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  1. Edward Baker Lincoln (1846–1850), Abraham and Mary Lincoln’s second son, was never a healthy child. He had been ill throughout much of his father’s term in Congress, and though he periodically showed signs of improvement, he was probably suffering from a chronic illness.

  2. 20. Okt. 2021 · In the aftermath of the death of Colonel Edward Baker at the Battle of Ball’s Bluff in October 1861, President Lincoln sought the assistance of Pennsylvania’s governor in promoting the fallen officer’s son to a position in a Keystone State military unit."Death of Col. Edward Baker," by Currier & Ives. (Library of Congress, 1861)Following an embarrassing defeat at the Battle of Ball’s ...

  3. Friend of Abraham Lincoln and lawyer who came in second in the 1843 Whig Convention for Congress, Edward D. Baker subsequently took the following Congressional term and Abraham Lincoln took the third. Baker resigned from Congress to serve in the Mexican-American War; he had earlier served in the Black Hawk War.

  4. Biographie. Edward Baker Lincoln, né le 10 mars 1846 et mort le 1er février 1850, est le deuxième fils d' Abraham Lincoln et de Mary Todd Lincoln. Il est nommé d'après l'ami de Lincoln, Edward Dickinson Baker. Le National Park Service emploie « Eddie » comme surnom 1 et le nom est aussi sur sa pierre tombale 2 .

  5. 29. Dez. 1996 · Eddie Lincoln. Edward Baker Lincoln, second son of Abraham and Mary Todd Lincoln, was born March 10, 1846. (The daguerreotype to the left is alleged to be Eddie Lincoln; please see the note near the bottom of the page.) Regarding Eddie's arrival, Abraham wrote to his friend, Joshua Speed, "We have another boy, born the 10th of March last.

  6. Edward Baker Lincoln, the second child of Abraham Lincoln and Mary Todd Lincoln, was born in 1846. He was named after one of his father's political fiends, Edward Baker . Like two of his brothers, William Lincoln (1850-62) and Thomas Lincoln (1853-1871), Edward did not reach adulthood and died in 1850.

  7. 27. Mai 2013 · Later that summer Baker declined President Lincoln’s commission of brigadier general in order that he could continue to serve in the Senate. (The Ineligibility Clause of the U.S. Constitution puts limitations, among other things, on the civil offices a sitting member of Congress may hold; Senator Baker serving as a brigadier general during the Civil War may have violated that Clause).