Abraham Lincoln Presidential
Library and Museum offers free admission on anniversary of
Gettysburg Address
Handwritten copy of Address will be on
display Nov. 15-24
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[November 15, 2024]
SPRINGFIELD – An original edition of the
Gettysburg Address is going on display for 10 days at the Abraham
Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum, the only place in America
where the public can regularly see Lincoln’s most famous speech
written in his own hand.
The presidential library’s copy of the Gettysburg Address will be
exhibited Nov. 15 through Nov. 24. After that, it returns to a
climate-controlled vault for safekeeping.
To give more people the opportunity to appreciate this powerful
document, admission to the museum will be free on Nov. 19, the 161st
anniversary of Lincoln delivering the speech at a military cemetery
in Gettysburg, Pa. For the full 10 days the address is on display,
visitors also have the option of paying just $5 to see the document
without touring the rest of the museum.
The anniversary day will also see students from Springfield’s
Japanese sister city, Ashikaga, visit the museum and recite the
address.
The Gettysburg Address is one of the most famous speeches ever
given. Its stirring prose and historic impact have been studied by
everyone from schoolchildren to scholars.
“In 272 powerful words, Abraham Lincoln captured the pain of the
Civil War and the truth of what was at stake: a new birth of
freedom,” said Christina Shutt, executive director of the Abraham
Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum. “This handwritten copy of
his address is a national treasure. We hope offering free admission
allows more people to appreciate it in person.”
The display includes several special features,
including additional photos, information in Spanish and a survey
about the meaning of the address. And people with visual
difficulties can use a QR code to call up an easy-to-read version of
information about the Gettysburg Address or to hear a reading of the
speech.
The ALPLM is also giving visitors a chance to talk
about the speech with Lincoln Historian Christian McWhirter. At
12:30 on Nov. 21 and 22, McWhirter will discuss what inspired
Lincoln to write it and what message he may have been trying to send
to his divided nation.
Lincoln delivered the Gettysburg Address on Nov. 19, 1863, at the
dedication of a national cemetery for the thousands of Union
soldiers killed at the Battle of Gettysburg. It opens with the
famous phrase “Four score and seven years ago” and finishes by
describing the Civil War as a battle to preserve government “of the
people, by the people, for the people.”
Five handwritten copies of the Gettysburg Address still exist. In
addition to the ALPLM’s copy, one is in the White House, one is at
Cornell University and two are at the Library of Congress. Those
institutions rarely exhibit their copies to the general public. The
ALPLM, however, displays its copy each year around the anniversary
of Lincoln delivering the speech.
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For anyone who can’t visit in person, the ALPLM offers a
webpage that provides an up-close look at the presidential
library’s copy of the speech, explaining its history and how it
differs from other copies. It examines the meaning and impact of
Lincoln’s words. Just click on key words in the speech and up
pop boxes full of helpful information. The page also includes
educational resources for teachers and parents, a photo gallery
and links to other sources of information about the address.
The State of Illinois has owned this edition of the address,
known as the Everett Copy, since 1944, when the state’s children
helped raise money to buy it from private owners.
“Most people know a few famous phrases from the Gettysburg
Address, but they haven’t thought much about what the words mean
or how they influenced the nation’s ideals. Seeing the document
in person offers a rare chance to connect personally and reflect
on what it asks of us as individuals and as a country,” said
Brian Mitchell, the ALPLM’s director of research and
interpretation.
The mission of the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and
Museum is to inspire civic engagement through the diverse lens
of Illinois history and by sharing with the world the life and
legacy of Abraham Lincoln. We pursue this mission through a
combination of rigorous scholarship and high-tech showmanship
built on the bedrock of the ALPLM’s unparalleled collection of
historical materials – some 12 million items from all eras of
Illinois history.
For more information, visit
www.PresidentLincoln.illinois.gov. You can follow the ALPLM
on Facebook,
Twitter and
Instagram.
[Christopher Wills (he/him/his)
Director of Communications
Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum]
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