Dateline Dixon: Can Dixon really sell Lincoln?

Small town Pittsfield may hold the answer

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How far will you travel to see the house where Abraham Lincoln slept? Or crazier yet, a public parking lot with a sign reading “Lincoln slept here?”

Dixon officials met Tuesday to discuss a regional branding strategy to capitalize on the popularity of Steven Spielberg’s “Lincoln.”

Seemingly every other Illinois town boasts its own statue, layover or connection to Lincoln, and Dixon and its surrounding communities figure to have competition to attract visitors.

While that endeavor may seem far-reaching, given Lincoln visited Dixon only twice, I’ll share a story of my own unexpected Lincoln-chasing experience that could give some perspective.

My initial question refers to a “Looking for Lincoln” sign in Ottawa, the site of the first Lincoln-Douglas debate. For some reason or another, the house where Lincoln stayed during the debate was torn down, but that didn’t stop Ottawa from putting up the marker.

Growing up in Streator and then moving to Ottawa, I always had my fair share of jokes about that parking lot where Lincoln slept.

“Couldn’t Lincoln afford a hotel?” “Where in the world did he go to the bathroom there?” And why in the world would Ottawa direct Lincoln enthusiasts to a parking lot with a sign that has a photo of that old site you can view just as well online from your home?

I had to travel to Pittsfield in southwestern Illinois before I gave a hoot about a Lincoln sign.

My wife, Julie, and I did not go there looking for Lincoln; we happened to stay at a hotel where Lincoln and Stephen Douglas casually met, mostly because it sounded like a nice place. We were not Lincoln enthusiasts.

With that said, by the end of our stay, we were driving around the Pike County seat of 4,211 with our radios tuned into the “Talking Houses” tour.

What sucked us in?

A good story.

On a whim, we started reading the historical signs in Pittsfield. They all told stories.

Our personal favorite was one in front of the Daniel Gilmer home and law office, now a bank. The house doesn’t exist anymore.

One day Gilmer’s 9-year-old daughter Lizzie erected a makeshift tollgate and on Oct. 1, 1858, she charged Lincoln to attend a luncheon her mother had prepared for him, his friends and leading political supporters. Lizzie’s father later took her aside for a severe scolding for asking their special guest for a toll fee.

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