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{{main|Knob Creek Farm}} |
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The Knob Creek site features a log cabin and a historic tavern. The log cabin is not original to the site, but may have belonged to neighbors of the Lincolns. It was moved to the approximate location of the Lincolns' home. Abraham Lincoln's earliest memory was his near drowning in Knob Creek, and being saved by the neighbor's son. |
The Knob Creek site features a log cabin and a historic tavern. The log cabin is not original to the site, but may have belonged to neighbors of the Lincolns. It was moved to the approximate location of the Lincolns' home. Abraham Lincoln's earliest memory was his near drowning in Knob Creek, and being saved by the neighbor's son. |
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==Administrative history== |
==Administrative history== |
Revision as of 16:33, 16 December 2010
Abraham Lincoln Birthplace National Historical Park | |
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Location | Hodgenville, Kentucky, USA |
Area | 344.50 acres (139.41 ha) |
Established | July 17, 1916 |
Visitors | 221,111[1] (in 2009) |
Governing body | National Park Service |
Abraham Lincoln Birthplace National Historical Park preserves two farm sites where Abraham Lincoln lived as a child.
In the fall of 1808, Thomas and Nancy Lincoln settled on Sinking Spring Farm. Two months later on February 12, 1809, Abraham Lincoln was born there in a one-room log cabin. Today this site bears the address of 2995 Lincoln Farm Road, Hodgenville, Kentucky. A cabin, symbolic of the one in which Lincoln was born, is preserved in a memorial building at the site. The Lincolns lived and farmed at Sinking Spring before moving to land a few miles to the northeast along Knob Creek, near present-day U.S. Highway 31W.
Memorial Building
A Beaux-Arts neo-classical Memorial Building was designed by John Russell Pope for the birthplace site. In 1909 the cornerstone was laid by President Theodore Roosevelt and the building was dedicated in 1911 by President William Howard Taft.[2] Almost a hundred years after Thomas Lincoln moved from Sinking Spring Farm, the log cabin was placed inside the Memorial Building. The Memorial Building features 16 windows, 16 rosettes on the ceiling, and 16 fence poles, representing Lincoln's being the 16th president. The 56 steps leading up to the building entrance represent his age at his death.
The log cabin
The original log cabin that Lincoln was reputed to have been born in was dismantled sometime before 1865 because it was a prostitute house. Local tradition held that some of the logs from the cabin were used in construction of a nearby house. New York businessman A.W. Dennett purchased the Lincoln farm in 1894 and used the logs from this house to reconstruct a cabin similar in appearance to the original cabin where Lincoln was born. Soon the cabin was dismantled and re-erected for exhibition in many cities.{fact} Eventually the logs for this cabin, along with logs reputed to have belonged to Jefferson Davis' birthplace and possibly a third cabin, were purchased by the Lincoln Farm Association (LFA), which believed they had acquired only Lincoln logs. When workers tried to reconstruct the cabin, they discovered the problem. The LFA bought a one-room cabin similar to the one reconstructed by Dennett. When the last rebuilt cabin was placed in the Memorial Building, its size made visitor circulation difficult. The LFA reduced the cabin's size from 16-by-18 feet to 12-by-17 feet.{fact}
Today, historians recognize that the former claim that these logs were from Lincoln's birth cabin was essentially inaccurate.
In his book It All Started With Columbus, satirical writer Richard Armour stated that Lincoln had been born in three states and also "in two cabins - the original, and the reconstructed."
Knob Creek
The Knob Creek site features a log cabin and a historic tavern. The log cabin is not original to the site, but may have belonged to neighbors of the Lincolns. It was moved to the approximate location of the Lincolns' home. Abraham Lincoln's earliest memory was his near drowning in Knob Creek, and being saved by the neighbor's son. x
Administrative history
The original Memorial was constructed by the Lincoln Farm Association. In 1916, they donated the Memorial to the Federal government, which established the Abraham Lincoln National Park on July 17, 1916. The War Department administered the site until August 10, 1933, when it was transferred to the National Park Service. It was designated as the Abraham Lincoln National Historical Park on August 11, 1939. It was renamed and redesignated Abraham Lincoln Birthplace National Historic Site on September 8, 1959. As with all historic sites administered by the National Park Service, the site was listed on the National Register of Historic Places, effective on October 15, 1966. The historic site's definition was expanded to include the Knob Creek site on November 6, 1998.[2] On March 30, 2009, the site was redesignated a National Historical Park.
Also on the property is the privately owned Nancy Lincoln Inn.
See also
References
- The National Parks: Index 2001–2003. Washington: U.S. Department of the Interior.
- ^ Abraham Lincoln Birthplace NHP Annual Park Visitation (all years) National Park Service. Retrieved on 2010-09-12
- ^ a b Robert W., Blythe (July 2001). "Abraham Lincoln Birthplace National Historic Site: Historic Resource Study" (PDF). National Park Service. Retrieved 2008-02-13.
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External links
- Official NPS website: Abraham Lincoln Birthplace National Historical Park
- Map links
- Sinking Spring/Birthplace: 37°31′52″N 85°44′15″W / 37.53111°N 85.73750°W
- Knob Creek/Boyhood Home: 37°36′41″N 85°38′18″W / 37.61139°N 85.63833°W