Nashville

My next stop was Nashville. It was a short visit, and I had two goals.

My first goal was to meet up with a friend I had met years and years ago on the Dictionary.com forum. I got situated in a campground and then we met up for dinner. After all those years of being digital friends, it was marvelous to finally meet Karen in person.

My other goal for Nashville was to see the state capitol. But, I had a little time to spend near my campground, and Karen recommended that I visit Opryland Hotel. With 2888 rooms, it is one of the 30 largest hotels in the world.

Really, it is enormous. There are fountains and plantings all over.

It seems more like a tropical oasis than someplace in Tennessee, and a quarter mile long river runs through the main atrium.

The plantings are really lush and well-tended. I can’t even imagine how many gardeners they have taking care of all of the plants that are inside.

There were several different conferences going on the day I visited. I wondered which conference these sisters were attending.

I walked around a bit and then headed outside. It was the beginning of November when I visited, and they are getting things set up for Christmas.

I persuaded a passerby to snap a photo of be sitting in this giant ornament.

Karen also encouraged me to eat at the Opry Backstage Grill. A friend of hers was working. The waiters get up and perform between serving their customers. This is her friend, but unfortunately I’ve forgotten his name. I do remember that he was a good musician.

I am pretty sure I ate a meal there, but I’ve forgotten what it was. I do remember the banana pudding I had for dessert. Yum!

It was time to cross another state capitol off my list. I parked in a spot close to the building and started climbing. It seems that city planners make a point of putting capitols on tops of hills! One of these days, I will do a compare and contrast of all the capitols.

I got up to the top of the hill and came upon this statue of a WW I doughboy.

It turns out that it was Sergeant York, one of the most decorated United States Army soldiers of World War I. He received the Medal of Honor for leading an attack on a German machine gun nest, taking at least one machine gun, killing at least 25 enemy soldiers and capturing 132.

If you are so inclined, click on the link above and read about his interesting life, starting out in a two-room log cabin in Fentress County, Tennessee. He was born in 1887, and died at age 76 in 1964. I must be getting old, because I can remember when World War I vets weren’t that uncommon.

If you are not inclined to read the link, you could always watch the sanitized Hollywood version of his story.

Sergeant York was a 1941 film based on Alvin York’s diary. It was directed by Howard Hawk and was the highest-grossing film of the year. Gary Cooper won the Academy Award for Best Actor for his portrayal of Sergeant York. The American Film Institute ranked the film 57th in the 100 most inspirational American movies, and rated Alvin York 35th in it’s list of the top 50 heroes in American cinema.

This small grove of trees is a memorial to the six million Jewish victims of the Nazi Holocaust. It was dedicated by Governor Lamar Alexander on May 4, 1986.

I had to check one of my previous posts to see when the holocaust memorial on the grounds of the Ohio state capitol was dedicated. I wondered if the ’80s was a period of holocaust memorials. Apparently not. Ohio’s memorial was dedicated in 2014, and the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum was dedicated in 1993.

There is a bronze statue of Andrew Johnson, the first American president to be impeached. He was born in North Carolina, but that didn’t stop him from serving Tennessee, first as mayor of Greenville, then as a representative to the U.S. Congress and as the 15th governor of Tennessee before he became Lincoln’s vice president on March 4, 1865. That gig was a short one. He became president on April 15, 1865, after Lincoln’s assassination. Johnson survived the 11 counts of impeachment brought against him, and went on to serve until the end of his term in 1869.

Here is one of the 57 liberty bell replicas that the U.S. Treasury minted and sent to each state and territory in 1950 as part of a savings bond drive. I swear that there are blogs for everything!

Check out Tom and his quest to find the 57 Liberty Bells. Incidentally, I borrowed this photo from his website. I let him know, so if he objects, I will take it down.

