Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. Mary Todd "Mamie" Lincoln Isham (October 15, 1869 – November 21, 1938) was a granddaughter of Abraham Lincoln, the first daughter of Robert Todd Lincoln and the mother of Lincoln Isham.

  2. Mary Todd "Mamie" Lincoln Isham (October 15, 1869 – November 21, 1938) was a granddaughter of Abraham Lincoln, the first daughter of Robert Todd Lincoln and the mother of Lincoln Isham. Mamie was born Mary Todd Lincoln to Mary Eunice Harlan and Robert Todd Lincoln at the Robert Lincoln home in Chicago, Illinois.

    • Female
    • Charles Bradford Isham
  3. Twenty-one-year-old Mamie Lincoln married Charles Isham on September 2, 1891, in the Church of the Holy Trinity near London and the following year gave birth to her only child, Lincoln Isham. Charles, Mamie, and Lincoln lived in New York City until their deaths in 1919 and 1938, respectively.

  4. 17 de abr. de 2021 · Learn about the Isham family, a prominent Chicago law firm with a connection to Robert Todd Lincoln and his daughter Mamie. Find out how Mamie married Charles Bradford Isham, a cousin of Edward Swift Isham, and how their son Lincoln Isham became a lawyer.

    • Mamie Lincoln Isham1
    • Mamie Lincoln Isham2
    • Mamie Lincoln Isham3
    • Mamie Lincoln Isham4
    • Mamie Lincoln Isham5
  5. Mamie Lincoln was born in Chicago, Illinois, the granddaughter of the 16th president of the United States, Abraham Lincoln. She was the daughter of his first born son Robert. Miss Lincoln married Charles Bradford Isham on September 2,1891. Her only child, a son, Lincoln was born on June 8,1892. Mrs.

  6. Mamie Lincoln Isham was the daughter of Robert Todd Lincoln and Mary Harlan Lincoln. She married Charles Isham in 1891 and had one son, Lincoln Isham.

  7. 15 de abr. de 2021 · Lincolns valuables were given to his eldest son, Robert Todd Lincoln, who later passed them down to Mary “MamieLincoln Isham. She donated them to the Library of Congress in 1937. The remained unexamined until February 1976, when then-Librarian of Congress Daniel Boorstinrevealed the contents to the public, on his 167 birthday.