The Commercial Appeal

Lock of Abe Lincoln’s hair and bloodied telegram up for auction

- William J. Kole

This is one macabre auction: A lock of Abraham Lincoln’s hair, wrapped in a bloodstain­ed telegram about his 1865 assassinat­ion, is up for sale.

Boston-based RR Auction said bidding has opened online for the items ahead of a live auction scheduled for Sept. 12 in New Hampshire. The auction house set the minimum bid at $10,000 but expects the lock and telegram to fetch $75,000 or more, spokesman Mike Graff said.

Measuring roughly 2 inches long, the bushy lock of hair was removed during Lincoln’s postmortem examinatio­n after he was fatally shot at Ford’s Theatre in Washington, D.C., by John Wilkes Booth. It was given to Dr. Lyman Beecher Todd, a Kentucky postmaster and a cousin of Mary Todd Lincoln, the 16th president’s widow, Graff said. The physician was present when Lincoln’s body was examined, he added.

The hair is mounted on an official War Department telegram sent to Dr. Todd by George Kinnear, his assistant in the Lexington, Kentucky, post office. The telegram was received in Washington at 11 p.m. on April 14, 1865.

A caption typed by Todd’s son reads: “The above telegram ... arrived in Washington a few minutes after Abraham Lincoln was shot. Next day, at the postmortem, when a lock of hair, clipped from near the President’s left temple, was given to Dr. Todd – finding no other paper in his pocket – he wrapped the lock, stained with blood or brain fluid, in this telegram and hastily wrote on it in pencil: ‘Hair of A. Lincoln.’ ”

Dr. Todd gave a slightly different account later in life, writing in 1895 – three decades after the assassinat­ion, and seven years before his own death – that he clipped the lock of hair himself.

In Lincoln-era papers kept at Allegheny College in Meadville, Pennsylvan­ia, he wrote in an account of the autopsy: “When all was over, General Hardin entered, and handed me a pair of scissors, requesting me to cut a few locks of hair for Mrs. Lincoln. I carefully cut and delivered them to General Hardin, and then secured one for myself which I have preserved as a sacred relic.”

Could scientists clone Lincoln from the lock? Forget about it. Hair follicles rarely contain viable DNA, the genetic material that maps human beings.

RR Auction said it vouches for the authentici­ty of the lock and telegram, in part based on a 1945 letter written by Dr. Todd’s son, James Todd. The letter says the clipping of hair “has remained entirely in the custody of our family since that time.” It last was sold in 1999.

Bobby Livingston, executive vice president of RR Auction, disputes the notion that the offerings – particular­ly the lock – are a little on the dark side.

“It’s not macabre. It’s a fascinatin­g artifact from a horrible tragedy,” he told The Associated Press in a telephone interview. “Collecting locks of hair was common after someone passed away. It’s such a piece of history. The assassinat­ion of President Lincoln was obviously such a shock.”

Historians say the telegram itself is significant because it disproved a conspiracy theory that then-secretary of War Edwin Stanton plotted to kill Lincoln because of their personal and political differences.

At the time, some claimed that Stanton ordered military communicat­ions to be disrupted, allowing Booth to briefly elude his captors. The time stamp on the dispatch shows that military telegraph lines were, in fact, functionin­g on the night Lincoln was assassinat­ed.

The telegram “is evidence to disprove the misinforma­tion and conspiracy theories in the Lincoln assassinat­ion,” Graff said.

 ?? BRICKETT/RR AUCTION VIA AP NIKKI ?? Boston-based RR Auction will sell off this lock of President Abraham Lincoln’s hair on Sept. 12. It was clipped during Lincoln’s postmortem examinatio­n in April 1865.
BRICKETT/RR AUCTION VIA AP NIKKI Boston-based RR Auction will sell off this lock of President Abraham Lincoln’s hair on Sept. 12. It was clipped during Lincoln’s postmortem examinatio­n in April 1865.

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