Continuing on around the grounds, I came upon this 1933 Corps of Engineers Geodesic Survey Marker. I was curious about the meaning of “geodesic”, so I looked it up. Apparently it has to do with measuring the shortest possible line between two points on a curved surface. If so, I would imagine that there are other geodesic survey markers, but I don’t remember coming across them on my travels.

While I absolutely love trees, there is a problem with planting trees as a memorial.

The “loyalty, devotion and sacrifices” of the American war mothers during the War to End All Wars may live on in the hearts of their countrymen, but trees have a tendency to die.

Man, there are a lot of stairs!

Andrew Jackson appears to be tipping his hat to the Tennessee state flag.

Andrew Jackson was the seventh president of the United States, from 1829-1837. I visited his plantation, The Hermitage, the year before.

Oh, my golly! More stairs!

William Strickland, prominent Philadelphia architect, modeled the capitol after a Greek ionic temple.

William Strickland by John Neagle

The cornerstone was laid in 1845 and the capitol was completed 14 years later, in 1859. Poor William didn’t live to see the completion of his masterpiece. He died in 1854 and is entombed in the Northeast wall. His son, F. W. Strickland, supervised completion of the structure. Samuel Dold Morgan, chairman of the State Building Commission overseeing the construction of the Tennessee State Capitol, is entombed in the Southeast corner near the South entrance.

Samuel Dold Morgan 1798 – 1880

At least Samuel lived to see the completion of the building. He died in 1880.

I must admit that this sign rather confused me. Oh, I’m used to entrances being closed, but which way is west? Should I go right or left? I don’t remember what I did, but I eventually got inside.

This elegant building has served as Tennessee’s capitol since it opened in 1859.

One interesting feature about the building is that it is one of 11 state capitols that does not have a dome. Those states are Alaska, Florida, Hawaii, Louisiana, New Mexico, New York, North Dakota, Ohio, Oregon, Tennessee, and Virginia – just in case you wanted to know.

There is no lack of architectural detail to draw the eye upwards as there are quite a few lovely chandeliers inside.

And they are reflected in the highly polished floors.

There are soaring arches, so the lack of a dome is really not noticeable. In fact, I didn’t realize that it was lacking a dome until I  looked at my photos and read up on the building.

The American Society of Civil Engineers has listed the building as a civil engineering landmark in recognition of its innovative construction. It made unusually extensive use of stone. Both the interior and exterior are built with limestone from a quarry that was only about a mile away. My Preferred Source says that some interior columns were built from single pieces of stone, which required massive wooden derricks to hoist them into place. Structural iron was used for roof trusses to reduce the building’s vulnerability to fire, which was an innovation in design.

Busts of significant people in Tennessee history are set into niches.

Davy Crockett

Andrew Johnson

Andrew Jackson. (Honestly, though, was is up with his neck? He looks like the statue was designed by El Greco.)

According to the information carved into the base of this bust, it was created in the ‘likeness of Sampson W. Keeble.”

I’ll let you read the rest of it for yourself.

Admiral Farragut has a bust here. He was born near Knoxville in a town named Campbell’s Station. It has since been renamed Farragut. His mother died at when he was quite young and he was fostered by David Porter. Mr. Porter was a naval officer, and it must have been “Take Your Son to Work Day”.  He served in the War of 1812 under the command of his father. At least he made it to double digits before he went to war.

He resided in Norfolk, Virginia prior to the Civil War, but he was a Southern Unionist who strongly opposed Southern secession. He remained loyal to the Union and captured New Orleans in 1862. He helped extend Union Control of the Mississippi River and also led a successful attack on Mobile Bay, home to the last major Confederate port on the Gulf of Mexico. He is credited with the order “Damn the torpedoes, full speed ahead!” This is a paraphrase of what he actually said. If you want to know what his actual order was, click here.

Sequoyah was born near Knoxville in the late 1700s. We had a story about him in one of the reading series at school, and I was always amazed that he invented a way to write his language. It is one of the few times in recorded history that a member of a pre-literate people created an original, effective writing system.

