clothing is always sort of creepy. They loved the color black.
Karen Smith No not really. In that period Queen Victoria of England I believe died and the fashion in them days was to wear dark color clothes and dark jewelry.
Brightly colored clothing, or cloth cost more, and more difficult to manufacture
Karen Smith I
Gerri Petress During that period, it wasn't Queen Victoria who died. Prince Albert, her husband, died in Dec.1861. Victoria wore mourning clothing until her death, 40 years later, in 1901.
I think they wore black to hide the dirt. They didn’t clean clothing often so it would last longer.
I would at do any restoration on the dress it will take away from Athens history of the dress it is a beautiful dress thank you for sharing
She suffered a lot,she was a nice lady l Lincoln was my favorite president
What pretty clothes they had back then! However, women did not go through their closets for what to wear. They wore their closets. Corsets, hoop skirt, etc.
I'm curious to know what size she wore
What. Why
What. Why
165 pounds and 5' 2" would be very large for that time.
I’m 5’2 and 150lbs and wear a size 10.
I am just fat. 5'3 & 170 lol. Trying to lose it though. It's really hard.
I can’t keep a shirt 5 years looking that good
So other than that Mrs. Lincoln, how did you enjoy the play?
why can't it be stored flat to avoid the weakening caused by folds?
My Great Grand Mother born in 1861 in Key West taught my Grand mother to preserve gowns , Wedding Dresses . Were to be covered in deep black Velvet so no lite would distort color or texture of the gown. So surprise to see her dress in a cardboard box with white tissues believe or not light still will inflate. That box.
Ocilia Canton US TOO!! I think this has to be a southern or coastal thing to do.
My grandmother told me when we would move the winter clothing upstairs and take the summer clothing out. To wrap everything in tissue paper or rice paper then wrap the garment or garments in green velvet, burgundy velvet or black velvet then tie that off with twine or string and place it folded in the cedar chest.
Yes all that .and remember all this was passed down from the 1800 or maybe further back, the clothes were supposed to be passed on down, clothes were very expensive and some handmade.
Where's the display part???
I thought gloves eye out because they make fingers more clumsy...esp with fragile silk...also more time should have been spent on filming the dress while the man was talking...the dress should be the focus not the historian
The gloves may make the fingers more clumsy but they also protect the delicate fabric from the oils on the skin transferring to the fabric so they do this to save the fabric from deteriorating.
How Beautiful
UA-cam searched Jason Statham Action Compilation and this came up.
You got it right.
Will future scholars be studying Melanias "I don't care" jacket?
I was truly hoping he would take out the dress. This was lame
I'm grateful to have the opportunity to be able to look at it I'm thankful because it may be another 26 years before it's taken out of the box We must appreciate and not misuse our words of distaste