80s


Lincoln Apparel "Wide Awake Club" T-shirt

Lincoln Apparel’s new "Wide Awake Club" T-shirt, intended to look like how a Lincoln campaign T-shirt might have in 1860. Copyright © 2010 Lincoln Apparel.

This has been a busy summer so far for Lincoln Apparel, and I’m enjoying it. I’ve released two new designs – "Wide Awake Club", which was created for the 150th anniversary of Lincoln’s election this year, and a yellow version of my popular "80s Abe" T-shirt, which has also been reprinted and restocked in its three original colors as well (no longer are any of the sizes "temporarily out of stock"). All of these shirts are now available on the Lincoln Apparel website, as well as locally at Springfield Novelties and Gifts on 6th Street and at the Old Capitol Farmer’s Market artisan area each Saturday.

The “Wide Awake Club” T-shirt has a lot of history behind it, and it was designed to resemble an 1860 Lincoln campaign banner or poster. In fact, during the creation of the shirt, I researched what many of these looked like, and incorporated their design style or elements into the design.

Before you ask, the "Wide Awakes" were localized, grassroots groups of young Lincoln supporters during the 1860 presidential campaign, thus the name of the T-shirt (and the reason why it says "Wide Awake Club"). I’ve already gotten asked this quite a bit, and I enjoy educating people about this (and other bits) of Lincoln history (my T-shirts do make great conversational pieces!). In fact, the "Wide Awakes" themselves had their own banners, with each club having a different design that was specific to their locality. One such banner is on display in the Old State Capitol, near the governor’s office. (It reads "LINCOLN, 3rd Ward, Mind Your Eye, WIDE AWAKES", and there is a picture of this Wide Awakes banner here.)

Now, obviously, with one T-shirt design it wouldn’t be possible to create a T-shirt for each specific locality (since I’d need to create a different design for each locality), so I had to settle for making a non-localized design. I based the design off of a picture of Lincoln often used during his 1860 Presidential campaign – the famous "Cooper Union" portrait, taken in February of 1860 in New York City, during a trip where he gave a famous speech that helped convince Easterners, and the nation, that he was a serious contender for President.

Closeup of the "Wide Awake Club" design

Closeup of the new "Wide Awake Club" Lincoln T-shirt by Lincoln Apparel. Copyright © 2010 Lincoln Apparel.

Now, in 1860, the process of "halftoning" – using dots of different sizes to print photographs and other images with gradients – had not been invented yet. So instead of using a photograph and having it printed with halftones on the shirt, I used a lithograph instead, which is what would have been printed in newspapers and on posters and the like in 1860. I artistically divided it into red and blue colors, since I knew I was going to use those patriotic colors for my design. I then focused on other common elements used in Lincoln election propoganda in 1860 – slogans like "Honest Old Abe" and "Railsplitter of the West", and imagery related to Lincoln’s frontier roots and his "Railsplitter" moniker, which I added into the lower portion of the design, under the lower half of the oval-shaped portrait of Lincoln.

Finishing up the design, I added 33 stars above the portrait of Lincoln – one for each state in the Union in 1860. (In fact, the flag that flies above the Old State Capitol is a 33 star flag – otherwise, it wouldn’t be fully restored to its 1860 appearance.) Finally, I added the text, "ABRAHAM LINCOLN for President 1860", below all of the artwork. I used fonts that were in common use on posters and banners 1860 for this and the other textual elements of the design.

All of these design elements come together to create a new original design, that resembles an 1860 Lincoln campaign poster or banner, and translates to the T-shirt medium well. Not that wearing something to support your candidate was necessarily new back then – people wore ribbons, typically emblazoned with their candidate’s picture, to support their candidate, just how nowadays, people wear T-shirts and buttons. So, in a lot of ways, the campaign T-shirt is the descendant of the campaign ribbon, except it’s bigger, like a banner. I can easily see Lincoln supporters wearing this T-shirt in 1860 if T-shirts existed then. (You can read more about the 1860 election in this post).

However, now you can show your support for Lincoln today (don’t you wish he could be president sometimes?) by wearing this T-shirt. It’s a cream colored T-shirt, instead of a white one, to make it feel old and authentic. Cool, isn’t it?

Yellow "80s Abe" Lincoln T-shirt by Lincoln Apparel

The new yellow "80s Abe" Lincoln T-shirt. The other three colors have been reprinted too, and are now in stock again. Copyright ©2009 Lincoln Apparel.

And speaking of cool stuff, my popular "80s Abe" T-shirt, representing a Lincoln for a different past era, one I love and that I grew up in, has been reprinted and is now in stock again. (You can read more about the creation of the "80s Abe" T-shirt here.) This time, I added a new color – yellow – in addition to the black, blue, and green colors, and the sizes now start at small instead of medium, since I’ve had people ask me why I don’t have any small. (I originally thought the design would be too big for that size, that’s why, but it really isn’t – the new shirts have the same 17×20 inch print as the old ones).

Interestingly, "80s Abe" has sold well and enjoyed a great reception amongst people of all generations, not just my own. I’ve sold that shirt to younger people, and older people as well. The 1980s were a time of great creativity amongst many different types of art and creative work; this goes to show that great art and creative work is timeless and appeals to any generation, much like Lincoln.

Another interesting thing is that "80s Abe" actually has no words (unless you want to count Lincoln’s signature). I think this sums up how I feel about T-shirts in general – the great ones need no words, just great artwork. I’ve never been one to wear simple funny text T-shirts; rather, I’ve always enjoyed making the world a brighter place by wearing cool artistic T-shirts. I love the T-shirt as an art medium since it’s wearable, so other people can see the artistic message, and spread it, instead of it just being something to hang on your wall, and because T-shirts provide a rather large "canvas" on which to "paint" your design.

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The new "Wearing Lincoln Apparel" page on lincolnapparel.com allows you to submit a photo of you or your friends wearing a Lincoln Apparel T-shirt!

The new "Wearing Lincoln Apparel" page on lincolnapparel.com allows you to submit a photo of you or your friends wearing a Lincoln Apparel T-shirt!

The past month I’ve been busy selling my Lincoln Apparel T-shirts at the Old Capitol Farmer’s Market, at Springfield Novelties and Gifts, and dealing with website orders (I had an order of 8 T-shirts just a few days ago!). The response to Lincoln Apparel has been overwhelmingly positive, and even though it can be a lot of work at times, it’s a lot of fun and I enjoy doing it – I finally feel like Lincoln Apparel and the message of Lincoln and his legacy is getting out there through my artistic Lincoln T-shirts. And that of course, is what I want to happen – for people to see my colorful Lincoln art on somebody’s T-shirt and get reminded of Lincoln and his legacy.