Just in case you are curious, this is what his syllabary looked like. It consisted of 85 characters, each representing a syllable of the spoken language. The first person he taught to read was his six-year old daughter, Ayokeh. He couldn’t find any adults who were interested. Together they traveled to the Arkansas Reserves where some Cherokee had settled. The chiefs weren’t too interested until he had them dictate some words that he wrote down. He called Ayokeh to read they words back to them. Literacy rules!

Robert Love Taylor was an interesting fellow. His first elected office was as governor. I imagine family gathering might have been contentious affairs. In that election, he defeated his older brother, Republican Alfred Taylor. However, maybe the campaign was more good-natured than we have become used to in recent years. The 1886 campaign was known as “The War of the Roses” and it involved story-telling, fiddle-playing and practical jokes.

Alfred did finally have his turn in the governor’s seat, though, as he was elected in 1920, after Robert had died.

There are always divisions. Some people like Pepsi…

while others prefer Coke.

I thought it was very accommodating that they had both options available.

We got to look inside the House of Representatives.

In one of the reception areas, there were some bronze plaques honoring Constitutional amendments. This one was for the 19th Amendment, which gave women the vote. Tennessee was the last of the 36 states needed to secure ratification of the amendment. That happened on August 18, 1920. The Nineteenth Amendment was officially adopted on August 26, 1920.

Did you know that prior to 1776, women had the right to vote in several of the colonies in what later became the United States? But, by 1807, every state constitution denied even limited suffrage. I did not know that.

This plaque honors the 14th and 15th amendments.

The 13th amendment, ratified in 1865, abolished slavery and involuntary servitude, except for those duly convicted of a crime. I guess that is how we can have crews of convicts working on the roads and in parks even today – especially down south.

The 14th Amendment, ratified in 1868, addresses citizenship rights and equal protection of the laws for all. The 15th Amendment (ratified in 1870) prohibits discrimination in voting rights of citizens on the basis of “race, color, or previous condition of servitude.”

Those three amendments, taken together, are known as the Reconstruction Amendments.

We continued on to the Senate.

There’s another lovely chandelier.

What really caught my eye, though, was the ceiling treatment. Who needs domes with ceilings like these?

I thought this rather low-tech sign in the Senate chamber was anachronistic. Or, perhaps, it was period appropriate, for when the capitol was built, in the mid 1800s.

We paused and looked out the door. That’s a long way down!

It goes without saying that I had to look up at the capitals on the capitol. Of course, they are of the Ionic order.

Our next stop on the tour was my favorite – the library.

Can you imagine being a clerk and having to ascend and descend that spiral stairway?

It was so intricate! I mean, look at all those animal heads!

In all the state capitols I’ve visited, I’d never seen any library as remarkable as this one.

Isn’t that something?

If I remember the guide correctly, this intricate ironwork wasn’t created specifically for this building. It was a style that they made for libraries in general. If you will notice, the portraits in the “cameos” are of literary figures – Milton and Irving.

There are two portraits of political figures – Polk, who I assume is the 11th President, and Clay, who also figured importantly in the politics of the first half of the 19th century. I don’t know if these are likenesses of the politicians or they just changed the names on the preexisting profiles.

With that, the tour was over. I spent a few minutes looking around and snapping photos of things that caught my attention – like that beautiful blue sky and the columns.

The decorative railing finial – they just don’t make them like that any more!

Hmm..what is that? It looks like something out of a grand cemetery. I must go investigate!

Well, look at that! It’s the tomb of the 11th president, James K. Polk!

I walked around the marker and took photos of what they chose to inscribe upon it.

I alway wondered whether Polk was responsible for expanding the boundaries of the USA, as many states have counties named “Polk.” Off to my Preferred Source to check. It turns out the there are 12 states with counties named Polk, which puts it at the 17th most common country name. Ten of those 12 counties are named after President Polk. The other two? One is named after Revolutionary War hero Ezekiel Polk, who was James K’s grandfather. The other was named after William Polk, also a Revolutionary War hero – and a first cousin, once removed.

