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Lincoln Memorial
The
Lincoln memorial is a monument honoring the 16th President
of the United States, Abraham Lincoln.
 Soon after Lincoln became president,
seven southern states seceded in response to the president's
condemnation of slavery.
One year later, four more states
seceded and in April 1861 the Civil War started. During
the war, Congress approved the 13th Amendment, abolishing
slavery in the United States. The Civil War ended in
April 1865 with the surrender of General Robert E. Lee.
Six days later, Abraham Lincoln was shot by an assassin.
Lincoln Memorial Monument Association
Two years after his assassination,
Congress formed the Lincoln Monument Association. Its
task was to build a memorial dedicated to Abraham Lincoln.
It would take until 1901 before a  site for the memorial
was chosen. In 1911 the Lincoln Memorial Bill was signed
by President Taft, providing $2 million funds for the
memorial.
Construction
Construction started in 1914. The design
by the New York architect Henry Bacon was based on a
greek temple with 36 doric columns. Each column represents
one state of the Union at the time of Lincoln's death.
When the memorial was completed in May 1922, the Union
had expanded with 12 more states, so the names of the
48 states were carved on the outside of the memorial's
walls. After the admission of Alaska and Hawaii, a plaque was
added with the names of the new states.
Interior
Inside the 99ft tall marble temple
is a large sculpture of Abraham Lincoln seated in a
chair. The sculpture, designed by Daniel Chester French,
was originally  intended to be 10ft/3m tall. Henry Bacon
realized the statue would be dwarfed inside the large
building so the size was almost doubled to 19ft/5.8m.
The northern wall contains an inscription of Lincoln's
second inaugural speech, the southern wall has the Gettysburg
address inscribed. Above the inscription is a mural
depicting the angel of truth freeing a slave.
Protest marches
The memorial is often used as a gathering
place for protests and political rallies. The most famous
was the March of Washington in 1963, when Martin Luther
King delivered his famous speech 'I have a dream' from
the Lincoln Memorial.
Location
The Lincoln Memorial is located at
the west end of the National Mall.
From the top of the stairs in front of the memorial, you
have a great view of the Washington
Monument and the US Capitol.
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Quick Info
Location
900 Ohio Drive, SW
Subway
Smithsonian (blue, orange)
Tools
Links
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