One of the things I’ve done in the past month is add, and code in, some new features on the Lincoln Apparel website. Much of this was done around late June/early July. I’ve added:

  • a newsletter where you can sign up to receive updates on new Lincoln Apparel designs, find shows and retail venues Lincoln Apparel will be at, and more;
  • a Wearing Lincoln Apparel page where you can show off your cool new Lincoln Apparel T-shirt, or Lincoln Apparel T-shirts your friends/family/other people you know may be wearing – I’ve got a couple photos on that page already that Lincoln Apparel fans have sent me;
  • a Lincoln Apparel Local page, where you can find information on physical retail stores our T-shirts are available in, as well as shows we’re going to be at;
  • a Lincoln Apparel product RSS feed, that will get updated whenever I post new shirts.
Black "80s Abe" Lincoln T-shirt by Lincoln Apparel

"80s Abe" has been the most popular Lincoln Apparel T-shirt so far this year.

Be sure to check out the new features on my website! I’ll be at the artisan area in the Old Capitol Farmer’s Market again this Saturday, July 24th, from 8 to 12:30, so be sure to stop by. The artisan area is located at the southeast corner of 4th and Adams, in historic downtown Springfield. I’ll be in the shadow by the building on the east side of the artisan area, where it’s cool in the morning, with some cool 80s music playing on some little portable speakers I got a couple weeks ago, that I can hook up to my portable CD/MP3 player (I’m still working on the tent).

I’ll also be coming out with my new “Wide Awake Club” Campaign 1860 Lincoln T-shirt soon. All I have to do is take pictures of it and put it up on my website. I’ll make another post about about the T-shirt and the story behind it (it involves a lot of Lincoln history) when it’s up!

I’m also going to get "80s Abe" reprinted, since it’s been a very popular design and I’m sold out of a lot of them. In addition, my Lincoln Bicentennial shirts – the poignant, serious "Equality" and the fun, colorful "Back to Springfield" – are beginning to sell out. No more of these designs will be printed – so if you love them, be sure to pick them up soon, as eventually they will be replaced by new designs!

Lincoln Bicentennial "Equality" T-shirt by Lincoln Apparel Lincoln Bicentennial "Back to Springfield" T-shirt by Lincoln Apparel

"Equality" (left) and "Back to Springfield" (right) are both starting to sell out. These Lincoln Apparel designs will not be reprinted, so if you like them, be sure to pick them up soon!

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Springfield: A Bicentennial Portrait tour screenshot (showing the Lincoln Home)

Photo tour screenshot (showing the Lincoln Home). Start the tour>>

You may remember last summer (and early fall) I took a series of photos for my Lincoln Land 80s CD project, which I use to showcase (on CD covers for my custom 80s music CD collection) areas of Springfield that are unique to the city. I do this every year or so because I love it. I think it’s a creative way to honor Mr. Lincoln’s hometown.

Included are big, well known sites like the Lincoln Home and Museum, and the Old State Capitol, lesser known places like the Vachel Lindsay Home and the Iles House, streetscapes that define the city, unique places in older neighborhoods on each side of town, and more. I decided to take all of the 88 photos and create a good photo tour of Springfield on my blog using all of the photos, so that you can tour these places that make Springfield unique yourself. Last year was especially important, because it was the year of the Lincoln Bicentennial, so this tour will be a great resource for showing what the city looked like that momentous year in history.

Springfield: A Bicentennial Portrait tour screenshot (showing mouseover)

Move your mouse over one of the pink arrows on the map to see what it is – then click on it to see the photo.

Over the past few months I’ve been coding custom CSS and HTML to make it work. I wanted to make it so that you could click a spot on a map of Springfield where a photo was taken, and up would pop a photo with a description so you can see what it looks like, and a bit of the history behind it. I succeeded in creating a tour like this (though it took more time than I thought). Each photo is marked on the map with a pink arrow and number from 1 to 88 (assigned in the chronological order I took the pictures), and when you move your mouse over a pink arrow, you’ll see a little tooltip that tells you what it is. Then when you click on it, you’ll see the picture and the description. The photos I used in this tour are much better quality than the ones I posted on my blog last year – they’re 720×540 pixels instead of little 200×150 thumbnails, allowing much more detail to be shown.

I plan to keep doing this project in the future to improve upon photos taken in the past, and to show what changes have occurred. I’ll likely base tours from future iterations of Lincoln Land 80s off the same CSS code, eventually creating a tour where you can go back in time as well, and see the changes that have occurred.

The tour is saved as a special page on my blog, so you will always be able to access it. It’s called Springfield: A Bicentennial Portrait, and you can access it from the Pages section in the sidebar. Enjoy the tour!

I have some great news with the Lincoln T-shirts to share with you too. I’ll make another post soon about it!

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"80s Abe" Lincoln T-shirt closeupOK, back to Lincoln now. I’ve created a new Lincoln T-shirt design, entitled "80s Abe", that blends my Lincoln and 80s interests. The T-shirts are available in black (shown), blue, and green on the Lincoln Apparel website, at my Etsy store, and at Springfield Novelties and Gifts on the 200 block of South 6th Street in historic downtown Springfield.

I’ve always wanted to create a "full front" print design, where the design fills up most or all of the front of the T-shirt. I’ve always loved how they look, and how intricate they often are. This is my first such design. I had a lot of fun making it!

This design was inspired by the famous "crew cut" portrait of Lincoln taken in February of 1865. As an 80s fan and a Lincoln fan, I’ve always loved this striking portrait of Lincoln. It shows Lincoln with an unusually short "crew cut" style haircut, perhaps because at this time sculptor Clark Mills was creating a life mask of Lincoln’s face. The plaster used to create the mask stuck to his hair, so Lincoln needed his hair cut short.

In the 1980s, this style of haircut became popular. So did bright neon colors, which I’ve always liked. It seemed only fitting that as a Lincoln fan, an 80s fan, and an artist, I’d create a T-shirt using this picture of Lincoln and bright 80s colors.

I figured that a design of this nature would look awesome as a "full front" print. Furthermore, it was simple enough that I could use it to "test" full front printing, but complex enough to be interesting and see how it would work before I made a very complex and intricate full front print design.

The results were spectacular, and I plan to make many more "full front" print T-shirts. The "80s Abe" represents a Lincoln for my generation, and for newer generations that have come to love the 80s. Lincoln, his words, and his memory have been invoked by every generation through the ages, and the 80s were no different. During that time, the "house divided" became a metaphor for the division between the Western democracies and the communist Eastern bloc countries, and his words were often used to extoll the virtues of democracy and promote its spread.

