Political cartoons at Lincoln College exhibit shed light on
Lincoln's popularity during his life
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[March 12, 2011]
Going on now through April 12, the
Lincoln Heritage Museum on the campus of Lincoln College is hosting
a traveling selection of cartoons featuring President Abraham
Lincoln.
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The exhibit
was originally set to leave Lincoln on April 5 but has
been extended to April 12, which is 150 years to the day since Fort
Sumter, S.C., was shelled by Confederacy, starting the Civil War.
The display is currently at the museum courtesy of the Gilder
Lehrman Institute of American History.
Melissa Weissert, assistant director at the museum, said the
cartoons on display are just a few of the kind that were typically
published between 1860 and 1865. The cartoons focus a great deal on
the Emancipation Proclamation and the public's distaste for
Lincoln's position on slavery.
Weissert said political cartoons shed some light on Lincoln's
popularity or lack thereof when he was serving as president.
While today, history views Lincoln as one of our nation's
greatest presidents, at that time, the opinion was quite different.
Lincoln's desire to end slavery and see people of color treated with
some form of respect was not popular.
Weissert said she likes to study the cartoons because "you can
see Lincoln through the eyes of the people at the time."
This spring the museum has a few other special exhibits going on
that the public is encouraged to stop in and see.
Beginning March 28 and running through April 15, there will be a
special exhibition on Logan County's own Gov. Oglesby. The exhibit
is described as:
An examination of
the life of Logan County resident Governor Oglesby, and his
association with Abraham Lincoln and U.S. Grant. The exhibit is
sponsored by the Governor Richard J. Oglesby Mansion.
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In memory of the assassination of Lincoln on April 14, 1865, the
museum will host a special evening event entitled "Our Martyred
President." Program information for the evening of April 14 says:
The museum will be
draped in black, and Mr. Virgil Davis will present his rare
assassination collection including many items never before shown.
Additional events are currently planned for September.
To keep track of everything that is going on at Lincoln Heritage
Museum, be sure to check out their website at
http://www.lincolncollege.edu/museum/index.htm.
[By NILA SMITH]
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