Meet Springfield’s best-known resident and revered icon
Two centuries after his birth, Springfield’s best-known resident remains a revered icon, a leader who bore the weight of destiny to his untimely demise. Born in dire poverty and self-educated, Abraham Lincoln rose to lead our nation during its darkest time. His words inspired Americans during the Civil War, and they inspire us today.
Lincoln was born in Kentucky, grew up in Indiana and came into his own in Illinois. As a young man, he arrived in New Salem. A year later, he was elected captain of a militia company in the Black Hawk Indian wars.
When the pioneer village helped elect Lincoln to the state legislature, he had to borrow money to purchase a suit. At the age of 28 he moved to Springfield without enough money to buy a bed. Through initiative, hard work and talent, he became an established, respected lawyer; was elected to the U.S. Congress; debated Stephen Douglas in an unsuccessful bid for the U.S. Senate; and, in 1860, was elected the 16th president of the United States.
As Lincoln left for the nation’s capital in 1861 and the Civil War appeared imminent, he prophetically told a crowd assembled at the train station in Springfield: “I now leave, not knowing when, or whether ever, I may return, with a task before me greater than that which rested on Washington.”
After Lincoln’s assassination, a grieving nation cast him as a mythic figure. Over the years Springfield has become a destination for many American pilgrimages. But in Lincoln’s hometown you’ll find not only the remnants of Honest Abe the railsplitter, you’ll also discover a more complex, shrewd and wondrous man than the one likely encountered in your high school textbooks.
Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum
The Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum (ALPLM ) is intended to serve current and future generations as both first and last stops on a learning journey. Whether you’re a Lincoln researcher or just curious about the life of the Great Emancipator, you should begin your visit at the museum, on the north side of Jefferson Street. Parking is available across the street to the northwest, on Sixth Street. You will want to plan three hours or more for your visit to the museum and a half-hour to an hour more for a first visit to the library.
All museum exhibits are located on the ground floor, and all facilities are in compliance with the Americans with Disabilities Act. On
the entryway floor, a compass points visitors to the plaza where the
historical tour begins. Visitors see a replica of Lincoln’s boyhood home
in Indiana and the front of the White House as it appeared in 1861.
From that sunny atrium-like area, with its 70-foot ceiling, visitors may
proceed to any of six display areas.
Many
will be drawn naturally to the more rustic setting of the log cabin,
where “The Journey” – the title of this odyssey through Lincoln’s life –
begins. Children who are not as fascinated with Lincoln lore as their
elders may enjoy a visit to Mrs. Lincoln’s Attic, a supervised playroom
where they may participate in a variety of hands-on activities,
including dress-up, playing with giant Lincoln Logs and exploring a
large dollhouse version of the Lincoln Home.
Part
one of “The Journey” begins with a visit to the circa-1820s replica of
Lincoln’s boyhood cabin. Lincoln’s life story is depicted with the use
of full-size replicas of a slave auction; life in New Salem; the future
president’s interest in Ann Rutledge and his courtship of Mary Todd;
Lincoln’s law office, with sons Willie and Tad playing on the furniture;
the 1860 presidential campaign debate at Galesburg; and Lincoln’s
farewell to Springfield. One highlight: a simulated television
director’s studio where news stories and commercials for Lincoln’s 1860
presidential campaign are continuously played on video monitors as
though the election were being held in modern times.
Part
two of “The Journey” begins in a replica of the White House’s Blue
Room, where Mary Todd Lincoln appears to extend her arms in welcome.
Most of this part of the tour is focused on the Civil War. In the
Whispering Gallery, visitors hear the whispering voices of Lincoln’s
detractors and see editorial cartoons depicting Abe in ways that make
modern editorial images seem tame. In a reproduction of what is now
known as the Lincoln Bedroom, a gravely ill Willie is shown with his
parents at his side as a White House ball goes on just outside the open
door. Also included are replicas of the White House’s basement kitchen
and the Cabinet Room, where Lincoln discussed his forthcoming
Emancipation Proclamation with a divided cabinet. In one room visitors
see the president standing at his desk before signing the proclamation
as a barrage of words and projected images depict the world that
surrounded him when he put pen to paper. The journey ends
with a reproduction of Lincoln’s coffin as it lay in state on the second
floor of Springfield’s first State Capitol.
