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			 Presenting Lincoln in the namesake town of Lincoln, Illinois is a 
			natural of course. Aside from the captivating portrayal from Daniel 
			Day-Lewis, that 2012 motion picture is a wonderfully told accounting 
			of Lincoln’s final months as president, a tale of how he wielded the 
			political avenues of his executive authority to achieve the noble 
			goal of ending slavery. It is a powerful reminder of the awesome 
			challenges and opportunities that come with the mantle of 
			leadership. 
 Watching that movie, one cannot but be struck with inspiration that 
			this same leader who took such breathtaking strides towards civil 
			rights in 1865 was the same lanky lawyer and legislator who 
			regularly scurried through the downtown streets of our city of 
			Lincoln, and who sauntered along the dusty roads of our own Logan 
			County in the 1840s and 1850s.
 
 Though older, war-worn, and much wiser in 1865, if one looks hard 
			enough at a photograph of the face of President Lincoln in 1865, or 
			a movie still from Spielberg’s Lincoln, the humble railsplitter and 
			the common man of the frontier people is still visible. By the time 
			he lived in the White House, Lincoln had outgrown his youth, but 
			never outgrew the strength of character and the quantity of humility 
			that the people of Logan County witnessed before Lincoln occupied 
			the Executive Mansion.
 
			
			 Though one often takes for granted what is in our own “backyards,” 
			those associated with tourism in this city have heard the same 
			comments numerous times from visitors who come here from afar. They 
			tell us: “You are fortunate to be living in an area so rich with 
			Abraham Lincoln history.” They are correct. 
 It is somewhat marvelous that visitors from all over the world come 
			here to our county specifically to take in our Abraham Lincoln 
			history and travel on our Route 66. In many ways we do live in an 
			area which represents what is truly spectacular and greatly 
			respected about America.
 
 Indeed, take a trip to any one of these locations in Logan County, 
			and you will encounter stories every bit as fascinating as that of 
			the movie Lincoln.
 
				To the peak of Elkhart Hill where Lincoln traversed Edward’s 
				Trace on a borrowed horseTo the Stagecoach Inn at Middletown, where Lincoln 
				socialized with the earliest settlers of Logan CountyTo the courthouses at Postville and in Mount Pulaski where 
				Lincoln argued the finer points of law To the christening site in Lincoln where it all began for 
				the city of LincolnTo Atlanta where ardent supporters held Wide-Awakes parades 
				in his honor To University Hall at the only college named for him in his 
				lifetime.  These are just some of the physical, tangible reminders of 
				what Lincoln did for our county, long before what he did for our 
				country.  
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			 If not for what happened here in our own backyard decades prior 
				to the presidency, what we see unfolded in the movie Lincoln 
				never would have happened at all. In other words, the fate of 
				history and the fate of mankind developed here in Lincoln and 
				Logan County. The residents of this area were among the first 
				to recognize the rising potential of frontier lawyer.  We returned the favor of what Lincoln gave to us. 
			Through four terms in the state legislature, one congressional 
			tenure, a senatorial run, and two elections as president, Logan 
			County never failed to provide Abraham Lincoln with a solid victory 
			at the polls. Indeed very few counties anywhere gave such solid 
			support as Logan County did. And Mr. Lincoln acknowledged that. 
 While Abraham Lincoln’s farewell speech to the citizens of 
			Springfield in February 1861 is more famous, he likewise made it a 
			point to deliver an equally fond farewell from the back of the train 
			here in his namesake city of Lincoln, telling the citizens gathered 
			at the train depot downtown, “Thank you for the many kindnesses you 
			have always manifested towards me.”
 
 It is certain that at the onset of his presidency, many nationwide 
			harbored reservations about Lincoln’s ability to hold a fragile 
			country together. But not Logan County. This county felt pride that 
			the father of their county, the father of their namesake city, and 
			now their favorite son, was now the leader of the country.
 
 We here, the inheritors of that legacy of Lincoln, have the 
			opportunity and responsibility to be stewards of those physical 
			places in our own backyard. They have been handed down to us to 
			maintain that honored legacy, to preserve and cherish it for future 
			generations, and to share its importance with our children and 
			visitors.
 
 Abraham Lincoln was proud to be associated with this area. May we 
			feel a similar pride that we reside in this namesake city, may we be 
			inspired by our heritage, and may we live out lives of character in 
			the example of Abraham Lincoln.
 
 [Ron J. Keller is associate professor 
			of history and political science at Lincoln College, and managing 
			director of the Abraham Lincoln Center for Character Development, 
			which is housed at the Lincoln Heritage Museum.]
 
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