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Ford's Theatre opens center to study Lincoln

Brett Zongker | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 12 years, 11 months AGO
by Brett Zongker
| February 12, 2012 8:00 PM

WASHINGTON - Flowers once attached to President Abraham Lincoln's coffin and ribbons from mourners have been paired with videos and interactive displays to explore his life in a new museum and education center at the theater where Lincoln was assassinated.

The Ford's Theatre Center for Education and Leadership opens to the public Sunday, the 203rd anniversary of Lincoln's birth. The new center built in a 10-story former office building is part of a $60 million project to create a four-part campus for visitors to learn about Lincoln in the nation's capital.

Visitors can begin with exhibits that explore Lincoln's presidency and see the theater where he was shot April 14, 1865. They can follow the story across the street to see where Lincoln died the next day.

More of Lincoln's story can be told in the new center. Visitors will walk through a replica train car to see objects never before displayed from when the nation grieved for 14 days after his death. Lincoln's funeral train traveled from Washington to Baltimore, Philadelphia and New York City, then toward his home in Illinois. They can retrace the hunt for Lincoln's assassin, John Wilkes Booth, to a theatrical model of the Virginia barn where he was found. Soldiers set the barn on fire to smoke him out and eventually shot Booth.

Director Paul Tetreault said Ford's Theatre is using the drama of Lincoln's story to teach history with a working theater and vivid exhibits.

"The more theatrical we can make the telling of the Lincoln story, I think the most accessible it is," he said. "It comes alive."

Lincoln's story is also told at his presidential library and museum in Springfield, Ill., at his birthplace in Kentucky, and at Lincoln's Cottage in Washington, which served as his summer home.

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