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Robert Smith Todd

Robert Smith Todd (February 25, 1791 – July 17, 1849) was an American lawyer, soldier, banker, businessman and politician. He was the father of First Lady Mary Todd Lincoln.

Robert Smith Todd
Undated daguerreotype of Todd
Member of the Kentucky Senate
for Fayette County
In office
1848–1849
Personal details
Born(1791-02-25)February 25, 1791
Lexington, Kentucky, U.S.
DiedJuly 17, 1849(1849-07-17) (aged 58)
Liberty Heights, Kentucky
Political partyWhig
Spouses
Elizabeth Parker
(m. 1812; died 1825)
Elizabeth Humphreys
(m. 1826)
RelationsJohn Todd (uncle)
Robert Todd (uncle)
Children16, including Mary
Parent(s)Levi Todd
Jane Briggs Todd
Residence578 West Main Street
Alma materTransylvania College

Early life edit

Todd was born on February 25, 1791, in Lexington, a year before Kentucky became a state. He was the third of six sons born to Gen. Levi Todd (1756–1807) and Jane (née Briggs) Todd (1761–1800).[1] A year after his mother's death in 1800, his father remarried to Jane Holmes. Among the eleven children his father had between his two wives, was sister Jane Todd, who married congressman Daniel Breck.[2]

A source of much family pride, his father fought in the American Revolutionary War under the command of Brigadier General George Rogers Clark. After the War, his father and his uncles, John and Robert Todd, helped found present-day Lexington and became leading landowners and prominent statesmen in the state of Kentucky prior to its admission into the United States in 1792. Through his brother, Dr. John Todd, he was the uncle of U.S. Representative and Union General John Blair Smith Todd.[3]

When only fourteen years old, Todd began attending Transylvania College in Lexington, graduating four years later when he was eighteen.[1]

Career edit

Todd studied law, first by apprenticing in the office of Thomas Bodley, the clerk of Fayette County (and a cousin by marriage of his first wife, Eliza), and second with prominent jurist George Bibb, the chief justice of the Kentucky Court of Appeals (later a U.S. Senator and U.S. Secretary of the Treasury in the 1840s).[1] He was admitted to the bar on September 28, 1811, however, Todd never practiced, instead, choosing to go into business.[1]

Military service edit

Even before what became known as the War of 1812 started, Todd was active in a militia company that eventually merged into the Lexington light artillery of the 5th Kentucky Regiment. In the winter of 1811 to 1812, he asked to be recommended for a commission from Senator Henry Clay through Parker family members.[1]

In July 1812, when the 5th Kentucky Regiment left Lexington, it contained Robert, three of his brothers, and eight Todd cousins. Initially, Todd himself did not receive his officer commission, although his two older brothers did, so along with his younger brother Samuel, he enlisted as a private. Before he could leave Ohio though, he caught pneumonia and had to stay there to recover. After recovering (and during which time he returned home to marry Eliza Parker), he went to the Front and fought in the Battle of Frenchtown in Michigan in January 1813 and later, the Battle of the Thames (where Tecumseh died) in the fall of 1813.[1] Before the War ended, he was promoted to captain.[4]

Business and politics edit

After the War ended, Todd began running a dry goods store with his partner, Bird Smith, and frequently traveled to New Orleans to buy French brandies, Dutch gin, and green coffee, which they sold in Lexington and Todd used to entertain many prominent friends with at his home.[1] He later became a partner in a cotton factory in Fayette County and by 1835, he served as president of the Lexington branch of the Bank of Kentucky.[5] In 1827, he was appointed a trustee to his alma mater, Transylvania University, alongside Henry Clay and Charles A. Wickliffe.[1]

A close friend of John J. Crittenden,[a] he was also involved in local politics as a justice of the peace and sheriff.[5] Todd spent over twenty years working as the clerk of the Kentucky House of Representatives in Frankfort, Kentucky, before he was later elected as a Whig to the state assembly (for three terms[2]) then to a single term in the Kentucky Senate in 1848.[6]

Personal life edit

On November 13, 1812, Todd was married to his second cousin, Elizabeth "Eliza" Parker (1794–1825). Eliza was the daughter of Robert Porter Parker, a prominent landowner and merchant who had died in 1800. Eliza's mother, Elizabeth Rittenhouse (née Porter) Parker,[7] a daughter of Col. Andrew Porter remained unmarried until her death in 1850.[8][b] Together, Eliza and Robert were the parents of seven children, six of whom survived to maturity, before her death in 1825, from complications during George's birth. Their children were:[5]

