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			Remembering Thomas Lincoln, craftsman 
			For Father’s Day, Lincoln Presidential 
			Library displays furniture made by Abraham Lincoln’s father 
			 
			  
			
		 
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            [June 15, 2017] 
            
			SPRINGFIELD 
			– In honor of Father’s Day, the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library 
			and Museum is displaying two rare pieces of furniture made by the 
			16th president’s father, Thomas Lincoln. 
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			 The display begins on Friday, June 
			16, and ends on Monday, June 26. The furniture will be displayed in 
			the ALPLM’s library building, which means there is no charge for 
			visitors. The building is open 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., seven days a week. 
			 
			“Thomas Lincoln was a skilled artisan, as well as a farmer. About a 
			dozen of his creations are known to exist, and the Abraham Lincoln 
			Presidential Library and Museum is fortunate to have two of them in 
			its collection,” said ALPLM Executive Director Alan Lowe. “We 
			thought Father’s Day was the perfect time to show them off to the 
			world.” 
			  
			One piece is a desk-and-bookcase, also known as a plantation desk or 
			a secretary. It is made mostly of cherry wood and is among Thomas 
			Lincoln’s finest works. He made it about 1820 for Dr. John Crook, 
			the first physician in Spencer County, Indiana, where the Lincolns 
			then lived.  
			 
			The other is a day bed, also made of cherry. Commissioned in the 
			1810s, this was one of the earlier pieces made by Thomas 
			(1778-1851).  
			 
			Another piece can be found at the Lincoln Log Cabin State Historic 
			Site, which was Thomas Lincoln’s final home. The Coles County site 
			has a blanket chest that may be the last surviving piece made by the 
			president’s father. A photo of that will be included in the 
			presidential library’s display. 
			 
			The display also includes three original documents. One shows Thomas 
			Lincoln’s clear, firm signature in 1813, while another from 1835 
			shows him simply signing an X due to his failing eyesight and 
			possible arthritis. The third, written by a granddaughter, describes 
			him as “a kind granpapa” who “all ways Sed grace at the table.” 
			
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			The Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum 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. The museum uses traditional exhibits, 
eye-catching special effects and innovative story-telling techniques to educate 
visitors. 
 
It also has some 12 million items pertaining to all aspects of Illinois history, 
making the library one of the nation’s leading institutions for genealogy and 
history research. 
 
For more information, visit www.presidentlincoln.illinois.gov   
				 
			[Shanta Thoele 
			Executive Secretary 
			Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library] 
			
			  
			
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