Sunday, October 15, 2017

DATELINE TOOBWORLD: THE STORY OF GRACE BEDELL



According to 'CBS Sunday Morning', today (Sunday, October 15, 2017) marks the 157th anniversary of the letter written by ten-year-old Grace Bedell to Abraham Lincoln.

You've probably heard of her, but may not remember her name.

From Wikipedia:
Grace Greenwood Bedell Billings (November 4, 1848 – November 2, 1936)[1] was an American woman, notable as the person whose correspondence, at the age of eleven, encouraged Abraham Lincoln to grow his iconic beard. Lincoln later met with Bedell.

On October 15, 1860, a few weeks before Lincoln was elected President of the United States, Grace Bedell sent him a letter from Westfield, New York, urging him to grow a beard to improve his appearance.[2] Lincoln responded in a letter on October 19, 1860, making no promises. However, within a month, he grew a full beard.

In an 1878 interview with a local newspaper of Westfield, Grace Bedell-Billings recalled what prompted her to write the letter.

"We were at that time residing at Westfield, N.Y. My father, who was a staunch Republican, brought one day to me—who followed in his footsteps and was a zealous champion of Mr. Lincoln—a picture of 'Lincoln and Hamlin,' one of those coarse exaggerated likenesses which it seems the fate of our long-suffering people in such contents. You are familiar with Mr. Lincoln's physiognomy, and remember the high forehead over those sadly pathetic eyes, the angular lower face with the deep cut lines about the mouth. As I regarded the picture, I said to my mother 'He would look better if he wore whiskers, and I mean to write and tell him so.'"
Hon A B [sic] Lincoln...Dear SirMy father has just home from the fair and brought home your picture and Mr. Hamlin's. I am a little girl only 11 years old, but want you should be President of the United States very much so I hope you wont think me very bold to write to such a great man as you are. Have you any little girls about as large as I am if so give them my love and tell her to write to me if you cannot answer this letter. I have yet got four brothers and part of them will vote for you any way and if you let your whiskers grow I will try and get the rest of them to vote for you you would look a great deal better for your face is so thin. All the ladies like whiskers and they would tease their husbands to vote for you and then you would be President. My father is going to vote for you and if I was a man I would vote for you to [sic] but I will try to get every one to vote for you that I can I think that rail fence around your picture makes it look very pretty I have got a little baby sister she is nine weeks old and is just as cunning as can be. When you direct your letter direct to Grace Bedell Westfield Chautauqua County New York.I must not write any more answer this letter right off Good byeGrace Bedell

The February 19, 1861 edition of the New York World recounted the meeting as follows:

"At Westfield an interesting incident occurred. Shortly after his nomination Mr. Lincoln had received from that place a letter from a little girl, who urged him, as a means of improving his personal appearance, to wear whiskers. Mr. Lincoln at the time replied, stating that although he was obliged by the suggestion, he feared his habits of life were too fixed to admit of even so slight a change as that which letting his beard grow involved. To-day, on reaching the place, he related the incident, and said that if that young lady was in the crowd he should be glad to see her. There was a momentary commotion, in the midst of which an old man, struggling through the crowd, approached, leading his daughter, a girl of apparently twelve or thirteen years of age, whom he introduced to Mr. Lincoln as his Westfield correspondent. Mr. Lincoln stooped down and kissed the child, and talked with her for some minutes. Her advice had not been thrown away upon the rugged chieftain. A beard of several months' growth covers (perhaps adorns) the lower part of his face. The young girl's peachy cheek must have been tickled with a stiff whisker, for the growth of which she was herself responsible."


You may have seen her defining moment in life dramatized for television in the early 1970s, but you wouldn't have known her name was Grace Bedell.  In "The Great Man's Whiskers", she was played by Cindy Eilbacher but was named Elizabeth Cooper.

I just don't understand this.  It's almost as if it was a slap in the face to the memory of Grace Bedell, erasing her from memory via televised history.  Beyond that, it's an insult to girls named Grace and to the family name of Bedell.  Such a distinctive loverly name - why homogenize it into something bland and unmemorable?  No offense to the Elizabeths and Coopers out there, but there are so many other TV characters with those names.

So this stands as the reason why I cannot in good faith incorporate this TV movie into Earth Prime-Time, the main Toobworld.  Of course, it counts toward the membership of Abraham Lincoln into the TVXOHOF as a multiversal back in February of 1999, one of the founding members of the official Hall.  (Dennis Weaver played the role.)

Maybe someday the life of Grace Bedell will be dramatized again on TV... and hopefully under her real name.


BCnU!

 

No comments: