Fleetwood Lindley and the reburial of Abraham Lincoln

Fleetwood Lindley (1887-1963) was, at the time of his death, the last living person to have seen the face of President Abraham Lincoln.

A young Fleetwood Lindley

A young Fleetwood Lindley

Lindley was 14 years old* on Sept. 26, 1901, the day Lincoln’s casket was opened for the last time prior to being buried in a concrete-and-steel vault 10 feet below the floor of the Lincoln Tomb State Historic Site.

Lindley’s father, Joseph, was a member of the Lincoln Guard of Honor, a group of men who had safeguarded Lincoln’s casket since a bumbling gang of counterfeiters had attempted to steal the body in 1876.

Finally, Lincoln’s surviving son Robert asked in 1901 that his father be buried securely below the floor of the tomb. To verify the burial, a group of people gathered in the tomb’s burial chamber as the casket was opened one last time.

California State University history professor Ronald Rietveld talked with Fleetwood Lindley about the reburial in fall 1962. Rietveld remembered the conversation later for Abraham Lincoln Online.

Lincoln's coffin in 1901, center (pine casing at right). Note that coffin was not opened outside; it was opened in tomb's burial chamber. (Roger J. Norton)

Lincoln’s coffin in 1901, center (pine casing at right). Note that coffin was not opened outside; it was opened in tomb’s burial chamber. (Roger J. Norton)

“Fleetwood told me that his father called his school and his teacher suddenly dismissed him in the middle of class,” Rietveld wrote. “His father had asked that he hurry to the tomb, but to tell no one about his errand. He did not know what he would see …”

Only part of the casket’s cover was removed, exposing Lincoln’s face and the top of his body. Thirty-six years after his assassination, Lincoln’s complexion had become dark brown, but with a white powdery covering that Rietveld wrote was chalk that had been applied by an undertaker during the funeral trip in 1865. However, other sources have suggested the white substance was mold growing on the body.

Nonetheless, Lincoln was entirely recognizable, Lindley and others present at the opening confirmed. When the identification was complete, the casket was closed again and lowered into the final crypt. Fleetwood Lindley said he held one of the leather straps as the coffin was lowered.

“I was not scared at the time,” Lindley told an interviewer a few days before his death, “but I slept with Lincoln for the next six months.”

The Illinois State Journal identified 18 of the witnesses to the opening in its Sept. 27, 1901, edition. They were: Acting Gov. John Brenholt (Gov. Richard Yates Jr. was out of town), assistant state superintendent of public instruction J.H. Freeman, state Treasurer M.O. Williamson, Adjutant General Jasper Reece, Auditor J.S. McCullough, Floyd Whittemore, Jacob Thompson, Judge G.D. Monroe, Col. J.S. Culver (whose construction company had rebuilt the tomb over the previous year), tomb custodian Edward S. Johnson and his wife, Walter Robbins, Clinton Conkling, George Black, Joseph Lindley, and Mrs. Alfred Bayliss.

The two plumbers who opened the casket were Leon Hopkins, who also had opened the casket during  a transfer 17 years earlier, and Charles Willey. Fleetwood Lindley was not mentioned in the newspaper article.

Several of those present certified that the remains were Lincoln’s in notices published in local newspapers:

We … certify that the remains so viewed by us are in fact those of Abraham Lincoln: that we saw the same before they were first laid at rest; …

We further certify that we were present at the place and day first above mentioned and saw the same casket containing these sacred remains placed in their final resting place in the Lincoln monument ….

The certification was signed by Black, as a member of the National Lincoln Monument Association, and Reece, Conkling, Edward Johnson and Joseph Lindley, as members of the Lincoln Guard of Honor.

Fleetwood Lindley later became a Springfield florist. He also was active in Ansar Shrine, serving as potentate in 1951. He is buried at Oak Ridge Cemetery.

*Note: Many sources give Lindley’s age at the time of the burial as 13; however, he was born on April 4, 1889 1887, making 14 the correct age. schs logo (2)

Further note: SangamonLink thanks commenter D. Finnigan for catching our error regarding the year Lindley was born.

Original content copyright Sangamon County Historical Society. You are free to republish this content as long as credit is given to the Society.

 

 

 

 

 

 

This entry was posted in Lincoln Tomb, Lincoln, Abraham and tagged . Bookmark the permalink.

4 Responses to Fleetwood Lindley and the reburial of Abraham Lincoln

  1. D. Finnigan says:

    I believe Fleetwood’s year of birth is 1887, not 1889

    • editor says:

      Mr./Ms. Finnigan: You are absolutely correct. My math was accurate in the original post — Mr. Lindley was 14 years old when he viewed Lincoln’s corpse — but I somehow reported the wrong birth year … TWICE. The entry has been corrected. Many thanks for your careful reading.

      • Ed Wiessing says:

        Just to reinforce: Fleetwood Lindley’s WWI AND WWII draft registration information list his birthdate as 4 April 1887. His 1909 application for a US passport in 1909 also shows his birthdate as 4 April 1887.

        These should supersede any death record, tombstone engraving or obituary account, as Lindley personally affixed his signature to each of these documents.

        Something else worth mentioning perhaps is that on 10 April 1909, when he applied for his passport, three Herndons (Richard Fleetwood Herndon – age 19; Obed Lewis Herndon – age 21; and John William Herndon – age 16) applied the same day, and the witness for all four applicants was Joseph Bunn of the State National Bank.

        Fleetwood Lindsey’s middle name was also Herndon – kind of ironic, as that was Lincoln’s law partner’s name. However, it doesn’t appear they descended from William Herndon, as the father of the three Herndon boys mentioned here was Richard Fleetwood Herndon. He was the brother of Fleetwood Lindley’s mother.

        • editor says:

          Mr. Wiessing: Thanks for all the additional information. I had wondered whether there was a connection to Billy Herndon.

Leave a Reply to D. Finnigan Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *