David Safford Walbridge (July 30, 1802 – June 15, 1868) was a politician from the U.S. state of Michigan.
Walbridge was born in Bennington, Vermont, where he attended the common schools. He moved to New York in 1820 and engaged in mercantile and agricultural pursuits at Geneseo from 1820 to 1826 and at Jamestown from 1826 to 1842. Then he moved to Kalamazoo, Michigan, in 1842 and again engaged in mercantile pursuits as well as becoming a large landowner and stock raiser.
On August 27, 1856, Abraham Lincoln visited Kalamazoo to take part in a campaign rally for John C. Fremont. Congress was in session, so Walbridge was in Washington, D.C. In his absence, his wife Eliza Taggart Walbridge, acted as a hostess, providing tea for Lincoln and Zachariah Chandler.[1] This was recalled by Lincoln in a letter he wrote to Chandler four years later.[2]
David S. Walbridge later resumed his former pursuits and was also appointed by PresidentAndrew Johnson to serve as postmaster of Kalamazoo, Michigan. He died there and was interred in Mountain Home Cemetery.
References
↑George, Tom M. and Brown, Cameron S. (Fall 2021). "Lincoln's Tea Hostess Revealed". The Michigan Historical Review. 47 (2): 89–104 – via Project MUSE.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
↑Lincoln, Abraham (August 31, 1860). Basler, Roy P. (ed.). The Collected Works of Abraham Lincoln. Vol.4. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press (published 1953). pp.102–3.