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  1. Mary Harlan Lincoln (née Harlan; September 25, 1846 – March 31, 1937) was the daughter of United States Senator James Harlan and the wife of Robert Todd Lincoln. Life and family. The eldest child of James Harlan and Ann Eliza Peck, Mary Eunice Harlan was born in Iowa City, Iowa on September 25, 1846.

  2. Brief Life History of Mary Eunice. Mary Harlan Lincoln (née Harlan; September 25, 1846 – March 31, 1937) was the daughter of United States Senator James Harlan and the wife of Robert Todd Lincoln. The eldest child of James Harlan and Ann Eliza Peck, Mary Eunice Harlan was born in Iowa City, Iowa on September 25, 1846.

    • Female
    • Robert Todd Lincoln
  3. Mary Eunice Harlan was the daughter of Senator James Harlen of Iowa and the wife of Robert Todd Lincoln, the son of President Abraham Lincoln. She was born in 1846 and died in 1937, and is buried in Arlington National Cemetery.

  4. Learn about the relationship between James Harlan, a senator and educator, and Abraham Lincoln, the president and his grandchildren. See the house where Mary Eunice Harlan, Lincoln's granddaughter, spent summers and visit the museum with Lincoln memorabilia.

  5. Mary Eunice Lincoln formerly Harlan. Born 25 Sep 1846 in Iowa City, Dubuque, Iowa, USA. Ancestors. Daughter of James Harlan and Ann Eliza (Peck) Harlan. Sister of William Aaron Harlan. Wife of Robert Todd Lincoln — married 24 Sep 1868 in Washington DC. Descendants.

    • Female
    • September 25, 1846
    • Robert Todd Lincoln
    • March 31, 1937
  6. Mary Harlan Lincoln, no date. In 1864, teenage Robert Todd Lincoln, with his mother’s consent, began to court a young well-educated woman from Iowa. Mary Harlan Lincoln was the daughter of a senator and, with the help of Mrs. and President Lincoln, Robert was able to escort her to the 1865 presidential inaugural ball.

  7. Robert Todd Lincoln is buried with his wife, the former Mary Eunice Harlan, whom he married in 1868. In April 1927, Mary Harlan Lincoln and the Fine Arts Commission selected noted American sculptor James Earle Fraser to design a memorial on the south slope of the cemetery.