Abraham Lincoln was elected to Congress in 1846.John F. Kennedy was elected to Congress in 1946.
Abraham Lincoln was elected President in 1860. John F. Kennedy was elected President in 1960.
The names Lincoln and Kennedy each contain seven letters.
Both were particularly concerned with civil rights.
Both wives lost their children while living in the White House.
Both Presidents were shot on a Friday. Both Presidents were shot in the head.
Lincoln's secretary was named Kennedy. Kennedy's secretary was named Lincoln.
Both were assassinated by Southerners. Both were succeeded by Southerners.
Both successors were named Johnson.
Andrew Johnson, who succeeded Lincoln, was born in 1808. Lyndon Johnson, who succeeded Kennedy, was born in 1908.
John Wilkes Booth, who assassinated Lincoln, was born in 1839. Lee Harvey Oswald, who assassinated Kennedy, was born in 1939.
Both assassins were known by their three names. Both names are comprised of fifteen letters.
Lincoln was shot at the theater named 'Kennedy'. Kennedy was shot in a car called 'Lincoln'.
Booth ran from the theater and was caught in a warehouse. Oswald ran from a warehouse and was caught in a theater.
Booth and Oswald were assassinated before their trials.
And here's the kicker…
A week before Lincoln was shot, he was in Monroe, Maryland.
A week before Kennedy was shot, he was in Marilyn Monroe.
via eMail, Thu, 7 Sep 2000 21:49:27 EDTComparisons:Kennedy and Lincoln's killings
Many of these lists in circulation contain errors. Lincoln didn't have a secretary named Kennedy. Lincoln was not shot in a theater named Kennedy. Booth was born in 1838, not 1839. No such town as Monroe, Maryland, even exists. I am sending you a couple of lists of Kennedy/Lincoln similarities that I believe to be historically accurate.
Sincerely, Roger Norton
Here's a small list:
Abraham Lincoln was elected to Congress in 1846. John F. Kennedy was elected to Congress in 1946.
Abraham Lincoln was elected President in 1860. John F. Kennedy was elected President in 1960.
The names Lincoln and Kennedy each contain seven letters.
Both were particularly concerned with civil rights.
Both their wives lost their children while living in the White House.
Both Presidents were shot on a Friday.
Both were shot in the head.
Both were shot in the presence of their wives.
Both were assassinated by Southerners.
Both were succeeded by Southerners.
Both successors were named Johnson.
Andrew Johnson, who succeeded Lincoln, was born in 1808. Lyndon Johnson, who succeeded Kennedy, was born in 1908.
John Wilkes Booth, who assassinated Lincoln, was born in 1838. Lee Harvey Oswald, who assassinated Kennedy, was born in 1939.
Both assassins were known by their three names. Both names comprise fifteen letters.
Booth ran from the theater and was captured in a warehouse. Oswald ran from the warehouse and was captured in a theater.
To cap it all off, Booth and Oswald were assassinated before their trials.
Similarities between Presidents Abraham Lincoln and John Kennedy
Life:- Both presidents had seven letters in their last names.
- Both were over 6 feet tall.
- Both were athletic men.
- Both enjoyed sitting in rocking chairs.
- Both were known for their quick wit.
- Both liked to quote the Bible.
- Both liked to quote Shakespeare.
- Both could express themselves well. Kennedy won the Pulitzer Prize and many of Lincoln's works are considered classics.
- Both seemed to have lazy eye muscles which would sometimes cause one to deviate.
- Both suffered from genetic diseases. It is suspected that Lincoln had Marfan's disease and Kennedy suffered from Addison's disease.
- Both served in the military. Lincoln was a scout captain in the Black Hawk War and Kennedy served as a naval lieutenant in World War II.
- Both were boat captains. Lincoln was skipper of the Talisman, a Mississippi River boat, and Kennedy was skipper of PT 109.
- Neither president was known to carry money and constantly borrowed funds from friends.
- Both had no fear of their mortality and disdained bodyguards.
- Both often stated how easy it would be to shoot a president.
- Both received many letters threatening their lives. In the year of his death, Lincoln received over 80 letters. In the year of his death, Kennedy received over 800 letters.