The fight for Lincoln’s ideals continues today. I chose to print this design on American Apparel, a sweatshop free, made in America T-shirt brand. I don’t think Lincoln would believe in sweatshop labor, so I won’t use brands of T-shirts that are made that way. I think he would want things to be made ethically, in a manner in which the workers have rights, so I make sure to make my T-shirts in accordance with his beliefs. These T-shirts are soft, comfortable, and durable, too – and I think Lincoln would like that!

Enjoy the T-shirt, enjoy Lincoln and the 80s, and feel good about it, too!

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225 Social Networks screenshot

225 channels and nothing’s on?

Short answer: Two. We only need one standardized method per communication medium that does the job right – just like with face-to-face contact, phone, email, etc.

The long answer: Social networking is not a novel concept. It has existed since the dawn of humanity. Since then, we’ve had inventions – like the written word and letters, telegraph, telephone, radio, TV, and email. In the past decade, hundreds of “social networking” sites have appeared. Recently, I’ve been getting burned out using them, and that has got me thinking “why are there so many?” Part of the reason they’re referred to as a time sink by so many people is because there are too many. Google Buzz just added itself last week – do we really need another social network?

Those of us that grew up in the 80s know of a time when there was no Internet. If you wanted to talk to someone remotely, you got their phone number and called them. You didn’t have to have the same phone or the same phone company as them to talk to them, you just dialed their number. Think about that for a minute – isn’t that incredible? You didn’t have to have AT&T to talk to somebody on Sprint, you just dialed a number, and talked. The system didn’t care what network you used, or what model of phone you used. You could use one of those fancy office phones to call somebody using a simple touch tone phone, and it’d work just as well.

When the Internet became commonplace, everybody had email. Just like the phone, you simply typed the person’s email address and your message and hit “Send” – off it went. It didn’t matter if they used a different ISP or email program. I still remember how neat it was to see a message arrive in somebody’s inbox in a different part of the world, nearly instantly.

Now, we have the so-called Web 2.0 “social networking” websites. There’s over 200 of them! And on each one, you can pretty much only talk to other people on the same network. They all work in different ways, each serving as their own “walled garden” where you can only talk to other people in the same network. This leads to a lot of repetition of information.

What’s more, each of these social networking sites has their own rules and etiquette – for each site you have to remember what the rules are and how they work. Because you have to spend so much time on these sites to actually communicate, very little of that gets done – I often feel like social networking is just a bunch of people shouting at each other on a street corner, rather than a group of people having a discussion in a coffee shop. It can be hard to get a reply to what you’re saying, which just creates frustration and noise, and makes “social networking” feel more like “social notworking”. It makes me long for the “social networking” of the Web 1.0 era that worked perfectly well – like forums and bulletin boards and chat rooms. People actually listened on those (although I must admit I never really cared for chat rooms).

Touch Tone Phone Keypad

If only it was this simple…

It’s interesting how social networking has evolved in my lifetime. Over the years we’ve gone from:
1985: “What’s your phone number? I’ll call you”.
1998: “What’s your email? I’ll email you.”
2010: “Do you have a Facebook? Do you have a Twitter? Do you have a Flickr? Do you have a MySpace?”

How many ways do we need to contact someone? I really wish the open source community would get together and make a single social networking protocol. It could be accessed using an appropriate client, like how a web browser acts as an HTTP client for websites, or how an email program acts as an SMTP/POP3 client for sending/receiving email. The Internet would not be what it is today without these standards. Social networking now is like if Alexander Graham Bell invented the telephone, but somebody else made another phone that worked differently, and another person made another one… you get the story. The phone would’ve never taken off as mode of communication if it wasn’t standardized. Imagine how the phone would work today, using the models the social networks use right now:

Twitter: You can only make a phone call that’s up to 1 minute long. If you want to reference someone, you might have to use an abbreviation for their name because speaking it would take too long. To call someone, you’d have to find out their phone number and add them to your followers list. The phone would have a “retweet” button that would allow you to share the call with a third party.

Facebook: This phone would allow you to send pictures as well as text. It would also come with little games you could play with other people if you called them, or if they called you. You could only call someone if you added them as a friend first in your phone. If you wanted to reach a business, you would have to go there first and tell the owner that you were a fan, and then you could add them as a contact in your phone. There would be no yellow pages, only a generic search for an exact business name, so unless you knew the name of the business you wouldn’t know they existed, let alone their location or what kind of business they are, unless one of your friends told you first. The phone would have “like” and “share” buttons instead of the # and * buttons.

Feel free to add your own analogy to the comments section!

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Yay! I have all 88 of the pictures now. I took the last one on Monday, and the nice days at the beginning of last week enabled me to take many of the remaining 23 pictures. I took over 7000 pictures while working on this project. Of those, only 262 turned out good enough for me to use for this project (for some of the 88 shots, more than one turned out good – but it’s nice to have a choice in case something doesn’t work out right). Now comes the task of updating my 80s music database and making the CDs themselves. I also want to make a photo tour of Springfield with the pictures – they provide a good portrait of Mr. Lincoln’s home town during the year of his Bicentennial.

I’m glad I was able to complete the project this year. It’s hard work, doing lots of walking around downtown, through historic neighborhoods, and crisscrossing the city to get pictures in neighborhoods on different sides of town. And sometimes it can be frustrating, when you don’t get a shot and then you have to take it again, or when the weather doesn’t cooperate. But it was fun, and it was worth it in the end.

I originally intended to show Springfield in the summer, and I tried to keep that theme as much as I could, but because it lasted so far into October some fall color crept into the later pictures. Still looks neat, though. Perhaps in a subsequent year, I will capture all of the shots in the summer.

The last 23 pictures are:

* Skyline from the 500 block of East Madison Street: This picture was taken from the top level of the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Museum parking ramp. You can get a beautiful view of the city from here. The picture is aimed down 6th Street towards the Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum, where you can see the entrances of both. You can also see some of the buildings on the east side of 6th Street, such as the Illinois Building and the Springfield Marine Bank, and the Hilton and President Abraham Lincoln hotels.

* 900 block of South 2nd Street, Looking South from Canedy Street: This shot represents the Aristocracy Hill neighborhood, just to the south of downtown. This neighborhood contains many Lincoln era houses, including some on this block, and is a diverse, though upscale neighborhood. Technically, the Vachel Lindsay Home and the Lincoln Home are both part of this neighborhood as well. The neighborhood was named Aristocracy Hill because the Governor’s Mansion is located within it.

