Explore Abraham Lincoln's marriage to Mary Todd and time as state lawmaker in Springfield, Illinois
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Explore Abraham Lincoln's marriage to Mary Todd and time as state lawmaker in Springfield, Illinois
Description of Abraham Lincoln's years as a state lawmaker in Illinois, where he was an early advocate of women's suffrage, and of his marriage to Mary Todd.
Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc.
Transcript
[Music in]
NARRATOR: In 1836, he was licensed to practice law and was reelected to the State House. One of the policies he advocated was woman's suffrage. It was evidence of Lincoln's caring for people--and his concern about the inequities that he saw around him.
In 1839, he met Mary Todd. She was from a prominent slave-holding family in Lexington, Kentucky--a young woman cultured and much admired. Two years later they were married. In May of 1844, they bought a home at Eighth and Jackson in Springfield, the only home Lincoln was ever to own. He and Mary had four sons in the Springfield house; one died there.
[Music out]
NARRATOR: In 1836, he was licensed to practice law and was reelected to the State House. One of the policies he advocated was woman's suffrage. It was evidence of Lincoln's caring for people--and his concern about the inequities that he saw around him.
In 1839, he met Mary Todd. She was from a prominent slave-holding family in Lexington, Kentucky--a young woman cultured and much admired. Two years later they were married. In May of 1844, they bought a home at Eighth and Jackson in Springfield, the only home Lincoln was ever to own. He and Mary had four sons in the Springfield house; one died there.
[Music out]