Teddy Roosevelt and Abraham Lincoln in the same photo (2010)
Posted by bryanrasmussen 8 hours ago
Comments
Comment by GCA10 2 hours ago
Roosevelt was married twice, and his first wife, Alice Hathaway Lee, died in 1884, so it's not her. But his second wife, Edith Carow, died in 1948, at age 87. So unless Lorant interviewed her posthumously, via seance, it can't be her, either.
Our best hope of rescuing this anecdote is to assume that Lorant's research happened earlier (1940s?) while Edith Carow Roosevelt was still alive. But she would have been just three years old at the time of Lincoln's funeral, and while her family and the Roosevelt's family socialized together, even her quoted reminiscence is less than definitive about whether that's actually TR.
Possible? Sure. Probable? Maybe. 100% verified? No way.
From what's presented to us, this sounds like a cool legend
Comment by Mordisquitos 1 hour ago
In the linked article Lorent does not specify when exactly he interviewed Edith Carrow Roosevelt, but I think it is fair to assume that the reference to "in the 1950s" is an assumption made by the author of the blog based on when the article was published, and does not cast any doubt on the timeline.
[0] https://web.archive.org/web/20060507100625/http://www.americ...
Comment by rootusrootus 1 hour ago
https://www.snopes.com/fact-check/roosevelt-lincoln-funeral/
Comment by dylan604 1 hour ago
While she might not have direct memory of the event, it would not be unheard of for older relatives to explain the picture to her when she was older. Just because she doesn't remember it directly does not automatically make the story of the picture untrue.
Comment by UncleSlacky 1 hour ago
https://web.archive.org/web/20090107061334/http://www.americ...
Apparently she was 4 at the time and lived next door:
Comment by Rebelgecko 2 hours ago
Comment by cdot2 1 hour ago
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Comment by ramesh31 1 hour ago
Comment by rootusrootus 1 hour ago
When I talk to young people today, and realize how little they know about people and events that were major news when I was young, I understand how it happens. Even for me WW2 is just something from the history books, and yet it concluded just ~30 years before I was born. 30 years before today was 1996.
Our descendants are going to enjoy an enormous wealth of imagery and videos for events that will to them otherwise be just something from a history book. Just imagine what it would be like today if we could see videos of George Washington and Abraham Lincoln, etc. Might knock the mythology down a peg or two, though.
Comment by bena 19 minutes ago
For me, that person would be 115 when I was born for our lives to overlap.
Yes, history is closer than we think, but it still moves on
Comment by xrd 2 hours ago
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Comment by triceratops 2 hours ago