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Revision as of 13:10, 23 December 2004 by Noah Peters (talk | contribs)(diff) ← Previous revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)There is debate about the possibility that Abraham Lincoln may have been homosexual or bisexual.
Abraham Lincoln is known to have lived for four years with Joshua Speed, when both men were in their twenties. They shared a bed during these years and developed a friendship that would last until their deaths. A number of biographers, beginning with Carl Sandburg in 1926, have suggested or implied that this relationship was homosexual, though others have argued that Lincoln and Speed shared a bed purely because of their poor financial circumstances, and that at the time it was not necessarily unusual for two men to share a bed.
When Speed left Lincoln and returned to Kentucky after their four years of cohabitation, Lincoln is believed to have suffered something approaching a nervous breakdown. He displayed remarkable intimacy and affection in his correspondence with Speed, more so even than in his correspondence with his wife.
Lincoln shared beds with several other men during his life. Amongst these was an army officer, David Derickson, assigned to Lincoln's bodyguard in 1862. Several sources characterise the relationship between the two as intimiate, and it was the subject of gossip in Washington at the time. They shared a bed during the absences of Lincoln's wife, until Derickson was promoted in 1863. Again, some biographers have interpreted this as a homosexual affair. A recent study has also pointed to homosexual themes in bawdy poetry written by the teenage Lincoln, especially a poem in which a boy marries another boy:
'But Biley has married a boy / The girlies he tried on every side / But none could he get to agree / All was in vain he went home again / And sens that he is married to Natty.'
The theory is explored in detail in a number of works, most recently in the book The Intimate World of Abraham Lincoln by C. A. Tripp (ISBN 0743266390). David Herbert Donald (considered by many to be Lincoln's definitive biographer) disputes the findings, but Jean H. Baker, a student of David Herbert Donald and author of Mary Todd Lincoln: A Biography (ISBN 0393305864) wrote the introduction to Tripp's book and supports his claims, and Michael B. Chesson, professor at the University of Massachusetts and another student of David Herbert Donald wrote the afterward and supports the book's thesis.
C. A. Tripp began the book with Philip Nobile, but they had a falling out. The N.Y. Times quotes Mr. Nobile saying "Tripp's book is a fraud" but he provided no details. Larry Kramer author and AIDS activist said that C. A. Tripp's book will "change history."
Critics of the theory that Lincoln was gay note that Lincoln married and had three children.