February 9, 2013
Lincoln travelog
For fans of Honest Abe, there's lots to see and do in Washington
The Associated Press
This image provided by Ford's Theatre shows the interior of the theater in Washington, D.C., where President Abraham Lincoln was shot while attending a play in 1865.
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The Associated Press
A statue of Lincoln with his horse stands outside President Lincoln's Cottage, a historic site in Washington. Lincoln summered there with his family and often commuted a half-hour on horseback to the White House each day.
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Located on the grounds of one of the country's first federally funded homes for soldiers, known today as the Armed Forces Retirement Home. Entrance at Rock Creek Church Road NW and Upshur Street NW, near 140 Rock Creek Church Road NW. Free parking. Closest Metro station, nearly a mile away, Georgia Avenue/Petworth stop on Green/Yellow lines. From the Metro, the local H8 bus takes four minutes and stops at the site's front gate. Open 9:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., Monday through Saturday (first tour 10 a.m., last 3 p.m.) and 10:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Sundays (tours 11 a.m. to 3 p.m.). Guided tour tickets required, $15 ($5 for children ages 6-12), http://lincolncottage.org/.

SMITHSONIAN'S NATIONAL MUSEUM OF AMERICAN HISTORY: Lincoln's famous top hat, brown and glossy with age, is currently on display here in the "Changing America: The Emancipation Proclamation, 1863, and the March on Washington, 1963" exhibit (second floor east through Sept. 15). Lincoln was tall at 6-foot-3 and the hat made him appear even taller. He wore the hat to Ford's Theatre the night he was murdered.

The "Changing America" exhibit portrays the sweep of history from the abolition of slavery to the civil-rights movement. When Martin Luther King Jr. made his famous "I Have a Dream" speech during the March on Washington, he stood at the Lincoln Memorial and echoed Lincoln's famous Gettysburg Address, which began, "Four score and seven years ago." King's opening line: "Five score years ago, a great American, in whose symbolic shadow we stand, signed the Emancipation Proclamation."

Another treasure is in the museum's "The First Ladies" exhibit (third floor): Mary Todd Lincoln's purple velvet gown with white satin piping, mother of pearl buttons and an enormous hoop skirt. The dress was made by her seamstress and confidante, Elizabeth Keckley, a black woman who had purchased her own freedom. "The American Presidency: A Glorious Burden" (third floor east) highlights other Lincoln objects including hand casts made two days after he was nominated for presidency, showing his right hand still swollen from shaking so many hands. Uniforms, weapons and other Civil War relics can be seen in "The Price of Freedom: Americans at War" (third floor east).

Located between 12th and 14th streets on Constitution Avenue NW, free and open daily, http://americanhistory.si.edu/.

SMITHSONIAN AMERICAN ART MUSEUM AND NATIONAL PORTRAIT GALLERY: "The Civil War and American Art" (first floor west), on display through April 28, offers paintings portraying what the museum describes as the "transformative impact of the Civil War and its aftermath." An 1865 landscape painting of Yosemite Valley notes that Lincoln set aside the California wilderness as America's first federally protected park. Other works show scenes of soldiers. Many of the most thought-provoking images depict blacks fleeing slavery or contemplating their new postwar lives. The exhibit includes paintings by some of the era's most important artists, Winslow Homer, Eastman Johnson, Frederic Church and Sanford Gifford.

In the National Portrait Gallery, you'll find a photo made of Lincoln in a local studio in 1865, a painting of the president by George P.A. Healy, and plaster casts of Lincoln's face -- one made early in his tenure, another made later showing the toll the war took on his gaunt features -- along with casts of his hands.

Located at Eighth and F streets NW, free and open daily, http://americanart.si.edu/civilwar and http://npg.si.edu.

NEWSEUM: An exhibit here called "Blood and Ink: Front Pages From the Civil War" displays more than 30 front pages from the era, from the founding of the Confederacy through Lincoln's death. "A Nation Mourns," reads one headline.

Located at 555 Pennsylvania Ave. NW, the former site of the National Hotel, where Booth was staying when he shot Lincoln, www.newseum.org/. Daily, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tickets, $21.95 plus tax ($12.95 for ages 7 to 18).

DINING: Two excellent restaurants near Ford's Theatre are Jaleo, pricey but fabulous tapas, 480 Seventh St. NW, and Teaism, a local chain offering moderately priced eclectic and Asian-influenced dishes, 400 Eighth St. NW. A restaurant called Lincoln, 1110 Vermont Ave. NW, offers a locavore menu and a floor covered with Lincoln pennies.

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