- Abraham Lincoln name is in the
Wrestling Hall of Fame
President Lincoln’s name wasn't quite a
WWE wrestler but courtesy of his long arms as a young lad, he lost just a
single match in 300 matches he took part in. He even once challenged onlookers
to try him: “I’m the big buck of this lick. If any of you want to try it, come
on and whet your horns.” These achievements earned him a top place in the
National Wrestling Hall of Fame.
- There was once a futile effort by
grave robbers to make off with Abraham Lincoln’s Corpse
In the year 1876, protection came to
Abraham Lincoln’s way by Secret Service. If only it would have come earlier!
Why? A mob of fraudsters who hailed from Chicago wanted to snatch his body from
its tomb. Its only protection was a single padlock’s, anyway. That was in Oak
Ridge Cemetery located in Springfield, Illinois state. Their aim was to hold
the corpse and seek a $200,000 ransom as well as secure a release of the mob’s
best fraudster from prison. Secret Service intervened and the body was moved to
an unmarked grave and was secured within steel cage.
- Abraham Lincoln goes down in History
as the only president to have secured a patent
After Benjamin Franklin noted a need to
invent a way to unload steamboats, which ran ashore on low shoals, Lincoln came
to his rescue. He had an innate love for machines and so he designed a way of
aiding vessels stay afloat, while navigating shallow waters. This he did by
applying empty metal air compartments to the sides of boats and thus he got a
Patent Number 6,469 in the year 1849 for the innovation.
- Poisoned Milk killed President
Lincoln’s mother
Abraham Lincoln’s mother, Nancy, passed
on while he was 9. Her cause of death was an unknown sickness connected to milk
consumption, which was a major outbreak in Southern Indiana at the time. This
was later to be discovered to be an ailment emanating from drinking milk from
cows that had fed on lethal white snakeroot.
- Abraham Lincoln never slept in the
popular Lincoln’s Bedroom
While he was president of the US, he used
the current Lincoln Bedroom as a mere personal office. There, he would meet
members of the Cabinet as well as sign documents, one of which is the
Emancipation Proclamation.