Here is the exhibit we saw on Monday, July 29th, 2013
5 Generations of Lincolns--
INDIANAPOLIS —
When Lincoln is mentioned in Hollywood circles, it’s all about the film’s 12 Oscar nominations.
At the Indiana State Museum, however, the Lincoln buzz is all about its
newest exhibition: The Lincolns: Five Generations of an American
Family, which premiered Saturday.
The Indiana State Museum is the only venue for this ground-breaking exhibition that will run through Aug. 4.
Visitors through March 2 can also view a rare copy of the 13th
Amendment to the Constitution, which ended slavery, and a signed copy of
the Emancipation Proclamation. Because the fragile documents cannot be
exposed to light for long periods of time, they are rarely on display.
The 13th Amendment, of course, was the focus of the Steven
Spielberg-directed movie that details the 16th president’s tumultuous
final months in office. The Indiana State Museum exhibition, however,
spans five generations of the Lincolns, who first came to Indiana in
1816. The museum wanted to offer a different, more personal perspective,
said Dale Ogden, senior curator of cultural history.
“There is no one person more mythologized than Abraham Lincoln,” Ogden
said. “This exhibition will help break some of the myths, while also
giving visitors a greater understanding of the very complex Lincoln
family throughout five generations.”
More than 150 objects will be on display, including handwritten
letters, photographs, Tiffany jewelry, candelabra and other family
keepsakes. The Indiana State Museum has one of the world’s most
important collections of Lincoln artifacts - The Lincoln Financial
Foundation Collection - given to the State of Indiana in 2008. Objects
from this collection will be joined by about 40 artifacts on loan from
several of America’s leading historical institutions.
Highlights of “The Lincolns” include:
• The Sum Book is the star of the show. With less than two years of
formal schooling, at age 15, Abraham Lincoln carefully assembled sheets
of paper and created his own book on which to practice math problems.
Over the years, the pages were separated, but the Indiana State Museum
has five pages on display. It is the largest grouping ever shown in one
place.
• A cabinet designed and crafted (c. 1818) by Abraham Lincoln’s father,
Thomas. Not knowing its history, a Newburgh, Ind., man bought the
cabinet – then painted green – at a sale. He used it to store nuts,
bolts and other items in his garage. In 2009, his son read an Evansville
newspaper article featuring Steve Haaf, a South Spencer High School
teacher, who restores and makes replicas of Thomas Lincoln’s furniture.
While Thomas Lincoln is often portrayed as a ne’er-do-well, this cabinet
demonstrates he was a true craftsman who used intricate designs and
overlays in his work. This detail is especially impressive considering
the rudimentary tools with which he had to work.
• Mary Todd’s Meissen porcelain figurine (c. 1835). Mary Todd Lincoln
was a prolific collector of the figurines, which were made in Meissen,
Germany. Moviegoers may have noticed these on the big screen. To a
historian, the collection demonstrates Mary Todd’s elite upbringing. The
exhibition also features a tea set crafted by a London potter, who also
worked for Queen Victoria. Mary Lincoln used the tea set to serve
coffee, tea and hot chocolate to guests at the Lincolns’ Springfield,
Ill., home.
• Toys the Lincoln boys played with at the White House, including a toy
cannon Secretary of War Stanton acquired for the youngest son, Tad.
Knowing the boy was rambunctious (the two youngest sons were known to
race their pet goats in the White House), Stanton disabled the
fully-functional firing mechanism.
• The insanity verdict following Mary Lincoln’s trial in 1875. Sally
Field’s portrayal of the former First Lady in the movie showed glimpses
of her instability. For 10 years, Mary Lincoln struggled to cope with
the death of her children and her husband. Her oldest son, Robert, had
her arrested and charged with insanity. She was convicted and remanded
to Bellevue Place sanitarium near Chicago. Historians for years have
been at odds over Robert’s motives for having his mother committed.
• Photographs of the last documented Lincoln descendants, siblings
Robert Todd Lincoln Beckwith and Mary “Peggy” Lincoln Beckwith, who were
great-grandchildren of Abraham and Mary Lincoln. They were raised at
Hildene, the family estate in Vermont.