Sneha Girap (Editor)

Lincoln Isham

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Children
  
None

Role
  
Mamie Lincoln's son

Name
  
Lincoln Isham

Parents
  
Mamie Lincoln

Lincoln Isham 38mediatumblrcom59bc36a16b74305386bf8f7cc821af
Born
  
June 8, 1892 (
1892-06-08
)
New York City, New York

Died
  
September 1, 1971, Dorset, Vermont, United States

Spouse
  
Leahalma "Lea" Correa (m. 1919), Marie Updyke

Grandparents
  
Robert Todd Lincoln, Mary Eunice Harlan

Great-grandparents
  
Abraham Lincoln, Mary Todd Lincoln, James Harlan

Similar People
  
Abraham Lincoln, Mamie Lincoln, Robert Todd Lincoln, Mary Lincoln Beckwith, Mary Eunice Harlan

Lincoln “Linc” Isham (June 8, 1892 – September 1, 1971) was a descendant of Abraham Lincoln. He was one of three great-grandchildren of Abraham Lincoln and the only child of Mary "Mamie" Lincoln.

Life and work

Isham was born to Mary "Mamie" and Charles Bradford Isham. A drop out of Harvard, a newspaper once said "his frail body was unequal to the strain". Later on, Isham was said to have been a secret operative for the U.S. government in World War II.

On August 30, 1919, Isham married Leahalma "Lea" Correa, a New York ‘Society Girl of Sephardic Spanish Descent’, and helped raise her daughter, Frances Mantley. He was a frequent visitor at Hildene. Once when he was young, he was allowed to drive his grandfather Robert Todd Lincoln's 1905 Thomas Automobile, but rolled it in a ditch.

Later in his life, Isham and his wife settled in Dorset, Vermont where they owned a 22-acre (9 ha) farm. A talented amateur musician, he would often play music while his wife wrote children’s stories. On September 1, 1971 at 12:30 am, Isham died at Putnam Memorial Hospital at the age of 79. He left most of his estate to the Red Cross, Salvation Army, and American Cancer Society. He also left a US$440,000 trust fund for his stepdaughter, and sent his grandmother's ‘Chicken Leg Coffee Set’ and ‘White House china’ to the Smithsonian. The rest of his family artifacts were auctioned off.

References

Lincoln Isham Wikipedia