EducationApril 13, 2026

Mary Todd Lincoln: Life, Loss, and Later Trials

Key Vocabulary

schooling/ˈskuːlɪŋ/
Formal education received at schools.
"She received more schooling than many women of her time."
relief/rɪˈliːf/
Help given to people in need.
"She supported relief work for people in need."
asylum/əˈsaɪləm/
An institution for the care of people with mental illness.
"She was sent to Bellevue Place, a private asylum."
pension/ˈpɛnʃən/
A regular payment, usually from the government, to support someone.
"She received a life pension of $3,000 a year."

Listening

Mary Todd Lincoln: Life, Loss, and Later Trials

Mary Todd Lincoln was born December 13, 1818, in Lexington, Kentucky, and she received more schooling than many women of her time at Shelby Female Academy and at Madame Mentelle's boarding school. She married Abraham Lincoln on November 4, 1842, and she served as First Lady from 1861 to 1865. While in Washington she supported relief work and kept a busy social household; she also relied on her dressmaker, Elizabeth Keckley, who later organized relief for formerly enslaved people.

After the Civil War and the assassination of her husband, Mary suffered deep grief. Her son Willie died in 1862 and Tad in 1871. Concerned by her behavior and spending, her son Robert brought legal action and a jury declared her insane on May 19, 1875; she was sent to Bellevue Place in Batavia, Illinois. She was released to her sister's care and a jury found her restored to reason on June 15, 1876. In 1870 Congress had granted her a life pension of $3,000 a year, which helped support her final years. She later traveled to Europe and lived for a time in France before returning to Springfield, Illinois.

189 words

Quiz

1. On what date did a jury declare Mary Lincoln insane?
2. Who was Mary Lincoln's dressmaker who organized relief?
3. How much was Mary Lincoln's life pension?

Reading Practice

Read the article from the Listening section aloud. Your AI teacher will give you pronunciation feedback.

Discussion

1

Do you think public opinion affects how a family handles private problems? Why?

2

Have you ever helped with charity or relief work? What did you do?

3

What do you think about traveling to heal after a family loss? Have you tried it?

4

Would you feel comfortable asking family to make legal decisions for you? Why or why not?

此內容僅供英語學習使用,不保證事實的準確性。