Was Lincoln Gay?
Was Abraham Lincoln a gay American?
The subject of the 16th president's sexuality has been
debated among scholars for years. They cite his troubled marriage to Mary Todd
and his youthful friendship with Joshua Speed, who shared his bed for four
years. Now, in a new book, C.A. Tripp also asserts that Lincoln had a
homosexual relationship with the captain of his bodyguards, David V. Derickson,
who shared his bed whenever Mary Todd was away.
In "The Intimate World of Abraham Lincoln," to be
published next month by Free Press, Mr. Tripp, a psychologist, influential gay
writer and former sex researcher for Dr. Alfred C. Kinsey, tries to resolve the
issue of Lincoln's sexuality once and for all. The author, who died in 2003,
two weeks after finishing the book, subjected almost every word ever written by
and about Lincoln to minute analysis. His conclusion is that America's greatest
president, the beacon of the Republican Party, was a gay man.
But his book has not stopped the debate. During the 10 years
of his research, Mr. Tripp shared his findings with other scholars. Many,
including the Harvard professor emeritus David Herbert Donald, who is
considered the definitive biographer of Lincoln, disagreed with him. Last year,
in his book "We Are Lincoln Men," Mr. Donald mentioned Mr. Tripp's
research and disputed his findings.
Mr. Tripp was the author of "The Homosexual
Matrix," a 1975 book that disputed the Freudian notion of homosexuality as
a personality disorder. In this new book, he says that early biographers of
Lincoln, including Carl Sandburg, sensed Lincoln's homosexuality. In the
preface to the original multi-volume edition of his acclaimed 1926 biography,
Sandburg wrote: "Month by month in stacks and bundles of fact and legend,
I found invisible companionships that surprised me. Perhaps a few of these
presences lurk and murmur in this book."
Sandburg also wrote that Lincoln and Joshua Speed had
"streaks of lavender, spots soft as May violets." Mr. Tripp said that
references to Lincoln's possible homosexuality were cut in the 1954 abridged
version of the biography. Mr. Tripp maintains that other writers, including Ida
Tarbell and Margaret Leech, also found evidence of Lincoln's homosexuality but
shied away from defining it as such or omitted crucial details.
Mr. Tripp cites Lincoln's extreme privacy and accounts by
those who knew him well. "He was not very fond of girls, as he seemed to
me," his stepmother, Sarah Bush Lincoln, told Lincoln's law partner
William Herndon. In addition, Lincoln was terrified of marriage to Mary Todd
and once broke off their relationship. They eventually had four children.
But in "We Are Lincoln Men" Mr. Donald wrote that
no one at the time ever suggested that he and Speed were sexual partners.
Herndon, who sometimes slept in the room with them, never mentioned a sexual
relationship. In frontier times, Mr. Donald wrote, space was tight and men
shared beds. And the correspondence between Lincoln and Speed was not that of
lovers, he maintained. Moreover, Lincoln alluded openly to their relationship,
saying, "I slept with Joshua for four years. " If they were lovers,
Mr. Donald wrote, Lincoln wouldn't have spoken so freely.
Mr. Tripp charts Lincoln's relationships with other men,
including Billy Greene, with whom Lincoln supposedly shared a bed in New Salem,
Ill. Herndon said Greene told him that Lincoln's thighs "were as perfect
as a human being Could be."
Lincoln's fellow lawyer Henry C. Whitney observed once that
Lincoln "wooed me to close intimacy and familiarity."
Then there is Lincoln's youthful humorous ballad from 1829,
"First Chronicles of Reuben," in which he refers to a man named Biley
marrying another man named Natty: "but Biley has married a boy/ the girls
he had tried on every Side/ but none could he get to agree/ all was in vain he
went home again/and sens that he is married to natty."
Mr. Tripp tries to debunk the popular opinion among scholars
that Lincoln's lifelong depressions were caused by the death of his first love,
Ann Rutledge. He writes that at the time she was supposedly involved with
Lincoln, she was engaged to John McNamar and that her name appears nowhere in
Lincoln's letters.
Mr. Donald also takes issue with the conclusion that Lincoln
had a sexual relationship with Derickson, his bodyguard at his presidential
retreat, the Soldiers' Home, outside Washington. Mr. Tripp writes that their
closeness stirred comment in Washington, and cites a diary entry from Nov. 16,
1862, by Virginia Woodbury Fox, wife of Gustavus Fox, assistant secretary of
the Navy. She recounted a friend's report: "'There is a Bucktail soldier
here devoted to the president, drives with him, and when Mrs. L. is not home, sleeps
with him.' What stuff!" But Mr. Donald writes that "What stuff!"
meant she was dismissing the rumor.