* 500 block of South Walnut Street, Looking South from Governor Street: This shot represents the Pasfield House neighborhood, just to the west of downtown. Most of the homes in this neighborhood were built just after Lincoln’s time. It is an upscale neighborhood containing large houses and big trees. There is a small Civil War museum on the right (west) side of the street, at the Governor Street intersection.

* Lincoln Totem Pole: So, what’s this doing outside the Illinois State Museum? After Lincoln’s assassination, the Tongass tribe of Indians in southeast Alaska adopted the Lincoln story as tribal legend. The story goes that when Alaska was purchased and became a U.S. territory, slaves among the Indian tribes there were freed by Lincoln’s acts as President. To commemorate the event, the tribe erected a totem pole in his honor. The original pole is now in a museum in Juneau, Alaska (after having been moved from Saxman, Alaska), and a copy is in the Illinois State Museum. This one outside the museum is a fiberglass replica of the totem pole. It is 50 feet tall and the carved statue of Lincoln on the top is 5 feet 10 inches tall (6 inches short of Lincoln’s 6 foot 4 inch height). I suspect a lot of people don’t notice this pole (it’s by the parking lot, near the Spring and Edwards intersection), but it goes to show how Lincoln is remembered by many different cultures.

* Skyline from Douglas Park: Through the trees at the southeast corner of this large northwest side park, at Walnut Street and Madison Street, you can see the downtown skyline, which is particularly beautiful during the afternoon and evening. I took the picture during this time. The Hilton, the State Capitol and the Ridgely Building are visible from here.

* 1500 block of South 4th Street, Looking North from Spruce Street: This shot represents the Near South neighborhood, to the south of Aristocracy Hill. This is a middle class neighborhood that was developed around the turn of the 20th century. It has big trees and a diverse range of housing styles, including brick apartment buildings which were a new style of living at the time. The east-west streets in this neighborhood are all named after trees.

* 1800 block of South State Street, Looking South: This narrow tree-lined brick street is located on the southwest side. It contains older, mostly one and a half story middle class homes built in the early 20th century. I’m unsure of the neighborhood name, but this atypical typical block is representative of many neighborhoods in this section of town built at around the same time. There is no cross street dividing the 1700 and 1800 blocks.

* 1400 block of South Lincoln Avenue, Looking North from Leland Avenue: This tree-lined brick street is in one of Springfield’s rich neighborhoods, just to the south of Washington Park, on the west side of the city. Large, old houses and mansions are common in this neighborhood. The neighborhood was developed at around the turn of the 20th century. This shot looks north towards Washington Park, visible in the distance.

* Thomas Rees Memorial Carillon: This is in the western portion of Washington Park, a very large 280 acre west side park. It is one of the largest carillons in the world. It contains 67 bells and is over 12 stories tall. Concerts are held here during the summer and at Christmas time. The carillon was built in 1962.

* Washington Park Gazebo: This is in the eastern portion of Washington Park, near the Lincoln Avenue/South Grand Avenue intersection. It’s surrounded by lots of trees, and a grassy open area. Events are sometimes held here.

* Lake Springfield: This 8-square-mile lake is located on the southeastern edge of the city. The southern and eastern shores of the lake are outside of the city and are still largely undeveloped. The lake is surrounded by parks, and it has beaches, a zoo, and a large nature center (Lincoln Memorial Gardens) along its shores. This shot was taken from Spaulding Dam on the north shore of the lake. It was a nice day to take a picture of the lake, and I got a boater in the picture.

* Skyline from the 800 block of East Madison Street: Taken facing the Old State Capitol, you can also see the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Museum, the State Capitol, the Myers Building, and the Illinois Building from here. I think the fall color made this shot more vibrant than it would have been if it was taken in the summer.

* Lincoln Statue on Lincoln Tomb Upper Deck: This is the oldest Lincoln statue in Springfield. It was dedicated in 1874, when the Lincoln Tomb was finished. It depicts Abraham Lincoln emancipating the slaves, with his arm outstretched and holding a copy of the Emancipation Proclamation. Since one of the things that made me a Lincoln admirer is emancipation, it is one of my favorite Lincoln statues in the city. Because the statue is up so high, you can see more detail in the picture than you can with your eyes alone.

* Governor’s Mansion: This beautiful Georgian mansion, located on the block bounded by 4th, 5th, Jackson, and Edwards Streets, was built in 1855, and is the 3rd largest governor’s mansion in the country. The grounds of the mansion are beautifully landscaped with trees and fountains. Joel Matteson was the first governor to reside here. Lincoln attended many events here. The mansion is open for tours and it contains several Lincoln-related artifacts, including paintings and a sculpture.

* Brinkerhoff Home: This is a big, beautiful house on the north end near Lincoln Park, on the Springfield College campus. It was built in 1869. The home is surrounded by lots of trees and sits at the top of a big hill. Events related to Springfield history occur here.

* Lincoln Tomb: The final resting place of Abraham Lincoln. It is located in Oak Ridge Cemetery, a large, beautiful, peaceful 365-acre cemetery on the north end. It is the largest cemetery in Illinois and the second most visited in the country. The Tomb itself is 117 feet tall. It was designed by Larkin Mead of Vermont. Outside is the famous bust where people love to rub Lincoln’s nose, and it contains a statue of Lincoln and four statues depicting the Civil War on its upper deck. There are 50 state shields carved into the tomb, in the order in which they came into the Union. Inside the tomb are 9 “statuettes” of Abraham Lincoln, which are all replicas of Lincoln statues elsewhere. In addition to Mr. Lincoln, Mary and the Lincolns’ sons Willie, Tad, and Eddie are buried here. Robert is buried in Arlington National Cemetery.

* 1200 block of North Monument Avenue, Looking North from North Grand Avenue: This shot represents the Oak Ridge neighborhood on the north end, north of Enos Park. It is a middle class neighborhood built in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. This street is a tree-lined boulevard with historic streetlights and brick landscaping that leads into Oak Ridge Cemetery.

* Inside the Lincoln-Herndon Law Offices: This picture was taken in the law office of Lincoln and Herndon in the back of the Tinsley Building on the third floor. This office was used by Lincoln from about 1849 to 1853.

* It Will Become All One Thing: At the intersection of 1st Street and North Grand Avenue on the north end, there is a small park with benches and a large wooden sign with this unifying quote from Abraham Lincoln’s House Divided speech. The sign is visible as you are going south down Monument towards North Grand Avenue (away from Oak Ridge Cemetery). The area around this small, but beautiful, park contains many big trees, which are visible in the background.

* State Capitol Rotunda: Taken inside the State Capitol facing straight up into the rotunda from the 1st floor. Pretty, isn’t it?

