Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter Allusions and Cultural References

When authors give shout outs to other great works, people, and events, it's usually not accidental. Put on your super-sleuth hat and figure out why.

Literary

  • "To Mock a Killing Bird" (Introduction.19) is a joke based on the Harper Lee book, To Kill a Mockingbird.
  • Washington Irving was an early American writer, known today for "The Legend of Sleepy Hollow," though his early work was mostly satire, like his paper Salmagundi. (1.13)
  • "Father of many" (3.41) and "father to many" (12.91) are references to Genesis 17, when God changes Abram's name to Abraham, which means "father of many." 
  • Poe's first book of poems (4.68) was Tamerlane and other Poems, by "A Bostonian."
  • Lord Byron, poet. (6.70) 
  • Matthew 12:25: "Every kingdom divided against itself will be ruined, and every city or household divided against itself will not stand." (10.10) 
  • Shakespeare's Julius Caesar features a prophet telling Julius that he's going to get killed on "the Ides of March" (which is the 15th). (10.27)
  • Shakespeare's Henry V: "Once more unto the breach, dear friends, once more!" (10.85)
  • Shakespeare's Richard III, Act V, Scene 2: "In God's name, cheerly on, courageous friends, to reap the harvest of perpetual peace, by this one bloody trial of sharp war." (11.36)
  • Our American Cousin is the comedy play famous for being the scene of Lincoln's assassination. (13.57)
  • Shakespeare's Julius Caesar, Act V, Scene 4: "I am a foe to tyrants, and my country's friend." (13.57)

Lincoln's Speeches and Writing

  • Lincoln's letter to Fanny McCullough on the death of her father. (1.1)
  • Lincoln's speech to Congress for the Special Session, July 4, 1861. (2.1)
  • The Lincoln-Douglas Debates. (3.1) 
  • Lincoln's letter to George Robertson. (4.1)
  • Lincoln's letter to William Herndon. (5.1)
  • Lincoln's letter to Lydia Bixby. (6.1)
  • "The Suicide's Soliloquy," a poem possibly written by Lincoln, published in the Sangamon Journal. (6.114)
  • Lincoln's letter to Mrs. Browning. (7.1)
  • Lincoln's speech to the House of Representatives, June 20, 1848. (8.1)
  • Mary's poem (possibly written with Abe's assistance), published in the Illinois State Journal. (8.123)
  • Lincoln's proclamation of a National Fast Day, March 30, 1863. (9.1)
  • Lincoln's acceptance speech for the nomination for senator, June 16, 1858. (10.1)
  • Lincoln's Cooper Union speech. (10.53)
  • Lincoln's Inaugural Address. (10.188)
  • Lincoln's message to Congress, Dec. 1, 1862. (11.1)
  • Lincoln's Second Inaugural Address, March 4, 1865. (12.1)
  • Lincoln's speech at Chicago, Illinois, July 10, 1858. (13.1)

History

  • "[…] the morning of the Iowa primary, and Barack Obama was running neck and neck with Hillary Clinton" (Introduction.36) is a reference to the Democratic primaries leading into the 2008 presidential election.
  • The Shawnee (1.25) were a Native American tribe. 
  • The War of 1812. (1.43) 
  • The Taborites (4.18) were a religious medieval group from Bohemia that had a few wars.
  • Black Hawk (not his real name) was a leader of the Sauk and Fox tribes, who commanded during the Sauk War of 1832; they were opposed in Illinois by Governor Reynolds. (6.27)
  • The Whig party. (7.63) 
  • Five Points was a dangerous section of New York, where gangs like the Plug Uglies, Dead Rabbits, and Bowery Boys would fight for control. (9.4) 
  • Dred Scott was a person—a slave who fought for his freedom—and also the name of a Supreme Court case that dealt a blow to abolitionists. (9.41) 
  • The Underground Railroad was not operated by vampires in the real world, but by brave people like Harriet Tubman. (10.57)
  • The first Emancipation Proclamation (12.67) only freed the slaves in the Confederacy. 
  • Ford's Theater (13.57) is famous for being the location of Lincoln's assassination; less famously, Petersen's Boarding House (13.86) is the place he actually died.
  • Reconstruction (14.29) refers to the historical period after the Civil War.
  • "[…] white-hooded devils to their deaths by the light of burning crosses" (14.31) is a reference to the Ku Klux Klan.
  • "[…] the second vampire uprising between 1939 and 1945" (14.33) sure sounds like a reference to World War II.

