Monday, September 17, 2012
 
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An old oak makes its way home to Lincoln

Thanks to Gene Hickey and the Logan County Mounted Police

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[September 17, 2012]  Several years ago Gene Hickey was hired to do an excavation of the old Sinclair gas station in Lincoln. During the teardown, the crew noted a small oak tree, about 4 inches in diameter, growing on the site. At first they thought the best thing to do would be to destroy it along with everything else, but Hickey had another idea. He dug up the tree, took it to his home and planted it in his front yard, where it thrived for several years.

Fast-forward to this spring and Hickey noted the tree had become diseased. It was dying and needed to come down.

When the tree was cut, Hickey really didn't want to see the beautiful old oak destroyed, so he came up with another idea.

"We drive by the covered wagon all the time. We'd see people stopped, looking at it, and realized there is no place for them to just sit down and enjoy it," Hickey said. He decided that turning the old oak into new benches for the wagon site would be the perfect way to preserve the tree.

"In a way, I guess you could say the tree has come back home," Hickey smiled as he prepared to participate in a dedication service on Saturday morning.

Hickey said that once the tree was cut down, he hired it split in half with a large band saw. He then used a draw saw to plane the seating area and make it smooth and even. The two half-logs were then mounted on legs.

Hickey said he used no nails when building the benches, but rather built them in the same manner they would have been built in the 1800s. He pointed out pegs that are inserted in the lower crossbar that ties all the legs together.

He had torn down an old barn where the pegs had been used to secure joists together and had saved the pegs from the teardown. He used those in the benches as well.

Once all the work was done, the benches were given ample coats of weather-resistant polyurethane to help preserve their life and color.

The benches were donated in the name of the Logan County Mounted Police to the Abraham Lincoln Tourism Bureau of Logan County to be placed at the covered wagon site.

The Logan County Mounted Police, of which Hickey is the captain, was formed in the 1970s. They currently have a dozen members who work with and for the Logan County Sheriff's Office. Hickey said the team is called out by Sheriff Steve Nichols as needed for search and rescue efforts.

They also represent the county in various social events such as local parades and are usually visible at the Lincoln Art & Balloon Festival, both downtown and at the airport.

Saturday morning Hickey was joined by two members of the group with their horses, Mayor Keith Snyder, Darlene Begolka of the Logan Railsplitting Association, Geoff Ladd of tourism, and Paresh Patel, owner of the Best Western Inn, for a ribbon-cut dedication of the benches.

Each person expressed appreciation for the donation.

Ladd had spoken earlier in the day about the benches, saying they were a beautiful addition to the covered wagon site.

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The wagon has been a popular tourist attraction, drawing visitors all year-round. While people were there for the ceremony Saturday, a family from Jacksonville stopped by, and a couple out for a motorcycle ride on a bright, sunny day stopped in as well.

The family from Jacksonville was heading out to Eaton Fields, where the two boys would be participating in a football game against the Lincoln Youth Football team. The family had seen the wagon and decided to stop in for a quick peek. They read the roadside sign that stands at the head of the wagon, chatted a minute with Mayor Keith Snyder, then went on up the road to the football game.

The wagon was built by David Bentley, a former police officer, in 2001. For several years it stood at the Divernon exit of Interstate 55, south of Springfield.

In 2007 it was purchased by Larry Van Bibber and donated to the tourism bureau.

When it arrived in Lincoln it was placed at the intersection of Woodlawn Road and Lincoln Parkway.

In 2009, Paresh Patel took over the Lincoln Country Inn and converted it to a Best Western. Patel owns the green space in front of his motel and invited the tourism bureau to place the wagon on his front lawn.

The wagon was brought to its new home in December of 2009. Since then, work has been done to make the wagon more stable. A new cover has been put on the wagon and is supposed to be more weather-resistant than the original. Landscaping has been done around the wagon, and now the benches seem to be the finishing touch.

The wagon, which is 40 feet long, 12 feet wide and 25 feet tall, is recorded in the Guinness Book of World Records as the largest covered wagon in existence. It also features a much-larger-than-life Abraham Lincoln seated and reading a law book.

In 2010, the wagon was also recognized by Reader's Digest as the No. 1 Roadside Attraction in America, based on their polling of 1,100 readers.

[By NILA SMITH]

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