  • Elizabeth Todd (1813–1888), who married Ninian Edwards Jr., the son of the Illinois Governor Ninian Edwards.[11]
  • Levi Oldham Todd (1816–1864), who married Louise Searle and remained in Lexington until his death.[12]
  • Frances Jane Todd (1817–1899), who married Dr. William Smith Wallace.[13]
  • Mary Ann Todd (1818–1882), who married Abraham Lincoln, later the 16th President of the United States.
  • Ann Maria Todd Smith (1820–1891), who married Clark Moulton Smith, a successful merchant.[13]
  • Robert Parker Todd (1821–1822), who died in infancy.[5]
  • George Rogers Clark Todd (1825–1900), a surgeon who served in a Confederate hospital in South Carolina.[14]

Six months after the death of his first wife, he proposed to Elizabeth "Betsy" Humphreys, and they married on November 1, 1826.[15] Betsy was the daughter of Dr. Alexander Humphreys and Mary (née Brown) Humphreys. Her maternal uncle was John Brown.[c] Together, Betsy and Robert were the parents of nine additional children, eight of whom survived to maturity:[5]

In 1832, Todd purchased a three-story, fourteen room, brick residence at 578 West Main Street in Lexington. The new Todd family home was built c. 1803 – c. 1806 as an inn and tavern and known as "The Sign of the Green Tree".[5] Today, the home has been preserved and is known as the Mary Todd Lincoln House.[5]

Todd died suddenly from cholera on July 17, 1849, aged 58, in Liberty Heights, a neighborhood in Lexington.[18]

Notes edit

  1. ^ Robert's cousin, John Harris Todd (1795–1824), a son of Supreme Court Justice Thomas Todd, was married to Maria Knox Innes (a daughter of Harry Innes). After John Harris Todd's death in 1824, Maria married Robert's close friend, and fellow widower, John J. Crittenden in 1826, two weeks after Robert's second marriage. Crittenden was the Secretary of State of Kentucky in the 1830s and later, after Todd's death, he served as Governor of Kentucky, U.S. Attorney General, a U.S. Representative and a U.S. Senator.[1]
  2. ^ Eliza's mother, Elizabeth Rittenhouse (née Porter) Parker was a half-sister of David Rittenhouse Porter (1788–1867), a Governor of Pennsylvania, George Bryan Porter (1791–1834), a Governor of the Michigan Territory, and James Madison Porter (1793–1862), a U.S. Secretary of War under President John Tyler.[9][10]
  3. ^ Betsy's uncle, John Brown, was a U.S. Representative and U.S. Senator from Kentucky who served as President pro tempore of the U.S. Senate. He was the father of Mason Brown (1799–1867), the Secretary of State of Kentucky, and Orlando Brown (1801–1867), the publisher and historian, both first cousins of Betsy.[5]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i Baker, Jean H. (1989). Mary Todd Lincoln: A Biography. W. W. Norton & Company. pp. 3, 8, 12, 26, 35. ISBN 9780393305869. Retrieved March 9, 2019.
  2. ^ a b c Green, Thomas Marshall (1889). "The Logans". Historic Families of Kentucky. R. Clarke & Company. pp. 215–216. Retrieved March 10, 2019.
  3. ^ Clift, Garrett Glenn (2009). Remember the Raisin! Kentucky and Kentuckians in the Battles and Massacre at Frenchtown, Michigan Territory, in the War of 1812. Genealogical Publishing Com. p. 130. ISBN 9780806345208. Dr. John Todd ... His brother, Robert S. Todd, was the father of Mary Todd, wife of Abraham Lincoln. ... Dr. John and Elizabeth Smith Todd had six children: John Blair Smith Todd ...
  4. ^ McClure's Magazine. S. S. McClure, Limited. 1898. p. 477. Retrieved March 10, 2019.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i "The Todd Family". www.mtlhouse.org. Mary Todd Lincoln House. Retrieved March 9, 2019.
  6. ^ Watson, Robert W. (2007). White House Studies Compendium. Nova Publishers. p. 335. ISBN 9781600215339. Retrieved March 10, 2019.
  7. ^ Evans, W. A. (2010). Mrs. Abraham Lincoln: A Study of Her Personality and Her Influence on Lincoln. SIU Press. ISBN 9780809385607. Retrieved August 23, 2017.
  8. ^ Sons of the Revolution Pennsylvania Society (1898). Decennial Register of the Pennsylvania Society of Sons of the Revolution: 1888-1898. F. B. Lippincott. p. 79. Retrieved August 23, 2017.
  9. ^ Unrue, Darlene Harbour (2010). Katherine Anne Porter Remembered. University of Alabama Press. ISBN 9780817316679. Retrieved August 23, 2017.
  10. ^ Blumenthal, Sidney (2017). A Self-Made Man: The Political Life of Abraham Lincoln Vol. I, 1809–1849. Simon and Schuster. p. 213. ISBN 9781476777269. Retrieved March 10, 2019.
  11. ^ "Eisenhower Thanks Mary Lincoln's Niece for the Gift of a 'Truly Historic Memento', 1952". Shapell Manuscript Collection. Shapell Manuscript Foundation.
  12. ^ Billings, Roger; Williams, Frank J. (2010). Abraham Lincoln, Esq.: The Legal Career of America's Greatest President. University Press of Kentucky. p. 212. ISBN 9780813139937. Retrieved March 10, 2019.
  13. ^ a b c d e f g Draper, Kenneth E. (2012). The Pike's Peakers and the Rocky Mountain Rangers: A History of Colorado in the Civil War. Xlibris Corporation. p. 34. ISBN 9781477102336. Retrieved March 10, 2019.
  14. ^ a b Neely, Jr (Winter 1996). "The Secret Treason of Abraham Lincoln's Brother-in-Law". Journal of the Abraham Lincoln Association. 17 (1): 39–43. ISSN 1945-7987. Retrieved March 10, 2019.
  15. ^ Sword, Wiley (2007). Southern Invincibility: A History of the Confederate Heart. St. Martin's Press. ISBN 9781429981408. Retrieved March 10, 2019.
  16. ^ "Elodie Todd Dawson Monument in Selma's Old Live Oak Cemetery". RuralSWAlabama.org. RuralSWAlabama. Retrieved August 20, 2017.
  17. ^ Kazek, Kelly (July 16, 2015). "13 of Alabama's most photographed cemetery monuments". al.com. Alabama Media Group. Retrieved August 20, 2017.
  18. ^ Ellison, Betty Boles (2014). The True Mary Todd Lincoln: A Biography. McFarland. p. 74. ISBN 9781476615172. Retrieved March 10, 2019.