Historical People Who Know Lincoln

  • Azel Waters Dorsey (1.45) was Abraham Lincoln's early teacher. 
  • William Herndon (2.87, 8.105) was Lincoln's last law partner.
  • Samuel Haycraft, Sr. (2.94) was a real guy—a clerk on the circuit court. 
  • Ann Rutledge really was engaged to John MacNamar. (6.67) Whether or not she loved Abe, too, is still a matter of debate. 
  • Joshua Fry Speed. (7.11)
  • Ebenezer Ryan (7.63) was another Whig.
  • Ward Hill Lamon. (9.14) 
  • William H. Seward (9.85) was Lincoln's Secretary of State; his son Frederick Seward (10.172), his daughter Fanny Seward (13.80), and his other son Augustus Seward (13.82) all show up, too.
  • Grace Bedell (10.155) was a little girl who told Lincoln to grow a beard.
  • Allan Pinkerton (10.167) was a detective, secret agent, and bodyguard.
  • John Nicolay (11.2) and John Hay (11.103) are Lincoln's secretaries.
  • In Lincoln's cabinet were Secretary of the Navy Gideon Wells and Secretary of the Treasury Salmon Chase (11.27) and Secretary of War Edwin Stanton (11.28).
  • Iowa Senator James W. Grimes. (11.58) 
  • Horatio "Bud" Nelson Taft, Jr. and Halsey "Holly" Cook Taft (11.58) were little boys in Lincoln's Washington, D.C.
  • Journalist (and friend of the Lincolns) Noah Brooks. (11.63) 
  • Elizabeth Keckley (11.94) was a free woman of color and dressmaker to Mary Todd. 
  • Alexander Gardner (12.59) was a famous photographer. 
  • Speaker of the House Schuyler Colfax. (13.25) 
  • Vice President Andrew Johnson. (13.25) 
  • Major Henry Rathbone, and his fiancée, Clara Harris. (13.57) 
  • Charles Leale (13.86), the first doctor to attend Lincoln after he was shot. 
  • Dr. Robert King Stone (13.88), Abe's family physician. 
  • Bishop Matthew Simpson (14.19) gave a eulogy for Lincoln at his Springfield funeral.

Civil War

  • Jefferson Davis (10.71), president of the Confederacy.
  • Fort Sumter (10.192) is a federal fort in South Carolina, where the first shots of the Civil War were fired.
  • Confederate Colonel James Chestnut, Jr. (10.195) fired on Fort Sumter.
  • Colonel Hunter (11.42) led at Bull Run.
  • Union Major General Ambrose Burnside. (11.47) 
  • General Ulysses S. Grant. (11.56) 
  • Fort Stevens. (12.3) 
  • Confederate General Jubal A. Early. (12.3) 
  • Antietam Creek. (12.38) 
  • General Robert E. Lee. (12.38) 
  • General George B. McClellan. (12.38) 
  • Christoph Niederer (12.40) wrote an eyewitness account. 
  • Lieutenant Sebastian Duncan, Jr. (12.42) also wrote an eyewitness account.
  • Confederate Generals Joseph E. Johnston, Meriwether Thompson, and Stand Watie. (13.31)

Assassination Conspiracy

  • John Wilkes Booth. (12.96) 
  • Mary Surratt (13.17) was the subject of a film directed by Robert Redford.
  • John Lloyd. (13.18) 
  • Lewis Powell. (13.20) 
  • George Atzerodt. (13.20) 
  • David Herold. (13.28)

Historical People

  • Marie Laveau (4.46) may be the famous New Orleans voodoo priestess.
  • John Walker (5.20) was a British chemist who invented the friction match.
  • Joseph Nash McDowell (8.8) really was a crazy doctor.
  • Elizabeth Báthory really was a Hungarian countess and Anna Darvulia was her mysterious friend. (8.78)
  • H. Greeley (9.3) is probably Horace Greeley, the editor.
  • Rep. Preston Brooks (South Carolina) severely beat Sen. Charles Sumner (Massachusetts) and Rep. Laurence Keitts (also SC) held everyone off with a gun. Yep, that really happened. (9.36) 
  • John Brown was a violent abolitionist. (9.39)
  • Harry Hawk (13.69) was an actor on stage at Ford's Theater when Lincoln was shot.
  • Edmund Spangler (13.71) (or "Edman") worked at Ford's Theater and was charged in the conspiracy. 
  • Sergeant Robinson and telegraph messenger Emerick Hansell (13.82) were stabbed by Lewis Powell when he was escaping from the Seward house.
  • William Knox, a Scottish poet (13.91) wrote one of Lincoln's favorite poems. 
  • Richard Garrett (13.98) was the Virginian who turned in Booth.
  • Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. (14.1) 
  • President Kennedy. (14.13)

Roanoke

  • Roanoke (3.101) is the famous lost colony, once located in present-day North Carolina.
  • Three ships came to America, including the Lyon. (3.105)
  • John White (3.105) led the colony.
  • White was picked by Sir Walter Raleigh (3.105) and got a ride back to England with Sir Francis Drake. (3.105) 
  • Virginia Dare (3.122) was the first English person born in America.