* Inside the Old State Capitol: This picture was taken inside Representatives Hall where Lincoln served in the Legislature. The desk with the hat on it is where Lincoln sat. The desk itself isn’t the actual desk that Lincoln sat at, that is on display in the north side of the room (not in the photo). Lincoln gave his famous “House Divided” speech (among others) underneath the big portrait of George Washington in the center of the room. Today, this room and the Old State Capitol itself is often used for Lincoln-related events. The entire Old State Capitol is open for tours.

* Inside Lincoln’s Home: I had to take two tours of the home to get this shot properly. It can be difficult when you have to stay at the pace of the tour and there are lots of people on the tour. It was taken inside the formal parlor on the north side of Lincoln’s home, which was used for formal events, like when the Republican delegation from Chicago came and told him he had won the 1860 Republican nomination for President. Many of the items in this room (like the couch, and the portable writing desk) are items Lincoln owned.

* Lincoln Family Statue in the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Museum Plaza: The ceremonial 88th shot. I took it on Monday. I always do this one last, it seems like a fitting tribute to Lincoln and Springfield for finishing the project. This life-size statue of Lincoln and his family (including Mary, Willie, Tad, and Robert) inside the central plaza of the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Museum is a popular picture-taking spot for tourists. Eddie is not included in the statue since we do not know what he looked like. Behind the Lincolns, a replica of the White House is visible.

The final 23 shots:

Skyline from the 500 block of East Madison Street

Skyline from the 500 block of East Madison Street

900 block of South 2nd Street, Looking South from Canedy Street

900 block of South 2nd Street, Looking South from Canedy Street

500 block of South Walnut Street, Looking South from Governor Street

500 block of South Walnut Street, Looking South from Governor Street

Lincoln Totem Pole

Lincoln Totem Pole

Skyline from Douglas Park

Skyline from Douglas Park

1500 block of South 4th Street, Looking North from Spruce Street

1500 block of South 4th Street, Looking North from Spruce Street

1800 block of South State Street, Looking South

1800 block of South State Street, Looking South

1400 block of South Lincoln Avenue, Looking North from Leland Avenue

1400 block of South Lincoln Avenue, Looking North from Leland Avenue

Thomas Rees Memorial Carillon

Thomas Rees Memorial Carillon

Washington Park Gazebo

Washington Park Gazebo

Lake Springfield

Lake Springfield

Skyline from the 800 block of East Madison Street

Skyline from the 800 block of East Madison Street

Lincoln Statue on Lincoln Tomb Upper Deck

Lincoln Statue on Lincoln Tomb Upper Deck

Governor's Mansion

Governor's Mansion

Brinkerhoff Home

Brinkerhoff Home

Lincoln Tomb

Lincoln Tomb

1200 block of North Monument Avenue, Looking North from North Grand Avenue

1200 block of North Monument Avenue, Looking North from North Grand Avenue

Inside the Lincoln-Herndon Law Offices

Inside the Lincoln-Herndon Law Offices

It Will Become All One Thing

It Will Become All One Thing

State Capitol Rotunda

State Capitol Rotunda

Inside the Old State Capitol

Inside the Old State Capitol

Inside Lincoln's Home

Inside Lincoln's Home

Lincoln Family Statue in the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Museum Plaza

Lincoln Family Statue in the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Museum Plaza

 

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This is as of Saturday, it doesn’t include anything taken this week. I still intend to finish the project and complete all 88 pictures, a goal towards which I have made significant progress this week. The weather here most of October hasn’t made this project easy (lots of cloudy days) but I’m doing what I can. As soon as I sort out the pictures from the past few days (which had almost perfect weather) I’ll make another post.

The 21 new pictures since the last post on this are:

* Union Square Park: This downtown park, popular with tourists, is across 6th Street from the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Museum, which you can see in the distance. It takes up almost an entire city block; Union Station takes up the northern portion of the block, the park takes up the rest. Many Lincoln-related events take place at this park.

* Lincoln Square Apartments: Luxury apartments in a great downtown location. I toured one of these once on the downtown Upper Story Tour, and they are very nice. Maybe someday I’ll live here. The building was built in 1984, though it looks much older than that. It emulates its historic downtown surroundings, as if it’s been there since Lincoln’s time. I took the photo from the 5th/Monroe intersection and captured some of the vibrancy surrounding it.

* (Benjamin) Edwards Place: This mansion in the Enos Park neighborhood is the oldest home still on its original foundation in Springfield. It was built in 1833. It was home to Benjamin Edwards, Ninian Edwards’ brother. The Lincolns were married at Ninian Edwards’ home which was on the 500 block of South 2nd Street where the Centennial/Howlett Building is now. However, the Lincolns visited the Benjamin Edwards home many times and the home was a focal point for activity during Lincoln’s time. The home is open to the public for tours and the Springfield Art Association (which owns the home) occupies an annex.

* Lincoln Park Pavilion: This is in Lincoln Park, a large, beautiful Northend park in a historic neighborhood encompassing over 150 acres. The pavilion in this park looks like an old stone country home on top of a big hill. It is located in the southern portion of the park, and you can see it from the little park road once you get into the park from the southeast entrance near 5th and Black. I took the photo from the grass “staircase” across the park lagoon from the pavilion. I wanted to capture the rural feel of the pavilion in this picture.

* Lincoln Bust at Lincoln Tomb: This is the one where everybody wants to rub his nose. It’s supposed to bring you good luck, and Lincoln’s nose is all shiny from all the rubbing. The bust was sculpted by Gutzon Borglum, who also did busts of Lincoln on Mt. Rushmore, in the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Museum and in the U.S. Capitol. I took this photo at sunset since I feel it captures the mood of the Lincoln Tomb nicely.

* 400 block of South 8th Street, Looking South from Capitol Avenue: This historic tree-lined street is in the Lincoln Home National Historic Site, preserved to its 1860 appearance. The Lincoln Home itself is visible down the street to your left. It was very difficult to get this shot without people in it.

* Lincoln School: I thought I’d do a school for this project, since a lot of Springfield’s school buildings are historic and have character. I chose this one since not only is it historic, it’s named after Lincoln. It’s located in the Pioneer Park neighborhood. The picture was shot from the 12th/Capitol intersection. This is the only shot in the project that I did on a cloudy day, but I think the clouds made it interesting.

* 700 block of North 5th Street, Looking North from Miller Street: This shot represents the Enos Park neighborhood, a diverse neighborhood just north of downtown. This neighborhood contains many Lincoln-era homes and lots of big trees and large, old colorful houses. There’s lots of character in this neighborhood. This block contains some beautiful old rowhouses, called the Enos Flats, visible on the right side of the street. Also visible are a couple of large brick homes, and a mixture of other historic homes.

