Four score and $7.50
JOSEPH N. BELL
Abe Lincoln has been in the news for the past few weeks, and I’m
trying to decide whether I feel good about it. The Abraham Lincoln
Presidential Museum opened last month in Springfield, Ill., in a
blast of publicity and high-powered ceremonies that provided a
dramatic contrast to the modest Lincolniana provided to visitors of
his hometown for the past century.
The numbers, decor and stylistic approach of the new museum are as
overpowering as Lincoln’s public speeches were simple and
straightforward. At 40,000 square feet, it’s twice the size of any
other presidential museum. The library portion holds the world’s
largest collection of Lincoln documents and artifacts. The museum,
itself, offers smoke machines, vibrating seats and roaring cannons,
along with remarkably lifelike latex statues of the Lincoln family.
All of this cost $145 million and is probably a long-overdue tribute
to the man generally regarded as our greatest president.
And yet Springfield, Ill., straddling U.S. 66 -- our most famous
national highway before the interstates arrived -- always seemed to
be directly on the route to virtually everywhere I happened to be
driving during my years in the Midwest. And I always stopped and paid
my respects to Abe. Felt like home.
The elongated box of a house where Lincoln raised his family was
only a few blocks from his law office in downtown Springfield. It was
easy to picture him ducking to clear the front door in his stovepipe
hat and trading greetings and tall stories with his friends and
neighbors while he walked to his office.
The house and law office were musty relics of his years in
Springfield, left pretty much as they were when he lived there, and
accessible to the public. So was his tomb in Oak Ridge Cemetery,
which I usually included in my visits. His whole family is buried
there except his oldest son, Robert, the only Lincoln offspring to
survive his youth, who chose to separate himself from his family in
death as he sometimes had in life.
Standing in the monument, where the headstones of the two sons
Lincoln buried in his lifetime and the one who died shortly after his
father was killed, I always had a powerful sense of the tragedy that
relentlessly followed this family -- even after their death. In 1876,
a plot almost succeeded to dig up Lincoln’s corpse and hold it for
ransom. And in 1901, it was moved to a temporary grave for 15 months
while the crumbling monument was torn down and rebuilt.
This time, at Robert’s insistence, Lincoln’s coffin was encased in
concrete after burial -- but not before the coffin was opened to
deal, forever, with the rumors that it was not his body. Twenty-two
witnesses passed by the open coffin and saw clearly that it was
Lincoln. The features, down to the mole on his cheek and melancholy
expression, were clearly preserved. That rite observed, Abraham
Lincoln was finally allowed to rest in peace.
All these visions played out in my head when I visited Abe. Now,
they have been technologized for me by a company named BRC
Imagination Arts of Burbank, whose designers regard the new museum,
according to one official speaking to a Los Angeles Times reporter,
not so much as a museum but “a personal encounter with Abraham
Lincoln.”
Phrases like that tend to scare me. The encounter will cost a
visitor $7.50. In my years of stopping by the old Lincoln haunts,
there was never a charge, a policy Robert Lincoln required when he
deeded his family home to the state of Illinois.
I haven’t seen the new Lincoln museum yet -- just pictures -- but
I will. I’m a presidential museum and library junkie. There are
presently 12 such entities, and I’ve explored seven of them (Hoover,
FDR, Truman, Eisenhower, Johnson, Nixon and Carter). On my
still-to-see list, in addition to Lincoln, are Clinton, Kennedy, Ford
and Reagan.
Every museum is different, and each one speaks carefully about its
subject, which requires some reading between the lines for real
insights. Sometimes the museums run a tight line between honesty and
kindness. And sometimes they distort by omission -- as did the Nixon
museum in virtually ignoring the scandalous departure of
vice-president Spiro Agnew. Where the new Lincoln museum will fall on
this scale is difficult to judge from the early reports.
The Democrats, in general, are less reverential and offer more
humor and allow more criticism than the Republicans. Truman and
Roosevelt have long corridors of scathing newspaper cartoons as well
as highly revealing personal correspondence. By contrast, the only
cartoons in the Hoover museum came from the Chicago Tribune, which
strongly supported Hoover to the bitter end. Eisenhower is dealt with
at respectful attention, more like a general than a president
If you are thinking about visiting the new Lincoln Museum, you
might want to consider turning it into a presidential museum
excursion. From Kansas City or St. Louis, you are several driving
hours away from Eisenhower (Abilene, Kan.), Hoover (West Branch,
Iowa) and Truman (Independence, Mo.) as well as Springfield -- a
circuit that would give you a great mix of presidential and museum
styles.
Meanwhile, I’ll try to keep an open mind when I visit Abe
Lincoln’s new habitat. But first, I’ll do my best to make it seem
like going home again by paying my respects at the house -- which
isn’t a part of the new museum complex. That should bring back the
pictures formed in my imagination in those long-ago trips to
Springfield. Then I’ll be ready to test my pictures against the
“personal encounter” with Lincoln awaiting me at the new museum.
However that plays out, I find it comforting to know that I can
always fall back on the Gettysburg Address in Lincoln’s handwriting
and with his editing that will be on display. No amount of creative
presentation can have an impact on the magnificent simplicity of that
message.
* JOSEPH N. BELL is a resident of Santa Ana Heights. His column
appears Thursdays.
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