Washington Whirlwind #6
Columbian Puzzle by Denniele Bohannon
Columbian Puzzle recalls the District of Columbia where
the Lincolns lived for the four years of Civil War.
One puzzle:
Why does it have such a shape?
The flat roof of the Executive Mansion with a parapet, a protective
railing, was the play space for the Taft & Lincoln boys.
Columbian Puzzle also recalls the Lincoln's youngest son.
There was something wrong.
Thomas Lincoln (1853-1871)
He may be 3 or 4 in this photograph.
Their youngest was born when Mary Todd Lincoln was about 35. They'd lost 3-year-old Edward to disease a few years earlier and this last child was much indulged and well-loved.
Columbian Puzzle by Jeanne Arnieri
His mother indicated she suffered from giving birth to Tad with his large head, later seeking cures in European spas for never named gynecological problems. She alluded to this last child's birth as the cause of her "headaches" and water-cure visits.
Tad at about 16
Tad at 18
A cleft lip can cause speech pronunciation problems, which afflicted Tad. White House observers noted his unintelligible speech. The cleft palate was a more serious problem with teeth growing in askew causing chewing and swallowing problems (also recorded by White House observers who noted he required a special easy-to-ingest diet.) A cleft palate can allow food to enter sinus passages and airways causing infection. Tad died at 18 of some kind of a lung problem, the kind of thing one might worry about with a boy whose food processing was a problem.
Columbian Puzzle by Becky Brown
We have noted Tad's mischievousness, which might be more clinically described as hyperactivity and an attention deficit disorder, commonly accompanied by learning disabilities. Tad did not learn to read until he was 13 years old, a milestone noted by his mother in 1866.
"Taddie ...Can now read....he did not know his letters when he came here."(Beyond learning his letters did he ever actually learn to read?)
Lincoln and Tad looking at a catalog, photographed by
the Brady Studios.
His reading and other academic deficiencies were the despair of White House tutors who noted his inability to pay attention. There was also the problem of parental indulgence with his father preferring to watch him play rather than suffer with lessons.
John M. Hutchinson, a speech pathologist by training and Lincoln historian, addresses the puzzle of Tad Lincoln's speech and related problems here:
"Given the evidence...it is probable that Tad Lincoln had a complex speech and language disorder that today would have necessitated early and extensive intervention by a speech/language pathologist to address, at a minimum, a delay in language development and the developmental articulation problem."
The Block
The Columbian Puzzles: "Why is the District of Columbia such an odd shape?" is more easily explained than Tad Lincoln's learning and physical problems.
Turkey red and white solids, inscribed 1896
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