Community Corner

Revisiting Lincoln Locally with SO's Tom McCabe

The Newark History Society presents "Lincoln and Newark."

, professor of history at Rutgers University – Newark and author of , will join Lincoln scholar  and Chairman of the Abraham Lincoln Bicentennial Foundation Harold Holzer on Wednesday night to discuss The program is sponsored by the Newark History Society, and will be held on June 1 at 6pm at the Newark Public Library. It is free and open to the public.

This year is both the 150th anniversary of Lincoln’s historic visit to Newark, which took place just before his first inauguration, and the 100th anniversary of the dedication of Gutzon Borglum’s “Seated Lincoln” statue in Newark. Borglum crafted the Presidential portraits on Mount Rushmore. When the statue was unveiled in 2011, President Theodore Roosevelt was among the crowd of some 100,000.

When Lincoln arrived in Newark in February 21, 1861, the President-elect came into the Morris and Essex Station on North Broad Street at 9:30 in the morning, according to OldNewark.com. Lincoln had left Jersey City earlier that morning en route to his March 4th Inaugural in Washington.

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Mayor Bigelow and a committee of Newark citizens met Lincoln at the station, and escorted him in a barouche drawn by four gray horses. The group traveled moved north along Broad Street to the Chestnut Street Station.

McCabe and Holzer will consider Lincoln’s significance to Newark citizens; according to records of the time, more than one-third of Newark citizenry turned out to watch the President-elect’s procession – despite a brutal snowstorm.

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For more information, NewarkHistorySociety@verizon.net or call 973 376-8273.

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