"The Lincoln Memorial" by NPS/Terry Adams , public domain
Lincoln MemorialBrochure |
Official Brochure of Lincoln Memorial in the District of Columbia. Published by the National Park Service (NPS).
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Lincoln Memorial
Washington, D.C.
National Park Service
U.S. Department of the Interior
It is ratherfor us to be here dedicated to the
great task remaining before us- thatfrom
these honored dead we take increased devotion
to that causefor which they gave the last
fillmeasure ofdevotion... that this nation,
under God, shall have a new birth offreedom—
and that government ofthe people, by the people,
for thepeopley shall not perish from the earth
— Abraham Lincoln
Gettysburg A ddress
November 19, 1863
Lincoln: The Person
Abraham Lincoln was born February 12,1809, in a log cabin
near Hodgenville, Kentucky, and became the 16th President
of the United States, leading his country through its greatest
trial, the Civil War. His life was full of personal tragedy and
disappointment, but his belief in the principles of the Declaration of Independence and his experience gained as a state
legislator, a lawyer, and as a Congressman, along with a
whimsical sense of humor, gave him the strength to endure.
Throughout his political career Lincoln strove to maintain
the ideals of the Nation's founders. He saw slavery as hypocritical for a Nation founded on the principle that "all men
are created equal." In an 1854 speech he said: "I hate it
[slavery] because it deprives our republican example of its
just influence in the world—enables the enemies of free institutions, with plausibility, to taunt us as hypocrites." As President he used the power of the office to preserve the Union.
In freeing the slaves, Lincoln left a legacy to freedom that is
one of the most enduring birthrights Americans possess.
Lincoln Memorial
Lincoln: The President
By condemning slavery's expansion and maintaining that he
would not interfere with it where it already existed, Lincoln
won the presidential nomination of the Republican party in
1860. Upon his electoral victory, seven states of the lower
South seceded and formed the Confederate States of America. At his inauguration in March 1861 Lincoln implored the
South to show restraint and tried to dispel its mistrust, but he
also pledged to do whatever was necessary to preserve the
Union. The South responded by firing on Fort Sumter in
Charleston harbor, April 12,1861. Lincoln, in turn, issued
the call for troops to put down the rebellion, and four more
states in the Upper South—Virginia, Arkansas, North Caro-
lina, and Tennessee—seceded. The result was four years
of bloody conflict. In January 1863 Lincoln issued the
Emancipation Proclamation to free slaves within the states
in rebellion, thus raising the war to a higher moral plane.
In January 1865 he secured Congressional approval of the
13th Amendment that abolished slavery in the United States.
In his Second Inaugural Address, March 4,1865, Lincoln
offered peace and reconciliation to the South. He was shot
by an assassin on April 14,1865, and died the next day, six
days after the surrender of Gen. Robert E. Lee and his troops
at Appomattox Court House, Virginia.
Bill Weems
The Memorial to Lincoln
Although Congress incorporated the Lincoln Monument Association in March 1867
to build a memorial to the slain President,
no progress was made until 1901 when the
McMillan Commission chose West Potomac
Chester French designed the statue, and
the Piccirilii Brothers of New York carved it.
It is 19 feet tall and 19 feet wide and made of
28 separate blocks of white Georgia marble.
Murals, painted by Jules Guerin depicting
principles evident in Lincoln's life, are on
the north and south walls of the memorial
above inscriptions of Lincoln's Gettysburg
Address and his Second Inaugural Address.
Ernest Bairstow sculpted other features of
the memorial with the assistance of Evelyn
Beatrice Longman, French's 19-year-old apprentice. The building is constructed primarily of Colorado Yule marble and Indiana
limestone. The 36 columns around the memorial represent the states in the Union at
the time of Lincoln's death; their names are
carved in the frieze directly above. The
names of the 48 states in the Union when
the memorial was completed in 1922 are
carved in the exterior attic walls. A memorial
plaque in the plaza commemorates the later
admission of Alaska and Hawaii. President
Park as the site for the memorial. This deci- Warren G. Harding dedicated the memorial
sion expanded on the ideas of Pierre L'Enfant on May 30,1922. The principal address at
the dedication was given by Robert Moton,
who designed the Federal City and envisioned an open mall area from the Capitol to president of Tuskegee Institute. Robert Todd
Lincoln, the President's only surviving son,
the Potomac River. Congress agreed on a
attended the ceremony.
design for the memorial submitted by New
York architect Henry Bacon and construction began on February 12,1914. Daniel
Visiting the Memorial
The Lincoln Memorial
is staffed from 8 a.m. to
midnight every day except December 25 by
park rangers, who are
available to answer
questions and give talks.
They also answer questions about other National Park Service sites
in and around Washington, D.C. Books and educational materials may
be purchased at the
bookstore on the chamber level. For visitors
with disabilities access
to the chamber and restrooms is in the lower
level of the memorial.
This memorial is a unit
of the National Park System, U.S. Department
of the Interior, one of
more than 370 parks that
are important examples
of our nation's natural
and cultural heritage.
For information write:
Superintendent, National Capital Parks-Central,
900 Ohio Drive SW,
Washington, DC 200242000. Or, www.nps.gov/
nacc on the Internet.
Daniel Chester French
(left), the sculptor, and
Henry Bacon, the architect, stand on the
steps of the memorial
that they created together. The dimly-lit figure of Lincoln can be
seen behind them.
ft GPO:2000—460-976/00358 Reprint 1997
Primed on recycled paper.