From Visiting Vintage |
I had a penny collection as a child – I think initially it was so I could earn a Girl Scout badge.
From Visiting Vintage |
From Visiting Vintage |
In 2004 we roadtripped to Wisconsin for my Aunt and Uncle’s 50th wedding anniversary. On the way home we drove to Lincoln’s Tomb in Springfield, Illinois.
A bit of a thrill for me to be at a historic site.
From Visiting Vintage |
From Visiting Vintage |
I’ve been happily perusing Life Magazines housed in the library where I work. The cover story from the February 15, 1963 edition: “Rare photographs, new-found facts tell the incredible story of What Happened To Lincoln’s Body”
From Vintage Goodness |
“The coffin was lowered into the cage and two tons of cement poured down, rolling and lapping about the metal like lava. Mr. Lincoln is still there, 10 feet beneath the floor and more than a million people make the pilgrimage to his tomb each year.” (page 88)Google books has the article - (hopefully the links I'm using work).
Rare photos of Lincoln's exhumation: strange history brought to light
And his face was chalky white
Securely laid to rest at the site we visited in 2004.
Here is Abraham Lincoln as a celebrity endorser in a February 1957 Life Magazine
From Vintage Goodness |
The “Collected Works of Abraham Lincoln” offered in February 1962 for only $5.95 by the History Book Club (if you agreed to buy four more books in 12 months . . . )
From Vintage Goodness |
President Lincoln probably had no idea he'd be a daily part of our life (if we paused to think about the pennies in our pockets). I think of him on occasion as someone who fought and sacrificed to right wrongs.
Almost a century and a half since your death and we are remembering you, Mr. Lincoln.
1 comment:
To the question of how many tons of concrete poured on to Abraham Lincoln's coffin .
You comment 2tons .I have read by different Historians it was 4 Ton .
Does anyone really know
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