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 Museum
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 northeast corner of Jefferson and Sixth St. Parking is available on the street or in a nearby visitors’ parking lot. Plan at least three hours for your visit to the museum and bookstore.
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.
“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-and-learn 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.
The temporary exhibit “To Kill and To Heal:
Weapons and Medicine of the Civil War” will be on display through Dec. 31, 2013. A smaller exhibit on Benito Juarez, President of Mexico from 1861 to 1871, explains the life of the man known as the Mexican Lincoln. Born to peasants in Oaxaca who died when he was three years old, Juarez was raised by an uncle and later became a lawyer, judge and president of Mexico.
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.). 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.
Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library
The Lincoln Presidential Library (formerly the Illinois State Historical Library) is just across Jefferson Street from the museum and is home to nearly 13 million items pertaining to Illinois history. Genealogists, scholars and students make use of the library’s county histories, photographs, manuscripts and newspapers. The Lincoln Collection is also housed in the library, as are the papers of Abraham Lincoln.
On display in the lobby is Part III of the popular Boys in Blue exhibit, the story of Illinois soldiers who fought for the Union. “Boys in Blue: When Will This Cruel War Be Over?” spotlights Civil War prisons and prisoners, immigrant and Jewish soldiers, the role of Gen. Ulysses S. Grant, the battle of Vicksburg and the Emancipation Proclamation.
There is no charge to use the library or see the exhibit. Library offices are closed on weekends and holidays, but the lobby is open from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily for anyone wishing to see the Boys in Blue exhibit which runs through March 2014.
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.
Illinois
Visitor Center at Union Station Looking for information about
Springfield’s historic sites and attractions? Look no more! The Illinois
Visitors Center at Union Station highlights sites and attractions in
the capital city, as well as tourism throughout Illinois. Located across
from the ALPM, the Illinois Visitor Center at Union Station also offers
information on booking hotel accommodations and special event packages
that are scheduled across Illinois.
Union
Square Park
Union Square Park, also located across the street from the
Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum, is home to a number of
Springfield’s most popular free activities, events and musical
performances, including the 33rd Illinois Vol. Regiment Band and the
10th Illinois Vol. Cavalry Regiment Band (both Civil War reenactment
groups), Mary Lincoln’s Strawberry Party (a summertime family event),
July 4 celebrations, New Century Orchestra, Springfield International
Folk Dancers and many more.
The 86,000-square-foot park is home to two Abe Lincoln statues. And, it’s beautifully
landscaped
with William Baffin Climbing Roses, Mary Todd Daylilies, Black-eyed
Susan and Wintergreen Littleleaf Boxwoods, and Autumn Blaze Maples,
Ozark Spring Flowering Dogwoods and Accolade Elms, providing the perfect
backdrop for relaxation.
A
list of events and performances at Union Square Park can be found at
www. presidentlincoln.org. Events of 15 or more people are required to
secure a park permit. To obtain a permit call 217-558-9014 or download
an application at http://www.alplm.org/union_station/
union_square_park.html and click “Request a Union Square Park Permit.”
Union Station is open 9 a.m.-5 p.m. daily and the park is open from 8
a.m.-10 p.m. daily.

Lincoln
Home National Historic Site
Each year, hundreds of thousands of
visitors from around the world learn intimate details of the life of our
16th president as they follow in his footsteps while touring the
Lincoln Home National Historic Site. Highlights of the Lincolns’ 12-room
Greek Revival Home includes a formal parlor, sitting and dining rooms,
Abe’s and Mary’s individual bedrooms, children’s rooms, kitchen and
outbuilding.
In
addition to the Lincoln family home, the four-block area features the
restored 19th century neighborhood, complete with homes of several
neighbors, sidewalks, gaslights and wooden walkways.
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 the admission tickets to the
residence, which is just a short walk away at Eighth and Jackson
streets.
The center
includes a theater, 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 documentaries Abraham Lincoln: A Journey
to Greatness, Homage to Lincoln and At Home with Mr. Lincoln. Visitors
can view them either before or after their visit. Guests can also
enhance their visits 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.
