Book Description In honor of the bicentennial of Abraham Lincolnâ??s birth, an extensively researched, lavishly illustrated consideration of the myths, memories, and questions that gathered around our most belovedâ??and our most enigmaticâ??president in the years between his assassination and the dedication of the Lincoln Memorial in 1922. A sequel to the enormously successful Lincoln: An Illustrated Biography, Looking for Lincoln picks up where the previous book left off, examining how our sixteenth presidentâ??s legend came into being. Availing themselves of a vast collection of both published and never-before-seen materials, the authors--the fourth and fifth generations of a family of Lincoln scholars--bring into focus the posthumous portrait of Lincoln that took hold in the American imagination, becoming synonymous with the nationâ??s very understanding of itself. Told through the voices of those who knew the man--Northerners and Southerners, blacks and whites, neighbors and family members, adversaries and colleaguesâ??and through stories carefully selected from long-forgotten newspapers, magazines, and family scrapbooks, Looking for Lincoln charts the dramatic epilogue to Lincolnâ??s extraordinary life when, in a process fraught with jealousy, greed, and the struggle for power, the scope of his historical significance was taking shape. In vibrant and immediate detail, the authors chart the years when Americans struggled to understand their loss and rebuild their country. Here is a chronicle of the immediate aftermath of the assassination; the private memories of those closest to the slain president; the difficult period between 1876 and 1908, when a tired nation turned its back on the former slaves and betrayed Lincolnâ??s teachings; and the early years of the twentieth century when Lincolnâ??s popularity soared as African Americans fought to reclaim the ideals he espoused. Looking for Lincoln will deeply enhance our understanding of the statesman and his legacy, at a moment when the timeless example of his leadership is more crucial than ever. Surprsing Facts from Looking for Lincoln (Click on Images to Enlarge) During the twenty days of his public funeral... ...more than a million mourners looked at the face of Abraham Lincoln. There was an attempt to steal Lincolnâ??s body from its tomb in 1876. For years afterward it was hidden in a basement while the public believed it was still inside its sarcophagus. Robert Lincoln was present or close at hand at three presidential assassinations--his fatherâ??s, James Garfieldâ??s, and William McKinleyâ??s--leading him to believe that his life was cursed. For years after the Civil War, Lincoln was hung in effigy in some southern homes, whereas John Wilkes Booth was hailed as the courageous slayer of an American tyrant. Lincolnâ??s dog Fido met the same fate as his illustrious master, and was â??assassinatedâ? by a town drunk. The Lincoln penny, issued in the Centennial year, was the first U.S. Coin to bear the image of a historical figure.
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