| The “Unfinished Work” exhibit features documents and artifacts 
			from the immense Taper collection. Among them: 
				A promissory note in which Lincoln promised to pay $379.82, 
				an amount he called “my national debt.”His patent for a mechanism to get stranded riverboats off of 
				obstructions. No other U.S. president has held a patent.His beloved stepmother’s “X” signature on a receipt.A gorgeously illustrated copy of the Emancipation 
				Proclamation.A ticket to his funeral at the White House. The exhibit takes its name from the Gettysburg Address, in 
				which Lincoln described the “unfinished work” of bringing 
				freedom to the nation. The name refers both to Lincoln’s life 
				being cut short and to the mission of ensuring that these and 
				other irreplaceable artifacts find a permanent home at the 
				Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum.
 The Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library Foundation has raised 
				almost $14 million in in-kind and financial support for the 
				Permanent Home Campaign, which has some $11 million remaining to 
				be raised until its completion.
 
			
			 “Unfinished Work” runs April 15 to May 15. Most of the exhibit's 
				items on display are underwritten by generous donors; others 
				remain available for sponsorship.
 “This exhibit is important not only because of the historic 
				documents and artifacts it showcases, but also because in very 
				quiet and understated ways it honors the generous individuals 
				who underwrote each item to ensure they all have a permanent 
				home at the Lincoln Presidential Library,” said Dr. Carla 
				Knorowski, chief executive officer of the Abraham Lincoln 
				Presidential Library Foundation.
 
 The exhibit is divided into several sections: Career, Family, 
				Presidency, Friends, Mary and Assassination. They guide visitors 
				from Lincoln’s days as a struggling shopkeeper to his presidency 
				to the tragedy of his death. They take visitors beyond Lincoln 
				to the lives of his widow, his son and his sole grandson.
 
			
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“The 
				lives of everyone around Lincoln were made more poignant by 
				association. His elders, his friends, his colleagues, his loved 
				ones – we learn about Lincoln by learning about them and 
				vice-versa,” said James M. Cornelius, curator of the 
				presidential library’s Lincoln Collection. “The Taper collection 
				offers us these rare chances to understand his relationships.” 
“Unfinished Work” will be presented in the museum’s Illinois Gallery. The 
exhibit is free with regular admission to the museum. 
 The Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum, a division of the Illinois 
Historic Preservation Agency, is dedicated to telling the story of America’s 
16th president through old-fashioned scholarship and modern technology.
 
 The library holds an unparalleled collection of Lincoln books, documents, 
photographs, artifacts and art, including the Gettysburg Address, Emancipation 
Proclamation, 13th Amendment and Abraham Lincoln’s stovepipe hat. It also serves 
as the state’s historical library, with some 12 million items pertaining to 
Illinois history.
 
 The museum uses traditional exhibits, eye-catching special effects and 
innovative story-telling techniques to educate visitors. It also presents an 
array of temporary exhibits about Lincoln and Illinois.
 
 The museum is open seven days a week. The library portion of the ALPLM is open 
free of charge Monday through Friday for research. For details, visit
www.PresidentLincoln.illinois.gov.
 
				 
			[Shanta Thoele, Communications and 
			Public Affairs, Illinois Historic Preservation Agency] 
			
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