So, they kept it all in the family.

That’s quite a resume!

Sarah got a section, too. Since James died in 1849, she had quite a long widowhood.

I saw another marker commemorating the first Catholic Church in Tennessee, which was on the site until it was sold to the state in 1857.

Here’s a closeup, if you want to read more.

Oh, my goodness! All those stairs going down.

Once I was down, I had to turn around and look at them going back up. Two things I am not fond of: stairs and rain. At least the weather was good.

Nearby, I passed some governmental buildings that had interesting statues in front.

This one is “The Equestrian Group” by Puryear Mims.

He was a new sculptor to me, so I had to go looking for some information. I was verklempt when my Preferred Source (Wikipedia) failed me! I went digging around and found a page with information about him on Facebook – of all places. I found that a bit ironic, considering that he was born in 1906 and died in 1975, years before Facebook was even a thing. It was even nine years before Mark Zuckerberg was born!

This one is “The TVA Group.” I remember learning about the TVA – the Tennessee Valley Authority – in social studies. From what I remember, it was one of Roosevelt’s great achievements, along with the CCC and the WPA.

And, we round out my photo essay with “The Family Group.”

A little more wandering brought me to this plaza. I’m sure I took this photo for the sign prohibiting camping. I don’t remember ever seeing a sign in a city that prohibits camping.

I looked up places nearby to eat, and I found a listing for a restaurant in an old Woolworth’s. We had one in my town growing up. I used to love to walk “up town” and go shopping. It had creaky old wood floors. I was sad when it closed.

On my way, I passed this sign about the sit-ins held at lunch counters in the 1960s.

The people took their lives in their hands to make our world more just.

There’s the old Woolworth’s! Its now called “Woolworth on 5th.” It is part of a 1890s commercial development that housed other building before Woolworth opened there in 1913. It added a lunch counter in 1925 to cater to the downtown workers.

Blacks were prohibited from sitting at the lunch counter because of the Jim Crow laws that were established in the 19th century. Students from historically black universities – Fisk University, American Baptist College and Tennessee A&I, among others, began walking into downtownluknch counter locations. They sat down at the lunch counters and asked to be served. The first sit-in was on February 13, 1960. The second was two weeks later,  on February 27. It was during this sit-in that Congressman John Lewis was arrested for the first time. Throughout his career, he has been arrested almost fifty times for non-violent protest.

The lunch counter where the sit-ins took place was on the mezzanine level. I was seated at a counter on the ground floor. Woolworth closed in 1976. It went through several different uses until this restaurant opened in 2018. It tried to keep the retro flare alive.


As I remember, I was there between meal times, so they weren’t offering all the items on the menu. What to do?

Why not a milk shake?

And it was mighty tasty, too!

I finished up and headed back to the car. Along the way, I passed another plaque honoring black perseverance.

I also passed this statue of Chet Atkins, a famous musician who was born and died in Tennessee, 1924 – 2001. While he is known for having created the “Nashville Sound” but he didn’t consider himself to be a “country guitarist.” He wanted to be known, simply, as a guitarist. Rolling Stone ranked him as Number 21 on their list of “The 100 Greatest Guitarists of All Time.”

This plaque was by the statue. I thought it was nice that it was erected during his lifetime. I wondered what the c.g.p. after his name meant. I went a’googling and found out that C.G.P. stands for Certified Guitar Player.  This is a designation that Chet Atkins assigned to guitar players who excelled far beyond the normal line of playing.  He handed the title out to only four guitarists in his lifetime. His daughter added another guitarist. If you want to know more, click on the link above.

I was just about done with my day. I drove over to the Farmers Market. In spite of the sign that proclaimed “Coming Soon” it was opened for business.

I wandered around a bit, to see what I could see.