External links edit

robert, smith, todd, february, 1791, july, 1849, american, lawyer, soldier, banker, businessman, politician, father, first, lady, mary, todd, lincoln, undated, daguerreotype, toddmember, kentucky, senatefor, fayette, countyin, office, 1848, 1849personal, detai. Robert Smith Todd February 25 1791 July 17 1849 was an American lawyer soldier banker businessman and politician He was the father of First Lady Mary Todd Lincoln Robert Smith ToddUndated daguerreotype of ToddMember of the Kentucky Senatefor Fayette CountyIn office 1848 1849Personal detailsBorn 1791 02 25 February 25 1791Lexington Kentucky U S DiedJuly 17 1849 1849 07 17 aged 58 Liberty Heights KentuckyPolitical partyWhigSpousesElizabeth Parker m 1812 died 1825 wbr Elizabeth Humphreys m 1826 wbr RelationsJohn Todd uncle Robert Todd uncle Children16 including MaryParent s Levi ToddJane Briggs ToddResidence578 West Main StreetAlma materTransylvania College Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 2 1 Military service 2 2 Business and politics 3 Personal life 4 Notes 5 References 6 External linksEarly life editTodd was born on February 25 1791 in Lexington a year before Kentucky became a state He was the third of six sons born to Gen Levi Todd 1756 1807 and Jane nee Briggs Todd 1761 1800 1 A year after his mother s death in 1800 his father remarried to Jane Holmes Among the eleven children his father had between his two wives was sister Jane Todd who married congressman Daniel Breck 2 A source of much family pride his father fought in the American Revolutionary War under the command of Brigadier General George Rogers Clark After the War his father and his uncles John and Robert Todd helped found present day Lexington and became leading landowners and prominent statesmen in the state of Kentucky prior to its admission into the United States in 1792 Through his brother Dr John Todd he was the uncle of U S Representative and Union General John Blair Smith Todd 3 When only fourteen years old Todd began attending Transylvania College in Lexington graduating four years later when he was eighteen 1 Career editTodd studied law first by apprenticing in the office of Thomas Bodley the clerk of Fayette County and a cousin by marriage of his first wife Eliza and second with prominent jurist George Bibb the chief justice of the Kentucky Court of Appeals later a U S Senator and U S Secretary of the Treasury in the 1840s 1 He was admitted to the bar on September 28 1811 however Todd never practiced instead choosing to go into business 1 Military service edit Even before what became known as the War of 1812 started Todd was active in a militia company that eventually merged into the Lexington light artillery of the 5th Kentucky Regiment In the winter of 1811 to 1812 he asked to be recommended for a commission from Senator Henry Clay through Parker family members 1 In July 1812 when the 5th Kentucky Regiment left Lexington it contained Robert three of his brothers and eight Todd cousins Initially Todd himself did not receive his officer commission although his two older brothers did so along with his younger brother Samuel he enlisted as a private Before he could leave Ohio though he caught pneumonia and had to stay there to recover After recovering and during which time he returned home to marry Eliza Parker he went to the Front and fought in the Battle of Frenchtown in Michigan in January 1813 and later the Battle of the Thames where Tecumseh died in the fall of 1813 1 Before the War ended he was promoted to captain 4 Business and politics edit After the War ended Todd began running a dry goods store with his partner Bird Smith and frequently traveled to New Orleans to buy French brandies Dutch gin and green coffee which they sold in