Abraham
Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum offers new way to enjoy
historic artifacts
Website provides 3-D images of treasures
from Illinois history
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[December 16, 2022]
Crawl around under Abraham Lincoln’s desk. Spin
the chair where Adlai Stevenson III sat in the U.S. Senate. Look
down the barrel of Tad Lincoln’s model cannon. Thanks to new 3-D
images from the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum,
anyone anywhere in the world can explore treasures from Illinois
history like never before.
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The virtual gallery features about
100 artifacts that can be enlarged, turned upside down or spun
around. Each comes with details about the item’s history and
significance.
“Every museum visitor has seen some fascinating artifact they would
like to pick up and examine more closely. These 3D images offer the
next-best thing,” said Christina Shutt, executive director of the
Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum. “They let all of us
satisfy our curiosity by peering into the nooks and crannies of
history.”
The images can be found at
www.PresidentLincoln.Illinois.gov/3D.
The 3-D scanning was made possible by grant funds the ALPLM received
as part of the Governor’s Emergency Education Relief. The U.S.
Department of Education awarded grants to governors for the purpose
of providing local educational agencies, institutions of higher
education and other education-related entities with emergency
assistance during the coronavirus pandemic.
“Nothing connects us to the past quite like artifacts. They add
concrete details as we imagine Abraham Lincoln writing a speech, a
soldier risking everything in war, or a lonely boy playing in the
White House,” said Lisa Horsley, the ALPLM’s director of library
services. “We’re excited to give people around the world a chance to
explore these historic treasures.”
The 3-D gallery includes many objects that were part of the Taper
Collection, a huge collection of Lincoln material that was housed at
the ALPLM for many years. The collection’s owners have removed the
items, but digital versions remain available through the ALPLM for
anyone who wants to study them.
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Highlights of the virtual gallery include:
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The desk where Lincoln wrote much of the speech
he would deliver after being sworn in as president
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A bust of Lincoln that was a gift to the Lincolns
from the sculptor
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Tools that thieves used in a failed attempt to
steal Lincoln’s body from his tomb in Springfield
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A bust of Frank “Free Frank” McWorter, first
Black man to plat and register a town in America
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A medal of honor awarded posthumously to Andrew
Jackson Smith, a Black man serving in the Civil War
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Campaign items from the presidential bids of
Adlai Stevenson II.
The mission of the Abraham Lincoln Presidential
Library and Museum is to inspire civic engagement through the
diverse lens of Illinois history and sharing with the world the life
and legacy of Abraham Lincoln. We pursue this mission through a
combination of rigorous scholarship and high-tech showmanship built
on the bedrock of the ALPLM’s unparalleled collection of historical
materials – some 13 million items from all eras of Illinois history.
For more information, visit
www.PresidentLincoln.Illinois.gov
[Christopher Wills]
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