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Admission: Free
Monument Hours: Open 24 hours a day
Staffed 8:00 AM - Midnight
Lincoln: The Person
Abraham Lincoln was born February 12, 1809, in a log cabin near Hodgenville,
Kentucky, and became the 16th President of the United States, leading his
country through its greatest trial, the Civil War. His life was full of
personal tragedy and disappointment, but his belief in the principles of the
Declaration of Independence and his experience gained as a state legislator,
a lawyer, and as a Congressman, along with a whimsical sense of humor, gave
him the strength to endure. Throughout his political career Lincoln strove
to maintain the ideals of the Nation's founders. He saw slavery as
hypocritical for a Nation founded on the principle that "all men are created
equal." In an 1854 speech he said: "I hate it [slavery] because it deprives
our republican example of its just influence in the world - enables the
enemies of free institutions, with plausibility, to taunt us as hypocrites."
As President he used the power of the office to preserve the Union. In
freeing the slaves, Lincoln left a legacy to freedom that is one of the most
enduring birthrights Americans possess.
Lincoln: The President:
By condemning slavery's expansion and maintaining that he would not
interfere with it where it already existed, Lincoln won the presidential
nomination of the Republican party in 1860. Upon his electoral victory,
seven states of the lower South seceded and formed the Confederate States of
America. At his inauguration in March 1861 Lincoln implored the South to
show restraint and tried to dispel its mistrust, but he also pledged to do
whatever was necessary to preserve the Union. The South responded by firing
on Fort Sumter in Charleston harbor, April 12, 1861. Lincoln, in turn,
issued the call for troops to put down the rebellion, and four more states
in the Upper South - Virginia, Arkansas, North Carolina, and Tennessee -
seceded. The result was four years of bloody conflict. In January 1863
Lincoln issued the Emancipation Proclamation to free slaves within the
states in rebellion, thus raising the war to a higher moral plane. In
January 1865 he secured Congressional approval of the 13th Amendment that
abolished slavery in the United States. In his second Inaugural Address,
March 4, 1865, Lincoln offered peace and reconciliation to the South. He was
shot by an assassin on April 14, 1865, and died the next day, six days after
the surrender of Gen. Robert E. Lee and his troops at Appomattox Court
House, Virginia.
The Memorial to Lincoln:
Although Congress incorporated the Lincoln Monument Association in March
1867 to build a memorial to the slain President, no progress was made until
1901 when the McMillan Commission chose West Potomac Park as the site for
the memorial. This decision expanded on the ideas of Pierre L'Enfant who
designed the Federal City and envisioned an open mall area from the Capitol
to the Potomac River. Congress agreed on a design for the memorial submitted
by New York architect Henry Bacon and construction began on February 12,
1914. Daniel Chester French designed the statue and the Piccirilli Brothers
of New York carved it. It is 19 feet tall and 19 feet wide and is made of 28
separate blocks of white Georgia marble. Murals, painted by Jules Guerin
depicting principles evident in Lincoln's life, are located on the north and
south walls of the memorial above inscriptions of Lincoln's Gettysburg
Address and his Second Inaugural. Ernest Bairstow carved other sculptured
features of the memorial with the assistance of Evelyn Beatrice Longman,
French's 19-year-old apprentice. The building is constructed primarily of
Colorado Yule marble and Indiana limestone. The 36 columns around the
memorial represent the states in the union at the time of Lincoln's death;
their names are carved in the frieze directly above. The names of the 48
states in the Union when the memorial was completed in 1922 are carved in
the exterior attic walls. A memorial plaque in the plaza commemorates the
subsequent admission of Alaska and Hawaii. President Warren G. Harding
dedicated the memorial on May 30, 1922. The principal address at the
dedication was given by Dr. Robert Moton, president of Tuskegee Institute,
and Robert Todd Lincoln, the President's only surviving son, was in
attendance.
Visiting the Memorial:
The Lincoln Memorial is staffed from 8 a.m. to midnight every day except
December 25 by park rangers who are available to answer questions and give
talks on Abraham Lincoln and the memorial. They can also answer questions
about other National Park Service sites in and around Washington, D.C. Books
and educational materials may be purchased at the bookstore on the chamber
level. Handicap access to the chamber and restrooms is located in the lower
level of the memorial. This memorial is a unit of the National Park System,
which consists of more than 360 parks depicting our country's natural and
cultural heritage. Address any inquiries to: Superintendent, National
Capital Parks-Central, 900 Ohio Drive SW, Washington, DC 20242.
Additional Information:
http://www.nps.gov/kwvm/
http://www.nps.gov/kwvm/home.htm
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