On May 30, 1922, an elderly man in a dark coat stood at the foot of the Lincoln Memorial.
He was seventy-eight years old.
His hair was white.
His body was frail.
Two officers helped steady him as he prepared to climb the marble steps.
The monument behind him belonged to his father.
The weight he carried belonged to history.
His name was Robert Todd Lincoln, the last surviving son of Abraham Lincoln.
And that day, at the dedication of the Lincoln Memorial, he made his final public appearance.
President Warren G. Harding led the ceremony. Thousands gathered to honor the man who had guided the nation through civil war and given his life before the healing could truly begin.
But many eyes turned toward Robert.
He was not only a guest.
He was a living bridge.
A man whose childhood had touched the Lincoln home in Springfield and whose old age now stood before a national shrine.
Robert was born in 1843. He studied at Harvard, became a lawyer, and lived much of his life under a name that no private person could ever fully escape.
Being Abraham Lincoln’s son brought honor.
It also brought sorrow.
On April 14, 1865, when John Wilkes Booth shot President Lincoln at Ford’s Theatre, Robert was in Washington. He rushed to the Petersen House and sat through the night near his dying father.
He watched the president become a martyr.
He watched his father become memory.
Years later, tragedy found him again.
In 1881, Robert was serving as Secretary of War when President James Garfield was shot at a Washington railroad station. Robert was there, close enough to rush toward the wounded president as panic spread around him.
Garfield lingered for weeks before dying.
Then, in 1901, Robert arrived in Buffalo as President William McKinley was shot at the Pan-American Exposition. He was nearby when the news broke. McKinley survived for several days, then died from infection.
Three presidents.
Three assassinations.
Robert had been present or nearby for all of them.
The coincidence haunted him.
He once remarked that there seemed to be a certain fatality about presidential occasions when he was present.
His life held another strange thread.
As a young man, he once slipped between a moving train and the platform at a station in New Jersey. A stranger grabbed him by the collar and pulled him to safety.
The man who saved him was Edwin Booth, one of the most famous actors of his time.
He was also the brother of John Wilkes Booth.
History seemed to circle Robert Lincoln in ways almost too strange to believe.
Yet he was more than a witness to sorrow.
He served on General Ulysses S. Grant’s staff near the end of the Civil War.
He became a respected attorney in Chicago.
As Secretary of War, he helped oversee the army during a period of change.
Later, as minister to Great Britain, he represented the United States abroad with steadiness and restraint.
In business, he led the Pullman Palace Car Company through difficult years and remained one of the most prominent figures of his generation.
Still, he preferred privacy.
Perhaps he had seen too much of what public life could cost.
By the time he stood at the Lincoln Memorial in 1922, Robert was the last living child of Abraham and Mary Lincoln. His brothers had all died long before. His mother was gone. The world of the Civil War had faded into textbooks, monuments, and old men’s memories.
He alone still carried the family line back to the house in Springfield.
To the White House during war.
To the room where his father died.
Four years later, in 1926, Robert Todd Lincoln died in Vermont, just before his eighty-third birthday.
He had lived a life of privilege, service, grief, and restraint.
He had never sought to become a symbol.
But history made him one anyway.
In the photograph from the memorial dedication, he looks tired but composed, leaning on those beside him as he climbs.
Behind him is the seated figure of Abraham Lincoln carved in stone.
In front of him is a nation still trying to understand what that life had meant.
Robert Todd Lincoln was the last living link to the president who held the Union together.
And until the end, he carried that link quietly.