Lexington and Todd used to entertain many prominent friends with at his home 1 He later became a partner in a cotton factory in Fayette County and by 1835 he served as president of the Lexington branch of the Bank of Kentucky 5 In 1827 he was appointed a trustee to his alma mater Transylvania University alongside Henry Clay and Charles A Wickliffe 1 A close friend of John J Crittenden a he was also involved in local politics as a justice of the peace and sheriff 5 Todd spent over twenty years working as the clerk of the Kentucky House of Representatives in Frankfort Kentucky before he was later elected as a Whig to the state assembly for three terms 2 then to a single term in the Kentucky Senate in 1848 6 Personal life editOn November 13 1812 Todd was married to his second cousin Elizabeth Eliza Parker 1794 1825 Eliza was the daughter of Robert Porter Parker a prominent landowner and merchant who had died in 1800 Eliza s mother Elizabeth Rittenhouse nee Porter Parker 7 a daughter of Col Andrew Porter remained unmarried until her death in 1850 8 b Together Eliza and Robert were the parents of seven children six of whom survived to maturity before her death in 1825 from complications during George s birth Their children were 5 Elizabeth Todd 1813 1888 who married Ninian Edwards Jr the son of the Illinois Governor Ninian Edwards 11 Levi Oldham Todd 1816 1864 who married Louise Searle and remained in Lexington until his death 12 Frances Jane Todd 1817 1899 who married Dr William Smith Wallace 13 Mary Ann Todd 1818 1882 who married Abraham Lincoln later the 16th President of the United States Ann Maria Todd Smith 1820 1891 who married Clark Moulton Smith a successful merchant 13 Robert Parker Todd 1821 1822 who died in infancy 5 George Rogers Clark Todd 1825 1900 a surgeon who served in a Confederate hospital in South Carolina 14 Six months after the death of his first wife he proposed to Elizabeth Betsy Humphreys and they married on November 1 1826 15 Betsy was the daughter of Dr Alexander Humphreys and Mary nee Brown Humphreys Her maternal uncle was John Brown c Together Betsy and Robert were the parents of nine additional children eight of whom survived to maturity 5 Robert Humphrey Todd 1827 1827 who died in infancy 5 Margaret Todd 1828 1904 who married Charles Henry Kellogg 14 Samuel Brown Todd 1830 1862 a Confederate soldier who was killed on the second day of the Battle of Shiloh 13 David Humphreys Todd 1832 1871 a commandant of the Richmond prisons and served in the 21st Louisiana Infantry Regiment 13 Martha Todd 1833 1868 who married C B White of Alabama 2 Emilie Pariet Todd 1836 1930 who married Confederate Gen Benjamin Hardin Helm and son of the Kentucky Governor John L Helm 13 Alexander Humphreys Todd 1839 1862 a Confederate soldier killed at the Battle of Baton Rouge 13 Elodie Breck Todd 1840 1877 who married Brig General Nathaniel Henry Rhodes Dawson later the third U S Commissioner of Education 16 17 Catherine Bodley Todd 1841 1875 who married William Wallace Herr 13 In 1832 Todd purchased a three story fourteen room brick residence at 578 West Main Street in Lexington The new Todd family home was built c 1803 c 1806 as an inn and tavern and known as The Sign of the Green Tree 5 Today the home has been preserved and is known as the Mary Todd Lincoln House 5 Todd died suddenly from cholera on July 17 1849 aged 58 in Liberty Heights a neighborhood in Lexington 18 Notes edit Robert s cousin John Harris Todd 1795 1824 a son of Supreme Court Justice Thomas Todd was married to Maria Knox Innes a daughter of Harry Innes After John Harris Todd s death in 1824 Maria married Robert s close friend and fellow widower John J Crittenden in 1826 two weeks after Robert s second marriage Crittenden was the