- Both presidents were shot in the head.
- Both were shot on a Friday.
- In each case, that Friday was one before a holiday. Linclon was shot on Good Friday and Kennedy was shot on the Friday before Thanksgiving.
- Both were seated beside their wives when shot.
- Neither Mrs. Lincoln nor Mrs. Kennedy were injured.
- Both wives held the bullet-torn heads of their husbands.
- Both presidents were in the company of another couple when shot.
- In each case, the man was injured but not fatally. Major Rathbone was slashed by a knife and Governor Connolly was shot.
- Lincoln was shot at Ford's Theatre. Kennedy was shot in a Ford product, a Lincoln limousine.
- Lincoln sat in Box 7 at Ford's Theatre. Kennedy rode in car 7 in the Dallas motorcade.
- Both presidents received the best medical attention available.
- Both received closed chest massage.
- Both presidents died in a place with the initials P and H. Lincoln died in the Peterson House and Kennedy died in Parkland Hospital.
- The wives of both presidents were with them when they died.
- Autopsies were performed on both presidents.
- Both autopsies were performed by military personnel.
- Both Lincoln and Kennedy were buried in mahogany caskets.
- The bodies of both presients rested on the same catafalque and caisson.
- Mrs. Kennedy insisted that her husband's funeral mirror Lincoln's as closely as possible.
- Both assassins had three names: John Wilkes Booth and Lee Harvey Oswald.
- There of 15 letters in each assassin's name.
- Both assassins struck in their mid-twenties. Booth was born in 1838 and Oswald was born in 1939.
- Each assassin lacked a strong father figure in his life. Booth's father died when he was 13 years old and Oswald's died before he was born.
- Each assassin had two brothers whose careers he coveted. Booth's two brothers were more successful actors and Oswald envied his brothers' military lives.
- Both assassins were privates in the military. Booth was a private in Virginia militia and Oswald was a private in the Marine Corps.
- Both assassins were born in the South.
- Both assassins were known sympathizers to enemies of the United States. Booth supported the Confederacy and Oswald was a Marxist.
- Both assassins were fond of writing down their thoughts; Booth kept a diary and Oswald kept a journal.
- Both assassins often used aliases. Booth frequently used "J. Wilkes" and Oswald used the name "Alek J. Hidell."
- Both assassins knew of their victims' whereabouts by reading of it in the newspapers.
- Both assassins planned their deed well.
- Booth shot Lincoln at a theatre and was cornered in a warehouse. Oswald shot Kennedy from a warehouse and was cornered in a theatre.
- The handyman, bill distributor, and part-time concession operator at Ford's Theatre was Joseph "Peanuts John" Burroughs. The concession stand operator at the Texas Theatre was Butch Burroughs.
- Booth was aided in his escape from Washington by Oswald (Oswell) Swan and Lewis Paine (also known as Payne). Oswald got his job at the School- book Depository through the aid of Mrs. Ruth Paine, his landlady.
- Each assassin was detained by an officer named Baker. Lt. Luther B. Baker was the leader of the cavalry patrol which trapped Booth at Garrett's barn. Officer Marion L. Baker, a Dallas motorcycle patrolman, briefly detained Oswald on the second floor of the School Depository until he learned that he worked there.
- Both assassins envisioned their deeds as a way to glory and fame.
- Both assassins received their fame posthumously since they were shot down before they achieved it.
- Both assassins were killed with a single shot from a Colt revolver.
- Both assassins were shot in a blaze of light–Booth after the barn was set afire and Oswald in front of the television cameras.
- Both assassins were shot before their version of the presidential assassination could be learned.
- Both assassins were shot by religious men; Booth was killed by Boston Corbett and Oswald was killed by Jack Ruby.
- Both of these assassins had changed their names. Corbett's real first name was Thomas and Ruby changed his name from Jacob Rubenstein.
- Both Corbett and Ruby were known as unstable men prone to violence.
- Both presidents were named for their grandfathers.
- Both were born second children.
- Before each was elected to the presidency, each lost a sister to death.
- Both married while in their thirties.
- Both married dark-haired, twenty-four-year-old women.
- Each wife had been previously engaged to someone else.