A
complete view of the site takes approximately 2 hours. Admission is
free; however, visitors must obtain tickets from the Visitor Center
Information Desk at 426 South Seventh Street. The home is at 413 South
Eighth Street. Hours are 8:30 a.m.-5 p.m. daily except Jan. 1,
Thanksgiving and Dec. 25. 217-492- 4241, www.nps.gov/liho/index.htm.
Old
State Capitol
Before
his days as president of the United States,
Abraham Lincoln spent countless hours at the building we now call the
Old State Capitol. During his term as state representative, Lincoln was
instrumental in moving the state capital from Vandalia to Springfield.
It is also the place where Lincoln served his final term (1840- 1841) as
an Illinois state legislator.
As
an attorney, Lincoln tried several hundred cases before the Illinois
Supreme Court housed here. It is also the site where Lincoln delivered
his famous House Divided speech. During the 1860 presidential campaign,
Lincoln used the Old State Capitol’s governor’s room as his
headquarters.
On May 3
and 4, 1865, following Lincoln’s assassination, 75,000 mourners
convened at the Old State Capitol to bid farewell as Lincoln’s body laid
in state in the building’s Representatives Hall.
In
the 1960s, the Greek Revival-styled building was reconstructed. Today,
the first floor features a central hall flanked by rooms interpreting
government offices, two libraries and the Supreme Court room.
First-floor rooms also provide an audiovisual theatre and staff offices.
The second-floor rooms were recreated to include a magnificent rotunda,
legislative chambers and smaller offices and meeting rooms.
Visitors can take a 30-minute interpreter-conducted tour or view the rooms on their own.
Also available is a 15-minute orientation video on the building’s history.
Each
year, the Old State Capitol hosts a number of special events, including
the Abraham Lincoln Symposium (February), Holocaust Remembrance Day
(April), Annual Civil War Encampment (June) and the Old Capitol Art Fair
(May). For more information on the Old State Capitol and its upcoming
activities and events go to http://www.illinoishistory.gov/hs/old_capitol.htm
The
Old State Capitol, located at 1 Old State Capitol Plaza, between Fifth
and Sixth Streets, is open Tuesday-Saturday, 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Extended
summer hours. The last tour begins 45 minutes before closing. The Old
State Capitol is closed on New Year’s Day, Martin Luther King, Jr.
birthday, President’s Day, Labor Day, Thanksgiving and Christmas. Free
admission. Donations accepted. 217-785-9363.
Lincoln-Herndon Law Offices
Though
Lincoln practiced law at a variety of locations, Springfield’s
Lincoln-Herndon Law Office is the only remaining structure still in
existence today. Originally designed as a commercial structure, from
1843 to about 1852 Lincoln and law partner William H. Herndon rented
space in the building to practice law.
Though
the walls can’t talk, Herndon, who worked with Lincoln from 1844-1852,
certainly did. In 1889, he penned a Lincoln biography – Herndon’s
Lincoln: The True Story of A Great Life – which shared an intimate look
at the life of the 16th president based on his own observation and
stories collected from people close to Lincoln and his family. His goal
was to portray Lincoln as a man rather than a saint. In the book,
Herndon revealed that he and Lincoln’s wife, Mary Todd Lincoln, shared
low opinions of each other. He believed that the Lincoln children were
indulged and 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.
Today,
the Lincoln-Herndon Law office consists of the surviving portion of a
three-story brick commercial block constructed in 1840- 41. The
“restored” building has a visitors center with an exhibit gallery,
audiovisual theater, and a room interpreted as an 1840s post office
facility. The site’s second floor consists of rooms representing those
used by the federal court, while the third floor displays a “common
room” and three lawyers’ offices – two of which were used by Lincoln and
his partners. The recreated offices are notable for the plainness and
disorder that were remembered by Lincoln associates.
