Submitted by Gina DaBiere-Gibbs, Montgomery County Tourism Department – Do you have something to share, too? Email events@mohawkvalleyguide.com
Abraham Lincoln traveling learning station exhibit coming to Amsterdam, NY on January 6, 2010 – February 5, 2010
“Abraham Lincoln: Self-Made in America” features reproduction artifacts from the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum.

Many people were visiting the exhibit immediately after setup earlier this week
A Press Conference will be held this Saturday, January 9, 2010 at 11:00 am in the Riverfront Center lower level to announce the opening of this nationwide traveling exhibit to our local area. In attendance will be New York Senator Hugh Farley, representative from U.S. Congressman Tonko’s office, representative from Assemblyman George Amedore’s office, Amsterdam Mayor Ann M. Thane, representatives from the Montgomery County Board of Supervisors and the Amsterdam City Common Council.
A world-class traveling exhibit featuring reproduction artifacts from the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum in Springfield, Illinois is coming to the Riverfront Center in Amsterdam, Lower Level, on behalf of the Walter Elwood Museum from January 6, 2010 through February 5, 2010.

Lincoln's gloves from the Theatre, and Funeral Badges
The public may view the exhibit free of charge.
In conjunction, Walter Elwood Museum artifacts from this same time period will also be on display for public viewing and enjoyment.
“Abraham Lincoln: Self-Made in America” was created to commemorate the 200th anniversary of the birth of America’s greatest president by the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum. The “We, the People” program of the National Endowment for the Humanities, a federal agency, provided major financial support for the exhibition and accompanying programs. The Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library Foundation and the History Channel provided additional financial and in-kind support.

President Lincolns Ax and personal photos
The exhibit covers Lincoln’s childhood, his self-education, his careers as a surveyor and lawyer, his family life, the Lincoln-Douglas Debates, the 1860 Presidential election, the Civil War, the 13th Amendment, the Emancipation Proclamation, his assassination, and other important periods and events in his life. The reproduction artifacts on display, all modeled from originals in the Presidential Library and Museum, include: Lincoln’s favorite books; his son Tad’s toy cannon; the nameplate from his Springfield home; his stovepipe hat, which he used like a briefcase to hold important papers; a Presidential campaign banner; an axe that Lincoln used to chop wood; the bloody gloves found in Lincoln’s pocket the night of his assassination; and many other unique and interesting items.
The traveling learning station exhibit is being displayed in 40 public libraries and historical societies over the next two years. It was one of just two “We, the People” programs for the Lincoln Bicentennial funded by the National Endowment for the Humanities. The exhibit will travel the nation from September 2008 through September 2010.
Abraham Lincoln, the son of a subsistence farmer, came of age during a dramatic transformation in America’s economic life. Like many of his contemporaries, he embraced a new emphasis on personal initiative, risk-taking, and ambition. He was only 22 when he left his family home to find his own way. After enduring a series of personal failures in business, he became a prosperous attorney, devoted husband and father, successful politician, and, finally, the 16th President of the United States. While Lincoln benefited from close association with a number of powerful friends, his own talents and ambitions combined with hard work and a dedication to self-improvement to produce a unique American specimen – the self-made man.
The American Library Association of Chicago and the Tribeca Film Institute of New York made strong contributions to the exhibit programming.
For more information about the “Abraham Lincoln: Self-Made in America” exhibit, visit www.PresidentLincoln.org.













