At a towering 6 feet, 4 inches, President Abraham Lincoln easily stood out in a crowd, especially thanks to his proclivity for stovepipe hats, which pushed his physical presence to nearly 7 feet from crown to sole.

Abraham Lincoln's hat once caught a bullet intended for the President.

Famous Figures

A t a towering 6 feet, 4 inches, President Abraham Lincoln easily stood out in a crowd, especially thanks to his proclivity for stovepipe hats, which pushed his physical presence to nearly 7 feet from crown to sole. In some ways, this sartorial preference made him an inviting target for his enemies, yet on one occasion, the President's conspicuous headgear may well have saved his life from an assassin's bullet.

In August 1864, Lincoln was traveling on horseback to his summertime cottage on the outskirts of Washington when an unidentified sniper apparently took aim at the war-weary President. A sentry later recalled hearing a rifle shot at around 11 p.m., shortly before a "bareheaded" Lincoln and his excited horse arrived at the front gate. Although the silk hat was soon found nearby with a bullet hole through the top, Lincoln dismissed it as the handiwork of an incompetent hunter, and told his men to keep quiet about the situation.

The experience rattled the President more than he initially revealed: According to his bodyguard, Ward Hill Lamon, Lincoln described how he "heard this fellow's bullet whistle at an uncomfortably short distance from these headquarters of mine." Yet Honest Abe refused to accept the concept that someone was deliberately trying to kill him, and he continued attempts to slip off on his own in spite of efforts to beef up security. Lamon was famously out of town when Lincoln attended a performance at Ford's Theatre on the night of April 14, 1865. And the iconic stovepipe hat, his unlikely savior on a deserted path eight months earlier, was resting on the floor during the play, unable to halt the bullet that took the President's life.

Thank you for supporting our advertisers!

By the Numbers

Existing stovepipe hats confirmed to have belonged to Abraham Lincoln

2

Height (in inches) of Lincoln's top hat at the Smithsonian

7

Travel time (in minutes) from Lincoln's summer cottage to the White House

45

Weight (in pounds) of a bronze top hat stolen from a Lincoln statue in 2023

40

Did you know?

Lincoln's Cottage was the first regular presidential summer retreat.

Presidents from Thomas Jefferson to Joe Biden have jumped at the opportunity to escape the White House for cooler pastures during the summer months, but the building now known as President Lincoln's Cottage was the first to serve as a home away from home for multiple commanders in chief. Built on a farm that became a campus for wounded veterans in the 1850s, the hilltop Gothic-revival house first caught the attention of James Buchanan before becoming a haven for Lincoln and his family during the turbulence of the Civil War. Lincoln frequently made the 6-mile round trip to and from the White House, but he also held meetings with officials at the cottage, and is believed to have drafted the Emancipation Proclamation there. Altogether, it's been estimated that Lincoln spent more than a quarter of his administration residing at what was nominally a vacation home. While regular executive use of the cottage died out after Rutherford B. Hayes left office, its place in presidential history was preserved when the building and surrounding grounds became a National Landmark in 1974.

Thank you for supporting our advertisers!

Recommended Reading

U.S. History

What 7 U.S. Presidents Did After Their Presidency

U.S. History

What 6 Major State Capitals Looked Like 100 Years Ago

+ Load more
Click here