* Lincoln Park Bridge: This stone bridge in Lincoln Park is over a century old. It spans the park lagoon, which contains beautiful waterfalls and fountains. It leads into a forest, where a path leads up a giant “grass staircase”. I took a picture of the bridge from opposite the staircase, with the forest visible in the distance behind the lagoon. The bridge has “LINCOLN” and “PARK” carved into the posts at this end (the end opposite the “grass staircase”), visible in the picture.

* State Fairgrounds Main Entrance: This is on 11th Street, at its intersection with Sangamon Avenue. There’s a large statue of Lincoln as a railsplitter just inside the gate. This isn’t my favorite Lincoln sculpture in Springfield (I always thought it was kind of tacky), but it’s still a representation of Lincoln and deserves to be included. I love getting the evening light on this shot – it’s as if the fair is about to begin.

* Adams Street Mall, looking West from 6th Street: Also known as the Old State Capitol Plaza, this busy brick pedestrian mall, which forms the south side of the square, is often used for outdoor events. I took the photo during one of these. The shops and restaurants that line the Adams Street Mall are visible to the left.

* 200 block of South 6th Street, Looking South from Adams Street: This busy downtown block is lined with a variety of shops and restaurants. The Tinsley Building, which contains the Lincoln-Herndon Law Offices, is visible on the right. To capture the vibrant urban feel I took the picture with people walking down the street.

* 1100 block of South Grand Avenue East, Looking East from 11th Street: This is in Old South Town, a quirky “mini-downtown” district on the near east side that is currently being revitalized. The district is about one mile southeast of downtown. The South Town theater marquee in this district is the oldest theater marquee in Illinois, dating from the 1910s.

* Skyline from 5th and Capitol: The harmony and contrast between nature and the city is visible in this shot. Through the trees, you can see buildings that punctuate the Springfield skyline. Down below, you can see the street, and people walking along it.

* 100 block of North 6th Street, Looking North from Washington Street: The Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library is the edifice that occupies much of the right (east) side of this block, towards the end of it. On the west side of this block, there are shops and restaurants. This block is often busy with tourists and other people milling about. I tried to capture some of this in the shot.

* Skyline from Comer Cox Park: This is a large 40-acre park on the east side, along M.L. King Drive between Capitol Avenue and Washington Street. You can see parts of the skyline from it. The Pioneer Park neighborhood lies between this park and downtown.

* Vachel Lindsay Home: This Lincoln-era home on the 600 block of South 5th Street was home to Springfield poet Vachel Lindsay, who lived here from 1879 until 1931. The home is restored to its appearance during that time. This is also known as the C.M. Smith home, for the name of Lincoln’s brother-in-law, who lived here during Lincoln’s time. The home is owned by the state and is open to the public.

* First Presbyterian Church: This is the church that the Lincolns attended (though Lincoln was never an official member of the church). When Lincoln lived in Springfield, the church was located at 3rd and Washington. It was moved to this location at 7th and Capitol in the 1870s. The new church building incorporates some elements from the old one, though (such as the stained-glass windows). The pew the Lincolns rented is on display here.

* Pasfield House: This large historic house in the Pasfield House neighborhood, just to the west of the State Capitol, functions as a B&B now. It’s not Lincoln-era (it was built in 1896), but it’s still beautiful. As a nice added touch, there is a large color cutout of Abraham Lincoln waving at you from the front porch. I love it and I made sure to capture it in the picture.

* Lincoln Tower Apartments: This large apartment building is conveniently located near the State Capitol. Even though it’s a more modern building, I felt the need to include it as it is another major “downtown living” apartment complex.

* State Library: This beautiful building on the northeast corner of 2nd and Capitol is located across the street from the State Capitol. It houses the State Archives (different from the collection that the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library has, which is the Illinois State Historical Library). The names along the top of the building are the names of prominent Illinois authors, writers, and educators.

The 21 new pictures:

Union Square Park

Union Square Park

Lincoln Square Apartments

Lincoln Square Apartments

Edwards Place

Edwards Place

Lincoln Park Pavilion

Lincoln Park Pavilion

Lincoln Bust at Lincoln Tomb

Lincoln Bust at Lincoln Tomb

400 block of South 8th Street, Looking South from Capitol Avenue

400 block of South 8th Street, Looking South from Capitol Avenue

Lincoln School

Lincoln School

700 block of North 5th Street, Looking North from Miller Street

700 block of North 5th Street, Looking North from Miller Street

Lincoln Park Bridge

Lincoln Park Bridge

State Fairgrounds Main Entrance

State Fairgrounds Main Entrance

Adams Street Mall, Looking West from 6th Street

Adams Street Mall, Looking West from 6th Street

200 block of South 6th Street, Looking South from Adams Street

200 block of South 6th Street, Looking South from Adams Street

1100 block of South Grand Avenue East, Looking East from 11th Street

1100 block of South Grand Avenue East, Looking East from 11th Street

Skyline from 5th and Capitol

Skyline from 5th and Capitol

100 block of North 6th Street, Looking North from Washington Street

100 block of North 6th Street, Looking North from Washington Street

Skyline from Comer Cox Park

Skyline from Comer Cox Park

Vachel Lindsay Home

Vachel Lindsay Home

First Presbyterian Church

First Presbyterian Church

Pasfield House

Pasfield House

Lincoln Tower Apartments

Lincoln Tower Apartments

State Library

State Library

 

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I have 44 of the 88 pictures so far. (Not including anything I got today or yesterday.) At least it rained last weekend, so now I can go take some of the residential shots without getting brown grass. This week’s weather so far has been cloudy, though, which has made it difficult for me to take the photos I want. I’ve also been working hard on my Etsy shop. I might not get this done until sometime in early October now. I thought I’d be finished by now. But of course, I’m still going to finish it, whatever it takes.

The 9 new pictures:

* Lincoln Home: This upper middle class house on the northeast corner of 8th and Jackson was the only home Lincoln ever owned. He lived here from 1844 to 1861 (when he left to be inaugurated as President). He probably spent the best years of his life here. The house was built in 1839 by the Rev. Charles Dresser, who also presided over the Lincolns’ wedding in 1842. When Lincoln bought the house, it was only 1 1/2 stories tall, and they added onto it over the years. The home was given to the state of Illinois in 1887 by Lincoln’s son Robert and then (along with the 4-block-square area surrounding it) to the National Park Service in 1972. One of the stipulations Robert made in the transfer of the home to the government is that it must always be free to tour, and that of course is still true today.

