Lincoln
Presidential Library welcomes new director
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[July 14, 2016]
SPRINGFIELD
– Alan Lowe, a veteran historian and archivist, began work Monday as
the new director of the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and
Museum.
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“This is an incredible and humbling opportunity.
Abraham Lincoln is a towering figure in American history,” Lowe
said. “I hope my experience can help the Lincoln Presidential
Library meet its responsibility to tell his story to the world.”
Lowe spent 20 years with the system of presidential libraries
operated by the National Archives and Records Administration.
Most recently, he was inaugural director of the George W. Bush
Presidential Library and Museum in Dallas. Lowe oversaw every aspect
of the library’s establishment, from the development, design, and
construction stages, to the 2013 dedication and the first three
years of public operations.
He began as an archivist at the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library
and Museum, then spent 11 years in the National Archives’ central
Office of Presidential Libraries in Washington, D.C. He later served
as acting director of the Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library
and Museum.
Lowe was also founding executive director of the Howard H. Baker Jr.
Center for Public Policy at the University of Tennessee in
Knoxville. That center was not part of the National Archives.
Lowe, 52, is a native of Kentucky. He has both a bachelor’s and a
master’s degree from the University of Kentucky. He lives in
Springfield with his wife, Kathy, and daughter, Carolyn. They have
two dogs: Theodore Rex (named after Teddy Roosevelt) and Lincoln.
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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, as well as some 12 million items pertaining to
all aspects of Illinois history. The museum uses traditional exhibits,
eye-catching special effects and innovative story-telling techniques to educate
visitors.
[Shanta Thoele, Abraham Lincoln
Presidential Library & Museum]
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