Mr. Tripp cites a second description of the relationship in
an 1895 history of Derickson's regiment, the 150th Pennsylvania Volunteers, by
Thomas Chamberlain, Derickson's commanding officer: "Captain Derickson, in
particular, advanced so far in the president's confidence and esteem that, in
Mrs. Lincoln's absence, he frequently spent the night at his cottage, sleeping
in the same bed with him and -- it is said -- making use of his Excellency's
night-shirts!"When Derickson was to be transferred, Lincoln pulled strings
to keep him. But Mr. Donald wrote that if their relationship was romantic, they
would not have separated so casually when Derickson finally left Washington in
1863.
Despite Mr. Donald's criticism, Mr. Tripp has won support
from other scholars. Jean H. Baker, a former student of Mr. Donald's and the
author of "Mary Todd Lincoln: a Biography" (W.W Norton, 1987), wrote
the introduction to the book. She said that Lincoln's homosexuality would
explain his tempestuous relationship with Mary Todd, and "some of her
agonies and anxieties over their relationship."
"Some of the tempers emerged because Lincoln was so
detached," Ms. Baker said in a telephone interview. "But I previously
thought he was detached because he was thinking great things about his court
cases, his debates with Douglas. Now I see there is another explanation."
"The length of time when these men continued to sleep
in the same bed and didn't have to was sort of an impropriety," Ms. Baker
said.
The question of Lincoln's sexuality is complicated by the
fact that the word homosexual did not find its way into print in English until
1892 and that "gayness" is very much a modern concept.
Ms. Baker said the focus of 19th-century moral opprobrium
was masturbation, not homosexuality. "Masturbation was considered more
dangerous," she said. "For homosexuals, there was a cloud over them,
but it seldom rained." People, she noted, "were accustomed to these
friendships between men."
In researching Lincoln, Mr. Tripp created a vast database of
cross-indexed material, now available at the Lincoln Library in Springfield,
Ill. He began the book working with the writer Philip Nobile, but they fell
out. Mr. Nobile has charged that Mr. Tripp plagiarized material written by him
and fabricated evidence of Lincoln's homosexuality.
"Tripp's book is a fraud," Mr. Nobile said in an
interview. He declined to say what was fraudulent, however, because he said he
was writing his own article about it.
After Mr. Nobile made his charges, Free Press delayed
publication. "We made some slight changes," said Adam Rothberg, a
spokesman for the publishing house, "and we are satisfied that we are
publishing a book that reflects Mr. Tripp's ideas and is supported by his
research and belief." The manuscript was edited by Mr. Tripp's friend
Lewis Gannett.
Larry Kramer, the author and AIDS activist, said that Mr.
Tripp's book "will change history."
"It's a revolutionary book because the most important
president in the history of the United States was gay," he said. "Now
maybe they'll leave us alone, all those people in the party he founded."
Michael B. Chesson, a professor at the University of
Massachusetts at Boston and another former student of Mr. Donald's, wrote an
afterword to Mr. Tripp's book supporting his thesis. The book is
"enormously important to understanding the whole person," he said in
an interview. He likened the criticism to early objections to Fawn Brodie's
1974 biography of Thomas Jefferson in which she claimed that Jefferson had
children with his slave Sally Hemings; later genetic studies suggested that
they had at least one child together.
Finding the truth is a sacred principal for historians, Mr.
Chesson said, adding, "It's incumbent on us as scholars to present to
readers material if historians have ignored it or swept it under the rug
because they don't agree with it."
Still, if Lincoln was gay, how did it affect his presidency?
Ms. Baker said that his outsider status would explain his independence and his
ability to take anti-Establishment positions like the issuing of the
Emancipation Proclamation. As a homosexual, she said, "he would be on the
margins of tradition."
"He is willing to be independent, to do what is
right," she said. "It is invested in his soul, in his psyche and in
his behavior."
Now, I have no real opinion about this for a couple of reasons: 1) Lincoln has been dead for a long time now, so if he was gay, it's not important anymore. 2) He was still an amazing president, and if he wanted to be with men, so be it. There's no problem with it. I just stumbled across this theory and thought it was interesting. I hope you did too.
See you all tomorrow.
Buh-bye.
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