Thank goodness that they keep their ice “ice cold.” If they didn’t, I guess they would be selling water.

They must have a thing about ice. I saw this sign at a drive through in McDonalds.

How in the world can 10 pound bags of ice be of varying weight?

I had no time to ponder that conundrum. It was time to get ready to leave for my next stop. See you down the road!

 

 

 

 

 

The Land of Lincoln

After I finished lunch, I bid adieu to my Airstream Addicts friends and headed west from Jackson Center, Ohio toward Springfield, Illinois. This was going to be speed tourism – kind of like speed dating.

I hit Indiana, and decided that I should use the restroom.

The reflective glass with one of the state’s symbols made for a great selfie.

It’s a good thing that I didn’t need any information. Apparently Indiana was closed. But there was plenty of space to wait for them to open.

I never knew that there were buffalo in Indiana, but apparently there were many  when settlers first arrived.

I got back in the car and continued my westward travel. I got to Springfield and checked into my hotel.

The Mansion View Inn was my home for the night. It was kind of a mid-century sort of place, but not exactly mid-century modern. It was more like mid-century old-fashioned. My room had a bed and a television and a bathroom. Not exactly luxurious, but I made it through the night and headed down to the included continental breakfast.

I must say it was one of the most woe-begone breakfast bars I’d ever seen! There wasn’t even any coffee! Horrors!

Capping off the insufficiency of the breakfast bar, they threatened “Guest who takes food” will be charged $10.00/room. I was happy to get packed up and out of this inhospitable hostelry.

Ah, but the sun was shining and the skies were blue! It was a great day for some high speed tourism.

I walked toward the capitol to see what I could see. It was Sunday, after all, so I didn’t figure I’d be able to get inside. It turns out that I was right.

The first memorial I came to was one of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.

I tried to get a shot that showed his eyes. It looks like they gave him glass eyes. I was always struck by his eyes, so I can understand wanting them to be prominent in the statue. I just had never seen this sort of mixed media – at least not that I remember.

Directly in front of the capitol was a statue of Lincoln.

On the back of the pedestal was inscribed his farewell to Springfield after he had been elected president.

A little ways away from the statue of Lincoln was a viewer. Given the tiny steps up to the eye piece, I assume it was intended for youngsters.

I continued up toward the entrance to the capitol and came across this replica of the Liberty Bell. I half-remembered something about a “Merci Train” that the French people sent to us after World War II to thank us for our support. I seemed to remember that these Liberty Bell replicas were on the Merci Trains. It turns out I was only partly right.

I swear you can find anything on the internet. As part of a government bonds drive held in 1950 to celebrate the 200th anniversary of the Liberty Bell, replicas of them were made in France and given to each state, the District of Columbia, and the Territories. A man named Roger Johnson has made it his mission to visit all the bells and have his photo taken with them. You can read his blog here.

Stephen A. Douglas, the “Little Giant”, is posed right in front of the entrance to the building. He was given that sobriquet because he was short in physical stature, but a forceful and dominant figure in political.

He is famous for defeating Lincoln in 1858 election for the United States Senate, and for his participation in the Lincoln-Douglas debates. In digging around a bit, I found out that he was one of the three candidates for President in 1860. The Northern Democrats favored Douglas, and the Southern Democrats supported John C. Breckenridge. Republicans nominated Lincoln. After the Battle of Fort Sumter in April 1861, Douglas rallied support for the Union, but he died in June.

On the pedestal for his statue are his dying words to his children. “Tell them to obey the laws and support the Constitution of the United States.” Not exactly warm and fuzzy thoughts, but then again, the country was in the midst of a Constitutional crisis.

I walked up to the entrance, just to make sure it really was closed.

It was, but the door pulls were quite impressive.

Here’s just a little more information about the building’s history and status.

I had to satisfy myself with looking at the exterior. Can you see the mesh that is stretched across the opening right in front of the door? I imagine that it’s there to discourage avian intrusions.

