Papers of Abraham Lincoln receives $300,000 matching grant
Will be
used to make Lincoln's pre-1860 political and personal
correspondence available to the public
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[October 22, 2012]
SPRINGFIELD -- The National
Endowment for the Humanities has announced a new three-year,
$300,000 matching grant for the Papers of Abraham Lincoln, the
largest grant the project has received to date from the NEH. This
will be used to help make available to the public Lincoln's
political and personal correspondence prior to his election as
president.
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"This grant is a great vote of confidence in our project," said
Daniel W. Stowell, project director and editor. "The NEH has long
supported the type of fundamental research that documentary editors
do to make the raw materials of history available to scholars and
the general public." The grant covers the period from July 1,
2013, to June 30, 2016. It will support more than half the salary of
the assistant director and the entire salary of one research
associate in Springfield. These staff members, along with other
editors, will focus their attention on the markup, annotation and
review of Lincoln's political and personal correspondence and
speeches prior to his inauguration as president.
The transcription and proofing of documents from the pre-1860
period will be complete by the time the grant begins in mid-2013.
Editors will use a sophisticated process to identify people,
organizations and places in the documents and prepare an explanatory
annotation that will allow researchers to understand the context and
importance of the documents. Prominent among these documents will be
correspondence and proposed and passed legislation from Lincoln's
four terms in the Illinois General Assembly (1834-1842) and his
single term in the U.S. House of Representatives (1847-1849).
These documents shed more light on Lincoln's role in the economic
development of the state and nation in a time of great expansion, as
well as his stance against the Mexican War, an unpopular position
that cost him a second term in Congress. They also help build new
audiences for the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum,
which administers the Papers of Abraham Lincoln project.
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Because the National Endowment for the Humanities offer comes in
the form of a matching grant, the project must raise at least
$100,000 per year from private sources to match the amount offered.
Thus, the grant award effectively doubles each private donation from
friends and supporters of the Papers of Abraham Lincoln.
Created in 1965 as an independent federal agency, the National
Endowment for the Humanities supports research and learning in
history, literature, philosophy and other areas of the humanities by
funding selected, peer-reviewed proposals from around the nation.
Additional information about the National Endowment for the
Humanities and its grant programs is available at
www.neh.gov.
The Papers of Abraham Lincoln is a long-term documentary editing
project dedicated to identifying, imaging, transcribing, annotating
and publishing all documents written by or to Abraham Lincoln during
his lifetime (1809-1865). The project is administered through the
Abraham Lincoln
Presidential Library and Museum and is co-sponsored by the
Center for State Policy and Leadership at the University of Illinois
Springfield and by the Abraham Lincoln Association.
[Text from
Abraham
Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum
file received from the
Illinois Historic
Preservation Agency]
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