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Old 20-11-23, 01:42   #1
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Movies The Lincoln Shiver: President Lincoln Home, a Washington Gem

‘The Lincoln Shiver’: A Visit to The Soldiers’ Home, a Less-Known Washington Gem

The house Abraham Lincoln used to escape the White House exerts unusual power, 160 years after the Gettysburg Address


Guardian Australia 20 NOV 2023






President Lincolns’ Cottage, in Washington DC.






A statue of Abraham Lincoln at the Soldiers’ Home in Washington DC, by Ivan Schwartz.



Abraham Lincoln needed an escape more than anyone but his bolt hole was closer to home: a cottage at the Soldiers’ Home, on a hill north of the White House in Washington DC itself. It’s still there, a lesser-known historical site in the capital.

Callie Hawkins, chief executive of President Lincoln’s Cottage, a national monument since 2000, says: “At the height of the civil war, some of Lincoln’s close friends suggested he take a break, go somewhere else. And he said, ‘Three weeks would do me no good. This follows me wherever I go.’

“It would be natural to think of this place as a retreat of some kind. But in many ways, this place brought him closer to the war. He was surrounded by veterans who were wounded. At that time, they lived in the building next door.

Just in front of us, about 200 yards away, is the first national cemetery. And then from the other side of the house, he could have looked out on to Maryland and Virginia, both slave-holding states. And so it was really a constant reminder, being out here, of reality.

“We’ll walk up to the statue, because I want to see how you stand up to Lincoln. You’re pretty tall yourself.”

I’m 6ft 4in but in his famous hat, Lincoln has me matched. The bronze, by Ivan Schwartz and showing the 16th president with the horse he rode to and from the White House each day in the hot months – June to November – was installed in 2008.


“It’s different in purpose to the Lincoln Memorial” on the National Mall, Hawkins says. “We wanted to push back against that idea that Lincoln can only be viewed from afar, as a figure larger than life, on a throne in a temple. Here, you can walk up and look him in the eye. And this is a view that many people who were part of this community, on the grounds of the Soldiers’ Home, would have had.”











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