- Both wives were from socially prominent families.
- Both wives were fluent in French.
- Both wives were known for their high fashion in clothes.
- Both wives were criticized by their husbands for spending money.
- Both wives renovated the White House after many years of neglect.
- Each couple had four children, two of whom died before becoming a teen.
- Each couple lost a son while in the White House.
- Both the Lincoln and Kennedy children rode ponies on the White House lawn.
- Lincoln had sons named Robert and Edward. Kennedy had brothers named Robert and Edward.
- Both presidents were related to U.S. Senators. Lincoln's cousin, General Isaac Barnard of Pennsylvania, was first elected in 1827. Kennedy's brother Edward was first elected in 1962 from Massachusetts and brother Robert was elected from New York in 1964.
- Shortly after his father was assassinated, Robert T. Lincoln (with mother and brother) moved to a home located at 3014 N Street, N.W., in Georgetown. Shortly after his father was assassinated, John F. Kennedy, Jr. (with mother and sister) moved to a home located at 3017 N Street, N.W., in Georgetown.
- Both presidents were related to Democratic U.S. attorney generals who graduated from Harvard University: Levi Lincoln,Sr. (Jefferson) and Robert F. Kennedy (Kennedy).
- Both presidents were related to ambassadors to the Court of St. James's (Great Britain): Robert T. Lincoln (B. Harrison) and Joseph P. Kennedy, Sr. (F. Roosevelt).
- Both presidents were friends with Illinois Democrats named Adlai E. Stevenson; Lincoln's friend would become Grover Cleveland's vice president and Kennedy's friend would twice be the Democratic presidential nominee.
- Both knew a Doctor Charles Taft. Lincoln was treated by Dr. Charles Sabin Taft, M.D., who was the half-brother of son Tad's playmates and chief surgeon at the Judiciary Square Hospital. Kennedy knew Dr. Charles Phelps Taft, LLD, who was mayor of Cincinnati (Ohio) and son of President William Howard Taft.
- Both presidents had friends and advisors named Billy Graham. Lincoln's friend was William Mentor Graham, a New Salem (Illinois) schoolteacher, and Kennedy knew the evangelist, Rev. Billy Graham.
- Kennedy had a secretary named Evelyn Lincoln (whose husband Harold's nickname was Abe); she warned him not to go to Dallas. Legend says Lincoln had a secretary named John Kennedy who told him not to go to the theatre, although no actual record of this person can be found.
- Both presidents were first elected to the U.S. House of Representatives in '46.
- Both were runners-up for their party's nomination for vice-president in '56.
- Both were elected to the presidency in '60.
- Both had the legality of their elections contested.
- Both were involved in political debates. The Lincoln-Douglas debates were in 1858 and the Kennedy-Nixon debates in 1960.
- Both were concerned with the problems of American blacks and made their views known in '63. Lincoln told of his in the Emancipation Proclamation and Kennedy in his report to Congress on Civil Rights.
- In 1964, William O. Douglas and Harry Goldin published books entitled Mr. Lincoln and the Negroes and Mr. Kennedy and the Negroes.
- Both Lincoln and Kennedy were succeeded by Southern Democrats named Johnson.
- Andrew Johnson was born in 1808; Lyndon Johnson was born in 1908.
- There are six letters in each Johnson's first name.
- Both Johnsons were large men.
- Both Johnsons were the fathers of two daughters.
- Both Johnsons served in the military. Andrew was a brigadier general in the Civil War and Lyndon was a commander in the navy during World War II.
- Both Johnsons were former southern senators.
- Both Johnsons entered the presidency in their mid-fifties.
- Both Johnsons had urethral stones, the only presidents to have them.
- Both Johnsons faced reelection opponents whose names began with G; Andrew Johnson could have run against Ulysses S. Grant and Lyndon Johnson faced Barry Goldwater in the election of 1964.
- Both Johnsons chose not to run for reelection in '68.
- Investigations for conspiracy were conducted for both presidential assassinations.
- Autopsies were done on both assassins to clarify identity.
- Formal investigations were conducted after each presidentail death.
- In each case, after a number of years, the investigation was reopened without really resolving who was involved in the assassination.