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The Lincolns moved into the White House in March of 1861. Willie and Tad had a great time in their new home. Willie was calmer and more conscientious than his younger brother. The boys loved animals, and gifts of dogs, rabbits, goats, and ponies poured into the White House. Because of the times, war-related games were popular with the boys, and they even constructed a fort on the White House roof. Willie and Tad often accompanied their father when he reviewed the troops in their camps. Additionally, they went with their mother when she took fruit, books, papers, etc. to the soldiers.
Pictured to the left are Horatio Nelson Taft, Jr. ("Bud") and Halsey Cook Taft ("Holly") who were close friends and playmates of the Lincoln boys in 1861 and early 1862.
Mrs. Lincoln hired a tutor for the boys. Willie's mind was amazingly mature for his age. Whereas Tad seems to have disliked the lessons, Willie loved learning. Just before Christmas, 1861, Willie turned 11. His future seemed extremely bright.
Shortly thereafter Willie became ill. His condition fluctuated from day to day. Mostly likely the illness was typhoid fever. Gradually Willie weakened. Both parents spent much time at his bedside. Finally, on Thursday, February 20, 1862, at 5:00 P.M. the young boy passed away. Abraham said, "My poor boy. He was too good for this earth. God has called him home. I know that he is much better off in heaven, but then we loved him so. It is hard, hard to have him die!"
Willie's coffin was placed in a crypt of the Carroll tomb at Oak Hill Cemetery in Washington. (The clerk of the Supreme Court, Thomas Carroll, offered space in the Carroll tomb for Willie.) After the assassination of President Lincoln in 1865, Willie's casket was removed from the crypt, and his coffin was placed on the Lincoln funeral train that traveled back to Springfield. Willie's remains were placed in the public receiving vault at Oak Ridge Cemetery along with his father on May 4, 1865. On December 21, 1865, the remains were moved to a temporary tomb. On September 19, 1871, the remains of Abraham, Eddie, and Willie were moved to the permanent tomb.
Sources: Lincoln's Sons by Ruth Painter Randall, Mary Todd Lincoln: A Biography by Jean H. Baker, and Twenty Days by Dorothy Meserve Kunhardt and Philip B. Kunhardt, Jr. Although the main focus of John D. Weaver's Tad Lincoln: Mischief Maker in the White House is Tad, the book also contains lots of information about Willie. The same is true for Julia Taft Bayne's Tad Lincoln's Father. Julia Taft Bayne was the older sister of the Taft boys pictured above, and her book is the source of that picture.
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