Frances Adeline "Fanny" Seward

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Frances Adeline "Fanny" Seward

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Auburn, Cayuga County, New York, United States
Death: October 29, 1866 (21)
Washington, District of Columbia, District of Columbia, United States (tuberculosis )
Place of Burial: Plot - Glen Haven, 4-7, Grave 18, Auburn, Cayuga County, New York, USA
Immediate Family:

Daughter of William Henry Seward, Gov., Sen., Sec. of State and Frances Adeline Seward
Sister of Cornelia "Frances" Seward; Brevet Brig. Gen. William Henry Seward, Jr./USA; Maj. Augustus H. Seward (USA) and Frederick W. Seward, U.S. Assistant Secretary of State

Managed by: Martin Severin Eriksen
Last Updated:

About Frances Adeline "Fanny" Seward

Frances Adeline Seward - Find A Grave Memorial 20856352



http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frances_Adeline_%22Fanny%22_Seward

Frances Adeline "Fanny" Seward (December 9, 1844 – October 29, 1866) was the only surviving daughter of United States Secretary of State, William H. Seward and his wife Frances Adeline Miller. Born into privilege in Auburn, New York; her father a powerful, progressive Whig (later Republican) United States Senator and former Governor of New York; her mother a stalwart abolitionist of prominent descent; Fanny was duly accorded a progressive education and upbringing. Mrs. Frances Seward, bearing a sickly constitution, ill-disposed to travel and Washington social circles, chose to remain largely at home in Auburn after her husband's appointment by President Abraham Lincoln to the office of Secretary of State. Thus in 1861, Fanny, at sixteen years old, became in a rather matronly manner her father's closest domestic companion. She devotedly accompanied him into office and life in wartime Washington, into the roiling maelstrom of the nation's darkest hour.

A sensitive and precocious girl with pronounced literary aspirations, Fanny Seward would maintain a voluminous diary throughout the course of the Civil War, documenting with pricelessly intimate detail the social and political milieu of Washington D.C. during the Lincoln administration. She witnessed the war's final concerted acts of bloodletting. As John Wilkes Booth was making his way into Ford's Theater just after 10 p.m. on April 14, 1865, his fellow conspirator and collaborator-in-arms Lewis Powell stormed into the Seward house and began a savage rampage by stabbing, slashing and pistol-whipping his way through the cordon of family and servants. Upon reaching the bedridden Secretary of State, Powell repeatedly stabbed Seward's face and neck. Only the collective effort of Fanny, her brother Augustus and a military sentry caused Powell to flee the bedroom and house, not before inflicting wounds on everyone present including Fanny. All of those wounded in the attack eventually recovered from their physical injuries. For his crimes, Lewis Powell was hanged with three other convicted Booth conspirators.

In the eighteen months following the attack, her mother died the following June, and Fanny Seward herself succumbed to tuberculosis at the age of 21 in October, 1866.



Frances Adeline Seward - Find A Grave Memorial 20856352

The daughter of celebrated American statesman William H. Seward and his wife, the former Frances Adeline Miller, "Fanny" Seward was a delicate young woman who aspired to be a writer, keeping detailed journals of her life in New York and Washington political circles. Afflicted with tuberculosis, her frail health was broken during a confrontation with Lewis Powell, a co-conspirator of Lincoln assassin John Wilkes Booth, during the attempt on her father's life on April 14, 1865. The traumatic event left her father severely wounded and seriously injured several members of the Seward family and their household, including her mother, who suffered a heart attack and died less than two months later. Fanny herself died at age 21 the following year. She was subsequently interred in the Seward Family plot, joining her mother, her paternal grandfather, and a baby sister who had died before her birth. This infant had originally been a namesake of Mrs. Seward like Fanny, but her name was listed as Cornelia when her remains were transferred to Fort Hill in the mid-1860's, perhaps to avoid confusion. In any case, Frances Street in Auburn, NY, one of four streets forming a city block memorializing the Seward family, was inspired by the name that came to be borne by many Seward descendants. Fanny was survived by her grieving father and her three brothers, Augustus, Frederic, and William, all of whom were eventually buried here. Her monument is in need of restoration, as the wreathed marble cross which formerly adorned its capstone was recently broken off by vandals and lost.

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Frances Adeline "Fanny" Seward's Timeline

1844
December 9, 1844
Auburn, Cayuga County, New York, United States
1866
October 29, 1866
Age 21
Washington, District of Columbia, District of Columbia, United States
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Fort Hill Cemetery, Plot - Glen Haven, 4-7, Grave 18, Auburn, Cayuga County, New York, USA