Touching Lincoln: 16th president spent most of his adult life in Springfield

Text Size: AaAaAaAaAa
Lifelike representations of the president and his family greet visitors in the museum’s entry plaza, with a replica of the White House in the background. (MCT News Service)
Buy Sauk Valley Media Photos »

Upstairs, we passed through federal courtrooms before climbing to a sparsely furnished room on the third floor, where two tables topped by green felt formed a “T.” At those tables and in just such a room – this was a reproduction in the actual building that held Lincoln’s offices – the man who would become our 16th president quietly went about his layerly work.

It was what he did across the street, in the Greek Revival Old State Capitol, that defined Lincoln for the nation.

In the representatives’ chamber there, a room now festooned with patriotic bunting, Lincoln riveted the 1858 Illinois Republican State Convention with his “House Divided” speech. The address warned against the discord slavery was causing in the nation, and it set the stage for the Lincoln-Douglas debates that put Lincoln in the spotlight.

My tour guide ushered me past the low wooden gate to the chamber, where a tall black stovepipe hat perches on what was Lincoln’s desk. Then he shared his perspective on the great man and his accomplishments. “Everyone talks about freeing the slaves like it was this instantly great thing,” the guide said. “But think of yourself as a slave, like some of my people. Suddenly, you have no shelter, no food to eat.”

Well before Lincoln set anyone free, he began making his own way as a young man in a village called New Salem. I drove 20 miles outside of Springfield to get there, and passed a pleasant afternoon among replica log cabins and stores populated with historical re-enactors. A woman cooked over an open flame and a man swatted at flies in his doorway, but the two Lincoln-Berry stores were empty save for dry goods lining the shelves. Fitting that they should be without customers: The two stores had failed, and fatefully so since the underemployed Lincoln then began studying law.

Lincoln was a masterful storyteller, according to a short film at the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Museum. So is the museum – and it has high-tech tricks to bolster its tales.

Lifelike representations of the president and his family greet visitors in the museum’s entry plaza, with a replica of the White House in the background. In the “Ghosts of the Library” theater, holograms of Civil War soldiers take form from clouds that billow out of books and boxes. Cannons boom and smoke pours out from behind the screen during the film “Through Lincoln’s Eyes.” The entire, enthralling effect is to carry you away to Lincoln’s time.

Comments

Blogs

» Out Here
Out Here

Good or bad? Depends on who you ask

Sometimes readers ask for more good news in the paper. They say we in the media only cover the bad. But one person's positive is another's negative.
» Extra! Extra! - A blog by Chris Heimerman
Extra! Extra! - A blog by Chris Heimerman

My kind of game

I would have gladly paid to take in the game I covered Saturday morning in Morrison.

Reader Poll

Memorial Day weekend heralds the arrival of summer vacation season. How much time do you plan to spend on vacation?

1 week
2 weeks
3 or more weeks
No vacation this year