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Category Archives: Museums
The Lincoln Home after the Lincolns (1861-1953)
For nearly a century after Abraham and Mary Lincoln left it, other people lived in and managed their former home at Eighth and Jackson streets. Among the eclectic group were a railroad executive, a couple of politicians, a physician, an … Continue reading
Old Stone House, Rochester
The Old Stone House, a project of the Rochester Historical Preservation Society, is an 1830s dwelling moved from its original site east of town to near Rochester Community Park. It is open periodically as a living history demonstration. The house … Continue reading
Posted in Architecture, Buildings, Communities, Historic Sites, Lincoln, Abraham, Markers, Museums
1 Comment
Lincoln Tomb custodians, 1874-1975
Five men served as custodians of the Lincoln Tomb in the century from 1874, when the still-incomplete tomb was dedicated, and 1975, when tomb management was reorganized. They were: *John Carroll Power (1819-94), a Kentucky native and failed farmer, was … Continue reading
Posted in Historic Sites, Histories, Lincoln Tomb, Museums, Presidents, Prominent figures
3 Comments
Lincoln Home neighborhood in 1971 (Nelson Howarth)
Nelson Howarth, with only a week to go in his third and final term as mayor of Springfield, testified in April 1971 before the U.S. House Subcommittee on National Parks and Recreation in support of designating the Lincoln Home neighborhood … Continue reading
Chatham railroad history
In the early 1800s, like many other places on what was then “the frontier,” lack of reliable transportation was an impediment to the growth of Sangamon County. The Sangamon River was an outlet to the Illinois River, but was too … Continue reading
Posted in Buildings, Communities, Historic Sites, Museums, Railroads, Transportation
Tagged Chatham
5 Comments
Illinois State Museum
The Illinois State Museum began, unlikely as it seems, in New Harmony, Ind. Former museum director R. Bruce McMillan described the quandary that faced Illinois’ first state geologist in his article on the museum’s centennial , “The First Century,” published … Continue reading
The Payne Stone Age Collection
Edward W. Payne (1857-1932), a Springfield banker and property investor, amassed a huge collection of stone relics — most, though not all, from pre-Columbian America — with the intention of building a museum to house them. At his death, however, … Continue reading
Destruction of the Lincoln Tomb sarcophagus
How did the marble sarcophagus that covered the coffin of Abraham Lincoln in the early years of the Lincoln Tomb State Historic Site come to be broken? Was it a workmen’s accident? Or was it done on purpose by souvenir … Continue reading
Posted in Historic Sites, Lincoln Tomb, Lincoln, Abraham, Museums, State government
2 Comments
Susan Lawrence Dana
Note: This entry was significantly expanded in July 2023. See “Hat tips” below. Susan Lawrence Dana (1862-1946) was a Springfield socialite, activist and philanthropist best known for commissioning architect Frank Lloyd Wright to transform her family’s Civil War-era home at … Continue reading