In
the 250-seat Union Theater, a 17-minute layered-projection show,
Lincoln’s Eyes, depicts the president as each side of the divided nation
saw him. The seats tremble when cannons are “fired” into the audience
and other special effects add dimension to the story. Although the show
presents the entire picture, the message is intended to inspire viewers
by revealing the obstacles Lincoln overcame in his effort to serve his
country. The theater is also rented to organizations to use for various
activities.
A
climate-controlled Treasures Gallery displays priceless artifacts from
Lincoln’s life. These displays change throughout the year, so what you
see in April may be replaced by something else by September.
The
“SBC Ghosts of the Library” theater presentation features a live actor
and holographic ghosts, answering the age-old question, “Why do we study
this old stuff?” “Ask Mr. Lincoln” is a touch-andlearn display that
allows visitors to make selections from a variety of questions about the
man and his family. Answers are spoken as related images appear on
screen.
The Illinois Gallery hosts a changing variety of presentations about Illinois history and art.
On
the south side of Jefferson Street, across from the museum, is the
Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library. Admission is free, but all
visitors must sign in. Visitors are invited to tour and use the library,
which offers a wealth of research material for students, historians and
genealogists. Among the site’s many assets is the Steve Neal Reading
Room, which has thousands of books about world history and historical
figures. The Newspaper Micro film Area offers access to more than 5,000
newspaper titles from every Illinois county, many from the 19th century.
The audiovisual department preserves photographs, broadsides, posters,
oral histories and more. Unpublished resources are accessible through
the Manuscript Reading Room. Copies of all resources are available by
special arrangement.
Visit the newly restored visitor center at Union Station on the northwest corner of Sixth and Jefferson.
Relax and watch the world go by in scenic Union Park.
Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum, 212 N. Sixth St., 217-558-8844, www.presidentlincoln.org
Museum hours: 9 a.m.-5 p.m. daily (ticket sales end at 4 p.m.). Library
hours: 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Public and Research hours: 9
a.m.- 5 p.m.; closed Saturday and Sunday. Admission to the library and
gift shop is free. Museum admission is $12 for visitors ages 16-61; $9
for seniors 62 and older; $7 for active duty military personnel; $9 for
students with a school or college ID; $6 for children 5-15; free for
children under age 5. Admission is discounted for prearranged group and
school tours.
Illinois Visitor Center at Union Station
Delivering
information to visitors that reflects not only Springfield area historic
sites and attractions but Illinois tourism as a whole, the Illinois
Visitor Center at Union Station is strategically located across from the
ALPLM. Additional services available on site include booking of hotel
accommodations and special event packages that are scheduled across
Illinois.
Union Square Park
Union Square Park has been the location of many free events and performances, including the 33rd
Illinois Vol. Regiment Band and the 10th Illinois Vol. Cavalry Regiment
Band (both Civil War re-enactment groups); Mary Lincoln’s Strawberry
Party (a summertime family event); July 4th celebration; New Century
Orchestra; Springfield International Folk Dancers and many more musical
performances throughout the year.
Look for even more events and performances at Union Square Park in the future at www.presidentlincoln.org Events of 15 or more people are required to secure a Park Permit. To download a permit application, please visit www.presidentlincoln.org
and click “Apply for a Park Permit” or call (217) 558-8955. Union
Station is open 9 a.m.-5 p.m. daily and the park, from 8 a.m.-10 p.m.
daily.
Lincoln Home National Historic Site
It’s best to begin your
tour of the Lincoln Home site at the visitor center, 426 S. Seventh St.
That’s where you get free admission tickets to the residence, which is
located just a short walk away at Eighth and Jackson streets.
