The building's elevation was lower than its water supply (the blue star-a natural spring), which was contaminated by a higher field (the green star) in which Washington's servants tossed the contents of the city's chamber pots. It was a series of step downs with dangers no one understood at the time.
William Henry Harrison (1773 - 1841)
White House Steps by Jeanne Arnieri
The Lincoln boys came down with typhoid fever in February, 1862, 11 months after they moved into the Mansion. The long-term polluted sanitary system was made more dangerous by Army camps a few blocks from the White House with their open sewers.
William Wallace Lincoln 1850-1862
Photo in early 1862 by the Brady Studios.
"Bud" Horatio Nelson Taft Jr. (1847-1915)
Bud was a few years older than Willie.
White House Steps by Becky Brown
Rebecca Rossignol Holiday Pomroy (1817-1884)
Abraham Lincoln asked Dorothy Dix, who supervised Union nurses, to recommend a nurse to help out. Dix had kept an eye on Rebecca Pomroy, who'd been treating typhoid patients in the Union hospitals in Washington. She was an empathetic, calm and consoling woman with a strong Protestant faith who had suffered too many illnesses and deaths in her own family shortly before the war.
Lincoln & Willie in Springfield
Willie is recalled as Abraham Lincoln's favorite child, much like him in his level demeanor and precise intelligence. Bud Taft's father Horatio N. Taft thought Willie a wise and amiable boy. Julia Taft remembered him as the "most lovable boy I ever knew."
"I stood at the foot of the bed, my eyes full of tears, looking at the man in silent, awe-stricken wonder,” recalled Elizabeth Keckley, a formerly enslaved woman who became Mary Lincoln’s seamstress and confident during the Civil War.
“His grief unnerved him, and made him a weak, passive child. I did not dream that his rugged nature could be so moved."
Lincoln historian Michael Burlingame's chapter on Willie's death in
When Life Strikes the President
Nurse Pomroy
Library of Congress
Rebecca Pomroy's enameled earrings
The Library of Congress has several objects that once
were Rebecca's:
Once Tad recovered and his parents adjusted in their own ways to their loss Rebecca went back to her hospital but periodically visited the White House when they needed her or she needed a rest.
"The green pools that used to distill malaria beneath your windows are now all sucked into the great sewers, planted at last in the foundations of the city."
White House Steps by Jeanne Arnieri
The Block
White House Steps
Log Cabin variations were extremely popular after 1870 or so with
different shading patterns. This one using concentric light and dark logs was
published by the Ladies Art Company about 1890 as White House Steps.
Their pattern was a little off. It's redrawn here to have consistent-sized side logs.
Detail of a top from about 1900
Further Reading:
Read a preview of Michael Burlingame's chapter here:
https://books.google.com/books?id=0Nc-DgAAQBAJ&printsec=frontcover&dq=willie+lincoln+death+president&hl=en&newbks=1&newbks_redir=0&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwjKsp25nK_-AhWjlWoFHSbxAKMQ6AF6BAgGEAI#v=onepage&q&f=false
Today we might call this mid-20th-century quilt from an online auction Housetops.
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