It’s too bad I couldn’t get inside, but at least my Loyal Readers are spared details about the construction and my arty shots of hinges, door knobs, and mail chutes.

Here we have a statue of John M. Palmer. The only Palmers I knew of were Arnold and my brother’s (and grandfather’s) middle name – oh, and The Palmer House in Chicago. I had to look him up. It turns out that he was a Civil War General who fought for the Union, the 15th Governor of Illinois and a presidential candidate in 1896.

According to my Preferred Source, Palmer switched political parties throughout his life, starting out a Democrat. He became in turn an anti-Nebraska Democrat (against  state sovereignty on slavery), a Republican, a Liberal Republican, returned to being a Democrat, then ended as a Bourbon Democrat. He said, “I had my own views. I was not a slave of any party,” and added, “I thought for myself and [have] spoken my own words on all occasions.”

Bourbon Democrat, eh? That’s the first I’ve heard of that party.

Then there was a statue of Richard Yates, who was governor of Illinois during the Civil War. Incidentally, his son, who was also named Richard Yates, eventually became governor. Can you say, “Dynasty?” (I knew you could.) Another interesting fact about Richard Yates, Jr, is that he was the first governor of Illinois who was actually born in the state.  Well, I thought it was interesting. It goes to show you that we aren’t all that far removed from the days of westward expansion and “Go West, Young Man, Go West.”

I had no idea who Menard was. I had to go look him up.  This is Pierre Menard. He was born in Montreal, and had many children. Four with his first wife, who died. Two years later, he remarried and had eight more children.

Now how did he get from Montreal to Illinois? Stick with me, here. He was a member of the Indiana Territorial Legislature. The Illinois Territory was a frontier region of the United States, which was formerly a part of the Illinois Country, which was a portion of New France. It was administered originally from Quebec and later transferred to Louisiana. I guess it was part of the deal when we bought Louisiana. When Illinois became a state in 1818, the population of the new state was divided between French-speaking and English-speaking citizens. To balance things out, Menard became the state’s first Lieutenant Governor, serving from 1818 to 1822 with the first governor, Shadrach Bond.

I came across another statue of a senator, I didn’t recognize him from looking at the statue, but anyone who was around in the 1960s would probably recognize the name of Senator Everett Dirksen.

Everett McKinley Dirksen

According to my Preferred Source, his parents gave him the middle name to honor President William McKinley. Now, since Dirksen was born January 4, 1896, and McKinley didn’t assume office until March 4, 1897, I can only assume they followed politics avidly or they held off naming him for a while.

He helped write and pass the Civil Rights Acts of 1964 and 1968. In spite of these progressive actions, he was quite conservative, and came to the Senate with the support of Joseph McCarthy. He did his best to talk McCarthy into apologizing to avoid censure, and then voted against censuring him.

On a lighter note, he is credited with the expression, “A billion here, a billion there, pretty soon, you’re talking real money.” There is no record of him saying it, but someone must have said it.

He also became the oldest person, for a time, to reach the Billboard Hot 100’s top 40 for his recording of Gallant Men. In 1968, his album “Gallant Men” won a Grammy Award for Best Documentary Recording. He also became the oldest person at that time to reach Billboards Hot 100s top 40 when the single reached #33. Two weeks later, it reached #29, just ahead of two versions of “Wild Thing” by William “Bill” Minkin. The A-side version was an impersonation of Senator Bobby and the B-side version was an impersonation of Senator Everett McKinley.

And, if you want to hear Senator Bobby, click here.

I did find it heartening that the workers of Illinois were also honored on the grounds of the capitol.
It might have been nice if there were some mention of the women and their contributions  in Illinois.
And that was it for my speed visit to Illinois’ state capitol.
My next stop, though, was my main purpose for visiting Springfield.
https://www2.illinois.gov/alplm/library/publishingimages/currentfocus/rotator1.jpg

The Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum. On my last visit, it was still under construction. It opened in April 2005, and this was the first time I was back in the neighborhood. According to my Preferred Source, it combines “traditional scholarship with 21st-century showmanship techniques.”