The center includes a
theater, a gift shop and a Lincoln-themed bookstore. A video tour of the
Lincoln home plays throughout the day in the theater. Other videos
include the theatrical documentary, Abraham Lincoln: A Journey to
Greatness, Homage to Lincoln, and At Home with Mr. Lincoln. They’re all
worth a look before or after visiting the home. Be sure to enhance your
visit by viewing the “What a Pleasant Home Lincoln Has” exhibit at the
Dean House and “If These Walls Could Talk: Saving an Old House” exhibit
at the Arnold House. Both houses are across the street from the Lincoln
residence and are self-guided; no tickets required.
The site is open year-round – for special events, check out the calendar in the back of this Visitor Guide.
The
area is cared for by the National Park Service and includes not only
the house Lincoln and his family lived in for 15 years (1844-1861) but
also the restored 19th-century neighborhood surrounding it. The
neighborhood takes up four blocks. The sidewalks and streets have been
remodeled to resemble post-1860s Springfield, complete with gaslights
and a wooden walkway. The Lincoln home is the most recognizable of all
the sites. Best of all, it’s open free of charge to the public.
The
tour of the Lincoln home isn’t long, but it varies depending on your
guide. The family sold most of its furniture after Lincoln was elected
president. The house was leased and eventually donated to the state by
eldest son Robert. The curators have acquired about 50 of the original
furnishings, including Lincoln’s desk.
Lincoln Home National Historic Site, Visitor Center, 426 S. Seventh St. (residence, 413 S. Eighth St.), 217-492-4241, www.nps.gov/liho/index.htm Open 8:30 a.m.-5 p.m. daily except Jan. 1, Thanksgiving, and Dec. 25. Admission is free.
Old State Capitol
Across the street
from Lincoln’s law office is the Old State Capitol. It’s located off the
Adams Street pedestrian mall, between Fifth and Sixth streets. Before
the current state Capitol opened in 1877, this was the seat of Illinois
state government. Behind its massive oak doors, Lincoln tried hundreds
of cases and spent countless hours bent over books in the state library.
Here he delivered his famed “House Divided” speech. After Lincoln was
assassinated, his casket was brought here to the Capitol, and 75,000
mourners filed past it to pay their last respects.
As a state
representative, Lincoln had a hand in moving the state capital from
Vandalia to Springfield. In 1834, a popular vote was held to select the
capital from one of six sites. Alton came in first, Vandalia second, and
Springfield third. However, the state legislature decided to repeal the
referendum and cast their votes for Springfield.
The
Old Capitol Art Fair Board hosts a juried art show on the Old State
Capitol Plaza the second weekend each May. This year’s show is May 21
and 22. The Old State Capitol, 1 Old Capitol Plaza, 217-785-9363, www.oldstatecapitol.org
Open Tuesday –Saturday, 9 a.m. – 5p.m. Extended summer hours. The last
tour begins 45 minutes before closing. Free admission. Donations
accepted.
Lincoln-Herndon Law Offices
On the south side of the
Old State Capitol Plaza, at Sixth and Adams, is the only remaining
building in which Lincoln practiced law. On the third floor, Lincoln and
his future biographer, William Herndon, worked together from 1844 to
1852. After Lincoln’s death, Herndon traveled the state, pulling
Lincoln’s original writings from the files of county courthouses and
leaving copies as he visited.
Herndon’s published
recollections provide a more intimate look at Lincoln’s life. Herndon
had a low opinion of Mary Todd Lincoln, and the feeling was mutual.
Herndon believed that the Lincoln children were indulged; they had free
run of both the house and their father’s law office, where, to Herndon’s
dismay, Lincoln ignored them further messing up his already messy
office.
Lincoln’s law
cases have been the subject of a decade-long project, the Lincoln Legal
Papers, which will eventually publish all of Lincoln’s legal writings.
Though popular legend concentrates on Lincoln’s
sticking up for the underdog, he collected his biggest fees from the
Illinois Central Railroad, which hired him to keep the people of McLean
County from taxing the corporation’s land. As Henry Whitney said in the
1880s, “As attorney for the Illinois Central Railroad, I had authority
to employ additional counsel whenever I chose to do so, and I frequently
applied to Lincoln when I needed aid. I never found him unwilling to
appear in behalf of a great soulless corporation.”
