Everything about Sarah Bush Lincoln totally explained
Sarah Bush Johnston Lincoln (
December 13,
1788 -
April 12,
1869) was the second wife of
Thomas Lincoln and
stepmother of
President of the United States Abraham Lincoln. She was born in
Elizabethtown, Kentucky to Christopher and Hannah Bush. She married her first husband, Daniel Johnston, in 1806, and they'd three children. When he died in 1816 she was left penniless.
Thomas Lincoln had met Sarah while living in
Kentucky. After his first wife,
Nancy Hanks, died in 1818, Thomas married Sarah on
December 2,
1819 and brought her and her children to his farm in
Indiana. She treated the two children from Thomas's first marriage the same as her own, earning the lasting affection of Abraham, who always addressed her as "Mother." She encouraged his appetite for reading and learning. He visited her "every year or two," and was apparently closer to her than to his father. After Thomas died, Lincoln maintained the family's farm in
Coles County,
Illinois for her and supported her until his death. Their final visit occurred on
January 31 and
February 1,
1861, just before Lincoln left Illinois for the
White House.
Lincoln's legendary sense of humor was probably influenced by his stepmother. He recalled that she was a firm but kind-hearted woman who loved to laugh. When he was eighteen years old, Lincoln, at 6' 4", was so tall that his head nearly touched the ceiling of the family's farmhouse kitchen. His stepmother repeatedly joked that Lincoln was so tall that she was afraid he'd leave footprints on her ceiling. Lincoln decided to have some fun with this idea. One day, when his stepmother wasn't home, Lincoln got together a group of younger boys and had them dip their bare feet in the mud outside the farmhouse kitchen. Then Lincoln took each of the boys inside, held them upside-down, and had them walk their feet across the ceiling, leaving muddy footprints. When Sarah Lincoln saw the muddy footprints on her ceiling, Lincoln recalled, she "took a broom to my head, but I could tell she was very amused by it."
The
homestead where she and Thomas lived is preserved as the
Lincoln Log Cabin State Historic Site. Sarah is buried next to Thomas in nearby Shiloh Cemetery, just south of
Lerna, Illinois. Sarah Bush Lincoln Health Center in Coles County was named after her.
This page includes text from the public domain page on Sarah Bush Johnston Lincoln maintained by the National Park Service
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