In
addition to an orientation video, visitors to the Lincoln-Herndon Law
Office receive a 20-minute guided tour of the historic rooms. On
Wednesdays during the summer months, a costumed interpreter portrays
Lincoln’s law clerk. Also, exhibits in the visitors center provide
information on Lincoln’s legal career and life on the Eighth Judicial
Circuit.
Lincoln-Herndon
Law Office, Sixth and Adams, 217-785-7289. Open 9 a.m.-5 p.m.
Tuesday-Saturday during winter and seven days a week during summer.
Free, donations accepted. http://www.illinoishistory.gov/hs/ lincoln_herndon.htm
The Lincoln Tomb
A
117-foot granite tomb in Oak Ridge Cemetery – Illinois’ largest
cemetery and the second most visited in the nation – houses the remains
of Lincoln, his wife and three of his four sons.
Lincoln’s
body rests in a concrete vault 10 feet below a marble floor of the
burial chamber. The gravesite is marked with a granite cenotaph flanked
by the presidential flag and flags of the states in which the Lincoln
family resided. Crypts in the chamber’s south wall contain the bodies of Lincoln’s wife and children.
The
117-foot granite tomb also features an interior room finished in
polished marble trimmed with bronze; an entrance opening into a rotunda
with corridors leading into the burial chamber; reproductions of various
Lincoln statues; a heroic bronze statue of Lincoln, and plaques with
excerpts from Lincoln’s Springfield farewell speech, the Gettysburg
Address and his second inaugural address.
The
cemetery also contains a public receiving vault, which was constructed
in 1860 and served as the scene of President Lincoln’s funeral.
While
at the cemetery, you can visit the gravesites of a number of other
prominent Illinoisans, including governors, poet Vachel Lindsay, and
United Mine Workers leader John L. Lewis.
Each
year, the Lincoln Tomb co-hosts a number of special events, such as the
American Legion Lincoln’s birthday pilgrimage, the Veterans of Foreign
Wars annual pilgrimage, the Sons of Union Veterans Lincoln’s Death
Anniversary Services, Mary Lincoln Coterie, Boy Scout Sunday and weekly
summer Civil War reenactments from the 114th Illinois Infantry.
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 a.m.-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
A
visit to Lincoln’s New Salem State Historic Site will transport you to a
century long gone, while giving you a better understanding of life as a
pioneer.
Though we
often think of Lincoln as the hardworking, rail-splitting pioneer,
historians maintain that the Old Abe lived in the village from 1831 to
1837 to get away from the manual labor of his younger days.
While
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 at the 635-acre site
effectively explain and demonstrate life in the 1800s, leaving some to
briefly long for simpler days.
Lincoln’s
New Salem also has a visitors center, where guests can view the film
Turning Point, which offers an introduction to New Salem and Abraham
Lincoln. A gift shop and an indoor museum and outdoor theater, which
houses outdoor plays and musicals during the summer, are also available
on site. The site hosts a variety of special events throughout the year,
such as the Lincoln’s New Salem Flatboat Presentation and Pioneer Life
Summer Day Camp. A complete list of activities and events can be found
at http://www. lincolnsnewsalem.com/
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. Call
217-632-4000, www. lincolnsnewsalem.com. Hours are 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Closed on Mondays and Tuesdays. Free admission. Suggested donations $2
children ages 12 and under, $4 adults or $10 for a family.
The Lincolns’ church
For
12 years, Abraham and Mary Todd Lincoln paid a fee to rent pew 20 at
the First Presbyterian Church when they attended services at the
church’s location on Washington and Third Streets. Despite the pew
rental, Abraham Lincoln never joined this – or any – church. Since then,
the church has moved to South Seventh Street, which also served as the
location for funeral services for Mary Todd Lincoln.
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-1960s, 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
While
Lincoln is often referred to as The Great Emancipator, a glimpse at
Lincoln’s banking ledger shows that his life was not much different than
that of the average citizen. The exhibit features bank statements for
expenditures for everyday necessities, such as groceries and monthly
mortgage payments. 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.