Though
far less lucrative, the 1858 “Almanac Trial” remains one of Lincoln’s
best-known cases. The legend goes that upon hearing a witness claim that
he saw a murder committed by moonlight, Lincoln produced an almanac
showing that the moon wasn’t up at the time. The defendant, “Duff”
Armstrong, an acquaintance of Lincoln’s from New Salem, was acquitted.
But the case may not have been as open-and-shut as that. Lincoln simply
discovered that “moonset,” when the moon falls below the horizon,
occurred about an hour after the murder, casting doubt on the witness’
assertion that the moon was directly overhead. Yet, as historian John
Walsh has noted, the moon’s position in the sky also depends on the
observer’s point of reference – and the moon was, in fact, visible
enough to see by. Walsh attributes the famous acquittal less to
scientific fact than to the manner in which Lincoln delivered the
“evidence,” as well as his closing arguments to the jury. Just what you
pay an attorney for – effective representation. Lincoln-Herndon Law
Offices, Sixth and Adams, 217-785-7289, www.oldstatecapitol.org Open 9 a.m.- 5 p.m. Tuesday-Saturday. Free admission. Donations accepted.
The Lincoln Tomb
Within hours of
Lincoln’s death, the Springfield City Council passed a special
resolution seeking to secure the return of the city’s favorite son.
During the Washington, D.C., funeral, about 400 people from Illinois
attended a special meeting in the White House’s East Room to lobby for
the body. Through Robert Todd Lincoln, state politicians convinced Mary
Todd Lincoln that her late husband belonged in Springfield. Mary
initially resisted. Her first choice was Chicago, followed by
Washington. Eventually she relented and only then was she told that a
Springfield committee had already purchased land downtown on which to
construct a monument. She put her foot down and the president was buried
at a quieter resting place in Oak Ridge Cemetery.
Oak
Ridge is the largest cemetery in Illinois and the second most visited
in the nation (after Arlington National in Washington, D.C.). The
striking tomb containing Lincoln and his family (except for Robert, who
is buried in Arlington) was designed by Larkin Mead and completed nine
years after Lincoln’s death. It has been restored several times since.
Tours are available, and special events are held throughout the year.
Enter
the cemetery by going north on Monument Avenue, which lies off North
Grand between First and Second streets. While you’re there, you may want
to visit the gravesites of several prominent Illinoisans, including
governors, poet Vachel Lindsay and United Mine Workers leader John L.
Lewis.
Lincoln Tomb, 1500 Monument Ave., Oak Ridge Cemetery, 217-782- 2717, www.illinoishistory.gov/hs/lincoln_tomb.htm
Open May 1-Labor Day, Monday-Sunday, 9 a.m.-5 p.m.; Post Labor Day in
September-October 31, Tuesday-Saturday, 9 am.-5 p.m.; November-February,
Tuesday-Saturday, 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; March-April, Tuesday-Saturday, 9
a.m.-5 p.m. Groups of 15 or more should call 1-800-545- 7300 for
reservations.
Lincoln’s New Salem State Historic Site
To better understand the
times in which Lincoln lived, be sure to visit New Salem, northwest of
Springfield near Petersburg. Here you will discover one of the most
educational experiences the Lincoln sites have to offer. Lincoln lived in this pioneer village from 1831-1837.
New
Salem’s history provides one of the main sources of the Lincoln legend.
Despite the “railsplitter” image used during the 1860 election, some
historians say that Lincoln went to New Salem specifically to get away
from the hard manual labor of his youth. His general store was a
failure, in part because his business partner, William Berry, apparently
drank more whiskey than he sold. Lincoln was unable to pay off the
store’s debts until he moved to Springfield and became a lawyer. While
in New Salem, Lincoln boarded at an inn kept by James Rutledge, whose
daughter Ann was allegedly Lincoln’s sweetheart. Legend has it that when
she died in 1835, at the age of 19, Lincoln nearly lost his mind with
grief. Today historians are not convinced – some think that the story
originated in a lecture given by William Herndon. At the time of her
death, Ann Rutledge was engaged to one of Lincoln’s friends, John
McNamara.