Madam Tussaud, of wax museum fame, lived December 1, 1761 – April 16, 1850. That hardly seems to be 21st-century showmanship, but I guess everything old is new again.
I was pleased that the Lincolns were waiting to receive me, although I did feel underdressed.
There were several galleries to visit. The first exhibit I toured was dedicated to presidents who had strong ties to Illinois.

There were a number of interesting artifacts. For instance, this is the second political document ever signed by Lincoln. In fact, Lincoln signed this petition three times. In addition to his own signature, he signed on behalf of his cousin, John Hanks, and stepbrother John D. Johnson. The document urged the Commissioners’ court of Sangamon County to fill a vacant constable position. Their petition was successful, and the court appointed Willian Constant.

These four presidents were examples of a time when men of a less than wealthy background could be elected to lead the country.

At what was described as Grant’s lowest point, he had to pawn his gold watch. He was facing increasing setbacks at his St. Louis farm, “Hardscrabble.” The sign accompanying the pawn ticket theorizes that he pawned it – for $22 – to be able to afford Christmas presents for his children. The economic distress he suffered trying to farm motivated Grant’s move to Illinois.

This is an invoice from the Galena leather goods store owned by Grant’s father, Jesse. It was signed by Grant on February 25, 1861, only two months before Grant came to Springfield to help organize the Union war effort.

Understandably, this museum was heavily Lincoln-centric – or maybe I just took pictures of what interested me. If you want to check for yourself, you’ll have to visit.

Here is his brief case.

If you’d like to know more about these artifacts, read the sign I photographed from the exhibit.

Senator Dirksen isn’t the only Illinois politician to win a grammy.

Here’s Barack Obama’s Grammy for “Dreams From My Father” in 2005.
I didn’t seem to photograph anything from Ronald Reagan. Maybe all his mementos are at his Presidential Library in Simi Valley, California. Incidentally, the Reagan Library is the largest of the 13 federally operated presidential libraries.
Wait! Wasn’t Reagan the big proponent of small government? Ironic, isn’t it?
I guess this image of “The Great Communicator” will have to suffice.
And here the four Illinois boys who made good.
There was an interesting display about campaigning “back in the day.” The Lincoln-Douglas Debates – also known as the Great Debates of 1958 – was given attention. In this day of sound bites and Twitter foreign policy negotiations, long-form debate is quite anachronistic.
Exactly who ran for president in 1860?
 
