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  1. 5 de feb. de 2017 · Added: Feb 6, 2000. Find a Grave Memorial ID: 8381. Source citation. Mother of U.S. President Abraham Lincoln. She was a Virginia native, moving to Kentucky, where she met and married Thomas Lincoln. She gave birth to three children. The Lincolns moved to Spencer County in southern Indiana in 1816 and constructed a cabin on Little Pigeon Creek.

  2. 17 de may. de 2024 · Nancy Hanks Lincoln (February 5, 1784 – October 5, 1818) was the mother of U.S. President Abraham Lincoln. Her marriage to Thomas Lincoln also produced a daughter, Sarah, and a son, Thomas Jr. When Nancy and Thomas had been married for just over 10 years, the family moved from Kentucky to western Perry County, Indiana, in 1816.

  3. She died when she was 35 of milk sickness on October 5, 1818. Abraham Lincoln was just 9 years old when his mother died. Nancy Lincoln was buried next to their closest neighbor, Nancy Rusher Brooner. Nancy Brooner had also become ill and died from milk sickness. Nancy Lincoln, took care of Nancy Brooner, but Nancy Brooner died two weeks before ...

  4. Sarah Lincoln (1807-1828) Abraham Lincoln (12 Feb 1809-15 Apr 1865) Thomas Lincoln, Jr. (1812-1812) Death. Nancy Hanks Lincoln died on 05 October 1818 from milk sickness at the Lincoln's home in Pigeon Creek, (now Spencer County), Indiana, at age 34. Thomas buried her on a hillside just south of the family farm.

  5. 10 de may. de 2014 · In the summer of 1818, when Abraham Lincoln was nine years old, his mother, Nancy, caught “the milk-sick,” a then-mysterious disease caused by drinking the milk of cows that had eaten white ...

  6. 13 de ene. de 2022 · Nancy Hanks Lincoln Gravesite. The grave of Nancy Hanks Lincoln today. Tombstone donated by Peter Studebaker in 1879. In 1868, a Civil War veteran named William Q. Corbin visited the boyhood home of his former commander-in-chief. Corbin was dismayed by the unkempt appearance of Nancy Hanks Lincoln’s gravesite and wrote a poem on the subject.

  7. 11 de abr. de 2006 · Among them was Nancy Hanks Lincoln, who died in 1818 leaving behind her family, including 9-year-old Abraham. In the March issue of the Indiana Magazine of History, Dr. Walter J. Daly, dean emeritus of the Indiana University School of Medicine, tells how milk sickness began to appear among early 19th-century Midwestern pioneers.