* Skyline from the 400 block of North 11th Street: If you recognize this photo, it’s because I used it (well, a version from a past year) to make my blog header image. I love the pretty lights and the urban feel. You can see the Hilton, the Convention Center, the President Abraham Lincoln Hotel, the Horace Mann Building, the State Capitol and the Myers Building from here.

* 600 block of East Capitol Avenue, Looking West from 7th Street: This is my favorite point along Capitol Avenue to take a streetscape shot looking directly towards the Capitol. To the right is the First Presbyterian Church, which the Lincolns attended (albeit not at this location), and visible down the street are restaurants and shops.

* 600 block of East Monroe Street, Looking West from 7th Street: This busy block has the Federal Building on the left, and a state office building on the right, and restaurants in the distance. For some reason, the traffic pattern at the 7th/Monroe intersection makes it tricky to take this streetscape shot.

* 600 block of East Adams Street, Looking West from 7th Street: Taken from the north sidewalk of the street instead of in the middle, because I like it that way. This vibrant block connects the hotels with the Adams Street Mall and the 5th and 6th Street corridors in the distance. It is lined with shops and restaurants and is one of the main corridors in downtown Springfield. The Illinois Building is visible on the right in the distance.

* West Side of the Square: Like the South Side of the Square shot, this one features the sun shining on the buildings. Which means that it was taken in the morning, and I’m not a morning person, so this one was little difficult to get. But I like the feel of this picture, somehow calming, yet urban, and vibrant. The tall building on the far right is the Myers Building, and Lincoln’s last law office was in the spot where this building now is. (The Myers Building was built in 1886.) The Chatterton Building, the 2nd building from the left, is a Lincoln-era building that housed a jewelry store where Lincoln bought Mary Todd’s wedding ring.

* Old State Capitol: This was the tallest building in Illinois when it was completed in 1839. Lincoln served his last two terms in the State Legislature here, and it was here that he gave his famous “House Divided” speech. This building remained the State Capitol until 1876 when state government outgrew the structure, thus necessitating the need for the New State Capitol.

* View from the 800 block of East Jefferson Street: While walking to the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Museum one day, I noticed that there was a point on this block where you could see the domes of both the old and the new State Capitols, and where the domes of each of the State Capitols both have the same apparent size. This is a shot of this, viewed through the columns of the Horace Mann building on this block, and the trees on its grounds.

* State Capitol: This is the tallest building in the city, at 405 feet high. It is so large it is impossible to get the whole thing in, so I just got the dome. The building is often referred to as the “New State Capitol” to distinguish it from the old one, even though it was completed in 1876. This building is the State Capitol building today, and it is located where 1st Street and Capitol Avenue would intersect if they ran that far.

The 9 new pics:

Lincoln Home

Lincoln Home

Skyline from the 400 block of North 11th Street

Skyline from the 400 block of North 11th Street

600 block of East Capitol Avenue, Looking West from 7th Street

600 block of East Capitol Avenue, Looking West from 7th Street

600 block of East Monroe Street, Looking West from 7th Street

600 block of East Monroe Street, Looking West from 7th Street

600 block of East Adams Street, Looking West from 7th Street

600 block of East Adams Street, Looking West from 7th Street

West Side of the Square

West Side of the Square

Old State Capitol

Old State Capitol

View from the 800 block of East Jefferson Street

View from the 800 block of East Jefferson Street

State Capitol

State Capitol

 

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That’s not including anything I got yesterday or today, so I’ve successfully taken 10 new ones since the last post on Wednesday. That means that 35 of 88 are successfully completed now, and the project is proceeding along faster than it was earlier. The 10 new pictures are:

* Iles House: This house is the oldest house still standing in Springfield. It was built in 1827. It is named for Elijah Iles, one of the founders of Springfield. He was also a friend and political ally of Abraham Lincoln. The house was originally located at 6th and Cook. Over the decades it was moved around a couple locations on the south side of the city before being moved to the northeast corner of 7th and Cook in 2001. (The 6th and Cook location is now a church.) Once it was moved to 7th and Cook, it was restored as much as is possible to its original appearance and opened to the public. It is now owned by the Elijah Iles Foundation.

* Lincoln Statue at State Capitol: This dramatic statue of Lincoln on the State Capitol grounds greets you at the eastern approach to the State Capitol, at 2nd Street and Capitol Avenue. I took this picture when the sun was hiding behind some clouds, to minimize glare.

* 400 block of East Jefferson Street, Looking East from 4th Street: This shot is aimed at one of Springfield’s greatest treasures between two of the city’s biggest downtown residential complexes. To the left (north side of Jefferson) is the vine-covered Near North Village Apartments, and to the right (south side of Jefferson) is the historic St. Nicholas Hotel (now apartments). In the distance are the rotundae of the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum.

* County Building: Even though the sign by the building says “Sangamon County Complex”, I call it the County Building, and so do many other people, probably because it’s shorter to say. The building was built in 1991, though it certainly looks more historic than that. It houses all of the county offices, including the present day Sangamon County Courthouse, and even the jail. The building takes up the whole block bounded by 9th, 10th, Adams, and Monroe. The original idea for this shot involved getting the whole 9th Street side of the building together with the sign, but realizing that that was impossible, I decided to take it with the sign close up. I liked the results.

* 500 block of South 7th Street, Looking North from Edwards Street: The first house on the left (west) side of the street is the Maisenbacher House, an upper middle class home that was built by Isaac Lindsay with a loan from Abraham Lincoln. It is currently being restored after having been moved to this block last year from the 1000 block of South 7th to save it. On the right (east) side of the street is the Lincoln Home National Historic Site. Further down the street, in the distance, behind the trees and other historic buildings, you can see downtown.

* City Hall Fountain East: Splash, splash, splash… This large fountain is located at the corner of 8th and Monroe, to the east of City Hall. It pulsates and splashes water several times each second. I tried to capture it during one of these water-splashing cycles, and I think I succeeded. Behind the fountain is the walkway that forms the 300 block of South 8th.

* 300 block of South 13th Street, Looking North from Capitol Avenue: This shot represents the Pioneer Park neighborhood, a primarily middle class, African American neighborhood just to the east of downtown. This neighborhood was developed in Lincoln’s time, though many of the houses in the neighborhood now are newer than that. Still though, the neighborhood has character and contains many old homes. It is the first neighborhood shot I have managed so far. This particular block was selected since it included a brick street. I love those.