They had an exhibit that reimagined Lincoln campaigning via television.
Here he is, being interviewed by Tim Russert, Buffalo hometown hero.
I guess this is the 21st century portion of the display, although, truth be told, political campaigning seems to be done more via Twitter and Facebook. But, can you imagine a display of tweets?
However, satire and political slant have always been part of the process.
I crossed back over to the family side of the museum.
Here is a diorama of Mary Todd Lincoln having her bustle adjusted by her confidant and friend, Elizabeth Keckley. I can’t imagine wearing clothes that required assistance to put on. I much prefer our modern fashions.
Elizabeth Keckley was an interesting person. She was a former slave who had been a dressmaker for Mrs. Jefferson Davis before the Senator from Mississippi left Washington to serve as the president of the newly established Confederate States of America. Mrs. Keckley went to work in the Lincoln White House and by early 1862, she had created no fewer than sixteen new dresses for Mrs. Lincoln.
According to information at the exhibit, she was far more than a dressmaker. She quickly became Mary’s most trusted friend in treacherous Washington. She soothed the First Lady’s migraine headaches, enlisted Mary’s support in fundraising for indigent former slaves, and consoled a heartbroken mother following the shattering death of Willie Lincoln in February 1862.
February 5, 1862 was a day when the Lincolns should have been in their glory. They were holding an elegant party in celebration of the newly redecorated White House. Nearly 500 guests were dining on terrapin and turkey. The last guests wouldn’t leave until daybreak.
Abraham and Mary left the party several times during the night to check on eleven-year-old Willie. He had been ill for several days, almost certainly from typhoid fever. On this night, he took a turn for the worse.
Willie died on February 20, two seeks after the presidential ball. Mary never entered his room again, but Abraham used to sit in the room alone and mourn his son.
It was three weeks before Mary left her bed to don deepest black mourning attire. She was desperate to contact Willie and attended several séances. She told her sister, Elizabeth, “Willie lives. He comes to me every night and stands at the foot of the bed with the same sweet, adorable smile he always has had.”
Adding to her distress, two months after Willie’s death, Mary’s half-brother, Sam, died in battle wearing Confederate grey.  Gossips accused the First Lady herself of being a Confederate sympathizer.
After the personal sadness of these displays, it was almost a relief to return to the mayhem of the Civil War.
There was a map with a timeline of the land taken and the casualties. When Lincoln was elected in November, 1860, the country was whole and there had yet been no casualties.
After Gettysburg and Vicksburg, the Union started to push back the Confederates, but at a tremendous cost in life.
Here we can see the results of Sherman’s March to the Sea. Just two days later, Sherman burned Atlanta.
Lee surrendered to Grant at Appomattox Courthouse on April 9, 1865. You can see that there was still some resistance, but the war was pretty much over. Unfortunately, the Lincolns didn’t get to enjoy the hard-won peace.
After four long years of war, they tried to relax with a bit of entertainment.
The Lincolns attended a performance of Our American Cousin at Ford’s Theater with Major Henry Rathbone and his fiancé, Clara Harris. The performers on the stage would have had this view of the presidential box.
After intermission, John Wilkes Booth made his way to the Presidential box. He timed his attack with a big laugh line in the play:
“Well, I guess I know enough to turn you inside out, old gal; you sockdologizing old man-trap.”

Lincoln was laughing when he was shot.

This was the nation’s first presidential assassination. There was a three-week funeral with lyings-in-state in a dozen cities after the funeral train left Washington on April 21. In checking out things for this post, I found out that one of the stops was in Buffalo, my hometown! I am surprised that I never heard of that before.

After the slow train ride through seven states and 444 communities, the cortege arrived back in Springfield. The final lying-in-state was in the Old State Capitol   and May 4, the body of Lincoln and his son, Willie, were received at Oak Ridge Cemetery. You can see the notation on the right hand of the cemetery internment book on the left hand side, just above the middle.

There are more things that I could share with you, but writing this post has now taken at least twice as long as the time I spent in Springfield.
 As always, exit through the gift shop.
 I had one more touristic spot to hit before I left Springfield: the Springfield Union Train Station. It is now a part of the Lincoln Museum and Library and it was also under reconstruction when I last visited the town.
They had some exhibits related to the 2012 film, Lincoln.
According to information at the display,
“Early in the process of making “Lincoln,” Daniel Day Lewis and Sally Field would text each other back and forth in character.
“He would send me things like little limericks or notes out of the blue, and we began to build a thread of intimacy…” 
          Sally Field
From day one of filming, Sally Field felt like Daniel Day-Lewis was her husband .
“As far as I was concerned, this was the man I had been married to for a very long time and was basically driving me crazy.”
          Sally Field”
This was Mary Todd Lincoln’s bedroom. The costume was one worn by Sally Field in her role as Mrs. Lincoln.
These are some of the items used by Mary…uh, Sally…in the film.
Here we see some of the costumes worn by Lincoln and Willie. They are standing in the office.
Here’s another view of the office.
This photo of Lincoln in the office shows how close they came to replicating the office that Lincoln actually worked in.
Okay, one last photo of a random architectural detail in the renovated train station that caught my eye and then I am off!
Next stop: Kansas City