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			 This first release of documents is a major step 
			toward the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum’s goal of 
			providing a transcript of every single document written by or to 
			Lincoln, complete with helpful annotations and supporting 
			information. 
			 
			“This project has the potential to transform Lincoln scholarship,” 
			said Alan Lowe, executive director of the Abraham Lincoln 
			Presidential Library and Museum. “Not only will researchers have 
			immediate access to what President Lincoln wrote himself, but 
			they’ll also be able to see what others were telling him. How did he 
			navigate conflicting demands and make decisions? Now this 
			information will all be in one place for students and scholars 
			around the world.” 
			 
			The presidential library’s Papers of Abraham Lincoln project has 
			spent years searching the world for Lincoln-related documents, and 
			then transcribing and annotating them. Now the project has begun 
			releasing its work at
			www.Papers 
			ofAbrahamLincoln.org,  a “beta” site that will be tweaked 
			and improved as user feedback comes in.  
			 
			This first wave, covering the period from his birth in 1809 birth to 
			the end of his legislative career in 1842, contains 340 documents 
			written by or to Lincoln. It also includes 4,839 documents that 
			provide context on what issues Lincoln faced as a lawyer and 
			legislator. 
			 
			The oldest document is a small workbook Lincoln used as a student. 
			It shows him learning to subtract, multiply, divide, calculate 
			interest and more. The young Lincoln also jotted down silly comments 
			and poems, including  
			 
			
			
			_small.jpg)  
			 
			Abraham Lincoln is my nam[e] 
			And with my pen I wrote the same 
			I wrote in both hast[e] and speed 
			and left it here for fools to read 
			
			  
			
			Over the years, the “ciphering book” was taken apart and its 11 
			pages were given to different people and institutions. The standard 
			reference on Lincoln’s writings contained only part of the 
			workbook’s contents. The version offered by the Papers of Abraham 
			Lincoln combines all 11 pages so that the workbook’s complete text 
			is now available – an example of the project’s goal of gathering all 
			Lincoln documents in one place. 
			 
			Other documents cover both Lincoln’s personal and professional life 
			– his attempts to find a profession in New Salem, his early legal 
			work, his failed relationship with Mary Owens and his successful one 
			with Mary Todd. The bulk of this release deals with his time in the 
			Illinois legislature. Researchers can read bills Lincoln wrote, 
			speeches he delivered and open letters he published in the 
			newspaper.  
			 
			
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“This is the most complete documentary collection ever produced 
on the first 33 years of Lincoln’s life. It undoubtedly will allow scholars to 
reassess Lincoln’s political beginnings,” said Illinois State Historian Samuel 
Wheeler, acting director of the Papers of Abraham Lincoln. “Future releases on 
other periods in his life will also set new standards, allowing for even more 
new insights and discoveries.” 
 
Valuable Lincoln resources can already be found online, but they have 
limitations. The Collected Works of Abraham Lincoln gets its content from a 1953 
collection and does not include documents written to Lincoln. A Library of 
Congress site features only documents in the library’s collection – roughly 
40,000 items. 
			 
  
When the Papers of Abraham Lincoln project is complete, it will include 150,000 
to 175,000 documents.  
 
Today’s debut follows an intensive process to improve the Papers of Abraham 
Lincoln project’s policies and procedures, assisted by a team of national 
experts and with tremendous guidance from Susan Perdue, the co-author of “A 
Guide to Documentary Editing.” 
 
Many organizations have helped make this project possible, including the Abraham 
Lincoln Association, Abraham Lincoln Bicentennial Foundation, Abraham Lincoln 
Presidential Library Foundation, Shelby Cullom Davis Charitable Fund, National 
Endowment for the Humanities, National Historical Publications and Records 
Commission, Shapell Manuscript Foundation, Jean and Bill Soman, and Tracy 
Community Foundation.  
 
Iron Mountain Inc. provided both financial and in-kind support, and today stores 
the detailed images of documents scanned by the Papers of Abraham Lincoln in a 
secure data storage facility. 
 
“We’re proud to support the legacy of Abraham Lincoln and act as the archival 
partner to the Papers of Abraham Lincoln project,” said Ty Ondatje, senior vice 
president, Corporate Responsibility and Chief Diversity Officer, Iron Mountain. 
“President Lincoln was one of the most prolific presidents, and documents 
written from him, or to him, help tell the story of our country during an 
important era in history. Iron Mountain’s Iron Cloud is committed to protecting 
and preserving a copy of those documents and thus ensuring they are accessible 
through the library for generations to come.”  
 
The presidential library and museum uses a combination of rigorous scholarship 
and high-tech showmanship to immerse visitors in Lincoln’s life and times. 
Visitors can see ghosts come to life on stage, watch TV coverage of the 1860 
Presidential election, roam through the Lincoln White House, experience booming 
cannons in a Civil War battle and come face to face with priceless original 
Lincoln artifacts. 
 
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.  
 
For more information, visit 
www.PresidentLincoln.illinois.gov.   
				 
			[Christopher Wills]  |