Los Angeles Times

Stovepipe hat was probably not Lincoln’s

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CHICAGO — A study has found no evidence to corroborat­e that a beaver-skin stovepipe hat — for years a centerpiec­e of Illinois’ Abraham Lincoln museum — ever actually belonged to the 16th U.S. president, according to a published report.

Among the findings spelled out in a 54-page study was that the hat, once appraised at $6.5 million, didn’t appear to be Lincoln’s size, and that descendant­s of the original collectors weren’t aware of the claim that Lincoln had owned it, Chicago public radio station WBEZ reported, citing a copy of the study.

The 16-month study also criticized a lack of due diligence to verify any link between the hat and Lincoln before it was purchased in 2007 and went on display at the Abraham Lincoln Presidenti­al Library and Museum in Springfiel­d, Ill.

Questions about the hat have been asked for the last several years. But the study by Illinois State Historian Samuel Wheeler cast greater doubt than ever over its authentici­ty.

Evidence that the hat sat atop Lincoln’s head rested on a claim by a southern Illinois farmer, William Waller, who said Lincoln gave him the hat in friendship. A 1958 affidavit from a descendant of Waller’s claimed the gift came when the farmer visited Lincoln in Washington after 1861.

The hat was purchased in 2007 by the private Abraham Lincoln Presidenti­al Library Foundation from collector Louise Taper for display at the Springfiel­d museum. It was the headliner in a wider Taper collection, for which the foundation paid about $25 million. The collection also included the bloodied gloves that Lincoln wore to the theater the night he was shot.

With secret doubts of their own, the private foundation sought to authentica­te the hat over recent years, including a failed attempt to match DNA on the hat to Lincoln.

The museum in 2018 asked Wheeler to conduct the latest study.

Wheeler also found that Waller’s son, former state legislator Elbert Waller, never appeared to mention the hat in hundreds of pages of writing. Wheeler said the decision by Elbert Waller’s widow to sell the hat for $1 in the 1950s also raised red flags.

“If the stovepipe hat was indeed one of Elbert Waller’s prized possession­s and was a tangible link connecting the Waller family to Abraham Lincoln, why did Clara not give the hat to Elbert’s surviving son … or his grandson?” Wheeler wrote.

The new chairman of the presidenti­al library board, former federal Transporta­tion Secretary Ray LaHood, praised the study. “We look forward to working with the foundation to explore continued research and ultimately decide how the hat can best be used to educate museum visitors,” he said.

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