Secretary of State of Kentucky in the 1830s and later after Todd s death he served as Governor of Kentucky U S Attorney General a U S Representative and a U S Senator 1 Eliza s mother Elizabeth Rittenhouse nee Porter Parker was a half sister of David Rittenhouse Porter 1788 1867 a Governor of Pennsylvania George Bryan Porter 1791 1834 a Governor of the Michigan Territory and James Madison Porter 1793 1862 a U S Secretary of War under President John Tyler 9 10 Betsy s uncle John Brown was a U S Representative and U S Senator from Kentucky who served as President pro tempore of the U S Senate He was the father of Mason Brown 1799 1867 the Secretary of State of Kentucky and Orlando Brown 1801 1867 the publisher and historian both first cousins of Betsy 5 References edit a b c d e f g h i Baker Jean H 1989 Mary Todd Lincoln A Biography W W Norton amp Company pp 3 8 12 26 35 ISBN 9780393305869 Retrieved March 9 2019 a b c Green Thomas Marshall 1889 The Logans Historic Families of Kentucky R Clarke amp Company pp 215 216 Retrieved March 10 2019 Clift Garrett Glenn 2009 Remember the Raisin Kentucky and Kentuckians in the Battles and Massacre at Frenchtown Michigan Territory in the War of 1812 Genealogical Publishing Com p 130 ISBN 9780806345208 Dr John Todd His brother Robert S Todd was the father of Mary Todd wife of Abraham Lincoln Dr John and Elizabeth Smith Todd had six children John Blair Smith Todd McClure s Magazine S S McClure Limited 1898 p 477 Retrieved March 10 2019 a b c d e f g h i The Todd Family www mtlhouse org Mary Todd Lincoln House Retrieved March 9 2019 Watson Robert W 2007 White House Studies Compendium Nova Publishers p 335 ISBN 9781600215339 Retrieved March 10 2019 Evans W A 2010 Mrs Abraham Lincoln A Study of Her Personality and Her Influence on Lincoln SIU Press ISBN 9780809385607 Retrieved August 23 2017 Sons of the Revolution Pennsylvania Society 1898 Decennial Register of the Pennsylvania Society of Sons of the Revolution 1888 1898 F B Lippincott p 79 Retrieved August 23 2017 Unrue Darlene Harbour 2010 Katherine Anne Porter Remembered University of Alabama Press ISBN 9780817316679 Retrieved August 23 2017 Blumenthal Sidney 2017 A Self Made Man The Political Life of Abraham Lincoln Vol I 1809 1849 Simon and Schuster p 213 ISBN 9781476777269 Retrieved March 10 2019 Eisenhower Thanks Mary Lincoln s Niece for the Gift of a Truly Historic Memento 1952 Shapell Manuscript Collection Shapell Manuscript Foundation Billings Roger Williams Frank J 2010 Abraham Lincoln Esq The Legal Career of America s Greatest President University Press of Kentucky p 212 ISBN 9780813139937 Retrieved March 10 2019 a b c d e f g Draper Kenneth E 2012 The Pike s Peakers and the Rocky Mountain Rangers A History of Colorado in the Civil War Xlibris Corporation p 34 ISBN 9781477102336 Retrieved March 10 2019 a b Neely Jr Winter 1996 The Secret Treason of Abraham Lincoln s Brother in Law Journal of the Abraham Lincoln Association 17 1 39 43 ISSN 1945 7987 Retrieved March 10 2019 Sword Wiley 2007 Southern Invincibility A History of the Confederate Heart St Martin s Press ISBN 9781429981408 Retrieved March 10 2019 Elodie Todd Dawson Monument in Selma s Old Live Oak Cemetery RuralSWAlabama org RuralSWAlabama Retrieved August 20 2017 Kazek Kelly July 16 2015 13 of Alabama s most photographed cemetery monuments al com Alabama Media Group Retrieved August 20 2017 Ellison Betty Boles 2014 The True Mary Todd Lincoln A Biography McFarland p 74 ISBN 9781476615172 Retrieved March 10 2019 External links editRobert Smith Todd at Find a Grave Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Robert Smith Todd amp oldid 1182935735, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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