Lincoln's Inaugural Stop

Image

On February 11-23, 1861 Abraham Lincoln made his inaugural journey from Springfield, IL to Washington, DC. He stopped and made remarks at sixteen cities and towns.Those cities include Springfield, Illinois; Indianapolis, Indiana; Cincinnati, Ohio; Columbus, Ohio; Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania; Cleveland, Ohio; Westfield, New York; Buffalo, New York; Albany, New York; Peekskill, New York; New York, New York; Trenton, New Jersey; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, Baltimore, Maryland; and, Washington, DC. 

Details of Lincoln's 1861 Inaugural Journey can be found in the links below.

Baltimore, Maryland - Inaugural Journey

Baltimore, Maryland

February 23, 1861

Lincoln traveled through the night; no longer making whistle stop speeches, but quietly passing through Baltimore's President Street Station, at President, Canton, and Aliceanna Streets, at about 3:30 a.m. Lincoln was transferred to the Camden Station at Camden and Howard Streets from the President Street Station by having his car pulled by horse down Pratt Street from one station to the other.

In 2011, the National Park Service sponsored programming that commemorated the 150 anniversary of President-elect Abraham Lincoln's trip from Springfield, Illinois to Washington, DC. The NPS developed presentations revisiting each of the sixteen towns and cities at which Abraham Lincoln stopped.

The 2011 program featured acclaimed Lincoln actor Fritz Klein, who presented what Lincoln said in each community as he tried to reassure a nation on the verge of Civil War. The program also included National Park Service Park Rangers supplementing Lincoln's remarks with the story of Lincoln's election, the turbulence that followed, and Lincoln's steadfast commitment to the principles of the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution, despite threats to the nation and himself. The programs touched on how events of 150 years ago resonated through later generations up to and including today.

The National Park Service is presented these series of events in cooperation with many local cosponsors in each community. Venues varied by community, ranging from the places where Lincoln had actually spoken 150 years prior, to a variety of National Parks, local museums, and schools.

In addition, the National Park Service sponsored an educational initiative related to the Lincoln's Inaugural Journey titled "National Park Service Memory Trail: Civil War to Civil Rights" in which students can research their local community with an eye towards how their community related to the Civil War, the subsequent Civil Rights struggles, and their vision for their community in the next generation.

Each community, in partnership with their local National Park sites and other partners, developed the local arrangements for the Lincoln Inaugural Route presentations as well as any additional programming that they wished to include. In the hope that many young people would be touched by this program, an additional educational component, titled Your National Park Service Memory Trail "Civil War to Civil Rights: A National Digital History Project for High School Students" was also offered.

Below are the cities Lincoln visited on route to the White House. Click each link to learn more about Lincoln's inaugural stops.

Springfield, Illinois
Indianapolis, Indiana
Cincinnati, Ohio
Columbus, Ohio
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Cleveland, Ohio
Westfield, New York
Buffalo, New York
Albany, New York
Peekskill, New York
New York, New York
Trenton, New Jersey
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Harrisburg, Pennsylvania
Baltimore, Maryland
Washington D.C.

More News from Timonium
I'm interested
I disagree with this
This is unverified
Spam
Offensive