But
historical accuracy is still New Salem’s lure. Though many of the
structures were rebuilt over the original sites in the early 1930s, the
town adheres to an impressive and painstaking attention to authentic
detail. Interpreters in period dress explain how things got done way
back when. The 635-acre site also includes gift shops and an indoor
museum and theater. During the summer months, Theatre in the Park stages
outdoor plays and musicals. Special events are held throughout the year
– check the calendar in the back of this guide for dates and times.
Maintained
by the Illinois Historic Preservation Agency, New Salem is also home to
a nicely equipped campground. You can easily spend at least a day here,
if not a weekend, depending on when you’re visiting.
New
Salem is about 20 miles northwest of Springfield on Route 97, called
Jefferson Street in town. GPS Coordinates - N39.58.550’ W89.50.511.
217-632-4000, www.lincolnsnewsalem.com
Open Nov. 1 – Feb. 28: Wednesday through Sunday, 8 a.m. - 4 p.m.; March
1 – April 15, Wednesday through Sunday, 9 a.m. - 5 p.m.; April 16 –
Sept 15, Sunday through Saturday, 9 a.m. - 5 p.m. Sept. 16 – Oct. 31,
Wednesday through Sunday 9 a.m. - 5 p.m. Free admission. Suggested
donations $2 children ages 12 and under & $4 adults or $10 for a
family.
The Great Western Railroad Depot
No single historical
event in Springfield is more poignantly considered than Abraham
Lincoln’s “Farewell Address,” which he delivered to thousands of friends
and well-wishers from this site on Feb. 11, 1861. From here, he
departed for Washington, D.C., to lead a nation that was splitting in
two. Visitors to the depot can see a short video about the 12-day train
trip to Lincoln’s first inauguration. Authorities were so fearful of a
rumored assassination plot in Baltimore that they persuaded Lincoln to
leave the train in Philadelphia. He completed the journey unannounced,
riding into the nation’s capital in a heavily guarded sleeping car.
Great Western Railroad Depot, Tenth and Monroe streets, 217-544-8695. www.nps.gov/liho/great-western-depot.htm Open 10 a.m.- 4 p.m. daily, May through August. Free admission.
“Lincoln’s church”
Located inside the First
Presbyterian Church is the family pew rented by Abraham and Mary Lincoln
when they attended Sunday services at the church’s original location at
Third and Washington Streets, the current site of Springfield’s Amtrak
station. Services for Mary Todd Lincoln’s funeral were held at the
church where it stands today. Interestingly, Abraham Lincoln never
joined this – or any – church.
Between 1890 and 1922,
seven memorial windows by the world-famous glassmaker and artist Louis
Comfort Tiffany were installed. Until air conditioning proliferated
beyond movie houses and taverns, their bottom portions swung open to
permit better air circulation during sweltering summer Sunday services.
Sealed
and protected against the elements since the mid-’60s, they are
historical testament to a unique art form – symphonies of sunlight for
citizens and tourists trekking between the nearby Lincoln Home Visitor
Center and the Old State Capitol.
First
Presbyterian Church, 321 S. Seventh. Docent-guided tours are available
10 a.m.-4 p.m. Mon.-Fri., June-September. All other times, group tours
may be arranged by calling 217-528-4311. For more information, go to www.lincolnschurch.org/html/Tours.html
Lincoln ledger
Inside the lobby of the
downtown Chase Bank you can look at original bank statements signed by
Abraham Lincoln. They include expenditures for such mundane items as
grocery bills and his monthly mortgage payments. This very personal
glimpse of the Great Emancipator reveals an ordinary citizen who
purchased the trappings of upper-middle-class life just like everybody
else. What did he buy? Visit and see for yourself!
The Lincoln ledger is in
the Chase Bank lobby, Sixth and Washington streets, 217- 527-3860. Open 9
a.m.-5:30 p.m. Monday through Friday and 8 a.m.-noon Saturday. Free
admission.