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  1. Birthplace: Hingham, Plymouth County, Massachusetts. Death: June 15, 1852 (88) Dennysville, Washington County, Maine, USA. Place of Burial: Dennysville Cemetery Dennysville, Washington County, Maine, USA. Immediate Family: Son of Maj. Gen. Benjamin Lincoln (Continental Army) and Mary Lincoln.

    • December 30, 1763
    • June 15, 1852
  2. Lincoln, Hon. Theodore, Dennysville, 15 June, age 89. He was a son of Gen. Benjamin L. of Hingham; was of the class of 1785 at Harvard. There remain on the catalogue but three survivors of older date. Immediately after leaving college, he removed to Dennysville, in Maine, where he has ever since resided.

  3. The official leaders of the Republican party today are the spiritual heirs of the men who warred against Lincoln, who railed at him as a revolutionist, who denounced him for assailing the Supreme Court, who accused him of being a radical, an innovator, an opponent of the Constitution, and an enemy of property.

  4. President Lincoln appointed five Justices to the United States Supreme Court during a critical period in American history. When he assumed the presidency in 1861 the Court had only one vacancy. However, Justice McLean soon died and Justice Campbell resigned to join the Southern Confederacy.

  5. May 4, 2022 · Benjamin Lincoln (January 24, 1733 – May 9, 1810) was an American Army officer. He served as a Major General in the Continental Army during the American Revolutionary War. He is notable for overseeing the largest US surrender of the war at Siege of Charleston and for being the officer who formally accepted the British surrender at Yorktown.

    • Hingham, Province of Massachusetts
    • Mary Lincoln
    • Province of Massachusetts
    • January 24, 1733
  6. Jan 22, 2013 · From Lincoln's time forward, most presidents have invoked God in their inaugural speeches. Theodore Roosevelt was a notable exception.

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  8. 4 days ago · July 4, 2024. Judge Learned Hand. Photograph from Bettmann / Getty. On a spring Sunday, eighty years ago in Manhattan’s Central Park, a hundred and fifty thousand newly naturalized citizens ...

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