* President Abraham Lincoln Hotel: This large hotel on the northeast corner of 7th and Adams is often considered the most expensive, luxurious hotel in the city. It was built in 1985, though its architecture, designed to emulate its historic surroundings, would lead you to believe it was built much earlier than that. It is located across Adams Street from the Hilton and is right next to the Convention Center. It contains restaurants, conference rooms, and ballrooms on the first floor. This year, with the Bicentennial, it is surrounded by Lincoln Bicentennial banners and posters in the windows. I had a tough time capturing it without all the people that are normally around the hotel (I wanted it without anybody in the way). Making things more difficult, I can only barely fit the entire height of the hotel into a landscape oriented frame. This is with my camera zoomed out all the way, standing kitty-corner from the hotel literally next to the buildings on the southwest corner of 7th and Adams. I can’t use a portrait oriented frame, since this is for a CD project and CD covers are in landscape. I tried (and failed) to shoot this one for many days until I finally got it (in just a single shot) on Saturday.

* Hoogland Center for the Arts: This large building on the 400 block of South 6th Street, on the south edge of downtown, contains theaters, art galleries, and the like, and is home to the Prairie Art Alliance. There are many events, like live theater and music, that occur here. It has a colorful marquee on the outside that lights up at night. To represent the activity that occurs here, I decided to take a picture of the Hoogland Center at night, after a show let out. The shot is panned towards downtown, so you can see what’s in the distance.

* 600 block of East Washington Street, Looking West from 7th Street: This is the only streetscape shot in the entire Lincoln Land 80s project that is taken at night. I did it this way since this block seems to have more activity at night than during the daytime, and I wanted to have at least one nighttime streetscape shot. There are people walking down the street in the shot. The Myers Building is visible in the distance, and further in the distance is a parking ramp stairwell all lit up (I always thought it looked neat that way). Since it’s impossible to set up a tripod in the middle of the street, this shot focused down the north side of Washington Street.

The 10 new pictures:

Iles House

Iles House

Lincoln Statue at State Capitol

Lincoln Statue at State Capitol

400 block of East Jefferson Street, Looking East from 4th Street

400 block of East Jefferson Street, Looking East from 4th Street

County Building

County Building

500 block of South 7th Street, Looking North from Edwards Street

500 block of South 7th Street, Looking North from Edwards Street

City Hall Fountain East

City Hall Fountain East (at 8th and Monroe)

300 block of South 13th Street, Looking North from Capitol Avenue

300 block of South 13th Street, Looking North from Capitol Avenue

President Abraham Lincoln Hotel

President Abraham Lincoln Hotel

Hoogland Center for the Arts

Hoogland Center for the Arts

600 block of East Washington Street, Looking West from 7th Street

600 block of East Washington Street, Looking West from 7th Street

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I didn’t meet my goal of getting the Lincoln Land 80s CD pictures project done by Labor Day, but I’m still going to complete the project. And I’m working on it – I’ve managed to take 7 new pictures since last Wednesday. I didn’t take any on Saturday or Sunday, I had family over those days. Of course, I would’ve got rained on had I took pictures those days.

These are the last 7 of them (since the last post on Lincoln Land 80s):

* Lincoln Statue at Lincoln Library: This is a “cubist” Lincoln statue at the entrance to Lincoln Library (the downtown one) on Capitol Avenue. Some people don’t like it, but I actually do like this statue. Somehow it seems to remind me of my 1980s youth. In any case, I think it goes along well with the building.

* 200 block of South 5th Street, Looking North from Monroe Street: This is one of the downtown blocks in the 5th Street nightlife district. A lot of the bars/nightclubs/late night restaurants in Springfield are located on this street. I took this one in the evening as people were milling about and sitting outside at some of the restaurants to capture the mood.

* Skyline from the 200 block of South 9th Street: This is taken at sunset, looking west towards the big hotels and the Illinois Building. The lights in the hotels and the colors from the sun setting create a very vibrant scene, one that I feel represents downtown Springfield. The city’s alive!

* Lincoln-Herndon Law Offices: Also called the Tinsley Building (for its owner Seth Tinsley), this building, located on the southwest corner of 6th and Adams, is the only building still standing today in which Lincoln had law offices. (Lincoln also had law offices in a building where the Myers Building is currently located and on the 100 block of North 5th Street; these locations are marked by plaques.) The building was preserved in 1986 by a local preservation group who bought it and then sold it to the state. The exact dates Lincoln had offices in the Tinsley Building (and where) are unclear, but he did have an office in the front of the building and (later) in the back. The building is basically the same today as it was then, except for the first floor, which has a small museum, and the Tinsley Dry Goods gift shop (one of my favorite Lincoln shops in Springfield). The post office is in basically the same spot as it was then. I shot this one from the north side of the building, close up. You can almost imagine Lincoln coming up to the door and entering it.

* Abraham Lincoln Presidential Museum at Sunset: This shot was taken from “behind” the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Museum, through the trees on the grounds of the nearby Horace Mann building. I’ve always thought the museum looked neat at sunset, so I wanted to do a shot of the museum at sunset for Lincoln Land 80s.

* Lincoln Statue at 6th and Adams: This is my favorite Lincoln statue in Springfield. It shows Lincoln as a normal Springfield citizen, and as a lawyer and politician, before he became well known nationally. Mary is straightening his tie, with his son Willie standing beside him. His son Robert (Tad wasn’t born yet) is running away from him (this was not captured in the picture). This statue is life size, and it certainly encourages tourists to interact with Lincoln as evidenced by its popularity as a tourist gathering spot. This makes it rather difficult to take the picture, since I don’t want people directly behind the statue (though I like capturing people walking around or sitting at sidewalk cafes on 6th Street in the distance). I used the Lincoln-Herndon Law Offices as a backdrop to represent his career at this point in his life.

* 300 block of South 8th Street, Looking North from Capitol Avenue: This section of 8th Street is actually a tree-canopied brick pedestrian walkway between City Hall and the police station. You can see these buildings along the side of the street; further down the street, you can see Saputo’s (a very good Italian restaurant), the President Abraham Lincoln Hotel, and the Convention Center.

The 7 new pictures:

Lincoln Statue at Lincoln Library

Lincoln Statue at Lincoln Library

200 block of South 5th Street, Looking North from Monroe Street

200 block of South 5th Street, Looking North from Monroe Street

Skyline from the 200 block of South 9th Street

Skyline from the 200 block of South 9th Street

Lincoln-Herndon Law Offices

Lincoln-Herndon Law Offices

Abraham Lincoln Presidential Museum at Sunset

Abraham Lincoln Presidential Museum at Sunset

Lincoln Statue at 6th and Adams

Lincoln Statue at 6th and Adams

300 block of South 8th Street, Looking North from Capitol Avenue

300 block of South 8th Street, Looking North from Capitol Avenue

 

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