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Sculpting Lincoln, Part 6 The Lincoln of the Farewell Address
Story and photos by Carl Volkmann The State of Illinois celebrated the centenary y of the meeting of the first General Assembly of Illinois on October 5, 1918, in Springfield. On that day, the cornerstone of the new Centennial Building was laid. An act of the state legislature had appropriated funds for statues of both Abraham Lincoln and Stephen A. Douglas to be erected as part of the centennial celebration. The Illinois State Art Commission sponsored a contest among several sculptors. Andrew O'Connor was chosen by the Commission to create the Lincoln statue. O'Connor was born on June 7, 1874, in Worcester, Massachusetts. His father was a sculptor and taught his son the basic concepts of the art. After spending several years traveling around the United States and Europe, O'Connor studied for a time under William Ordway Partridge and Daniel Chester French. While employed in the studio of John Singer Sargent, he decided to become a sculptor like his father. O'Connor's statue of Lincoln in front of the State Capitol is said to depict the President-elect making his farewell address to his friends and neighbors of Springfield as he stood on the rear platform of the train taking him to Washington. The "Farewell Address" is inscribed on the back of the massive stone slab on which the statue stands. O'Connor portrays Lincoln with downcast eyes, sad but composed. The historical accuracy of the statue is somewhat marred by the fact that Lincoln appears as a smooth-faced man when in reality he wore a heavy beard when he delivered his famous address on February 11, 1861. The commemorative Illinois Centennial half-dollar, issued by the United States Mint in 1918, bears a low-relief portrait of Lincoln taken from O'Connor's statue. The dedication ceremonies for "The Lincoln of the Farewell Address" began with an invocation by Rev. J.R. Thomas, pastor of the First Presbyterian Church. Governor Frank Lowden acted as master of ceremonies. The assembled crowd sang the Centennial hymn, "Our Illinois," and Donald Robertson recited Edwin Mark-ham's poem "Lincoln, The Man Of The People." Vachel Lindsay then recited his own poem "Abraham Lincoln Walks At Midnight In Springfield, Illinois." Col. C.E. Adams, National Commander of the Grand Army of the Republic, gave a short speech. The main orator of the day was Godfrey Rathbone Renson, Lord Charnwood, English statesman and author, whose biography of Lincoln had been published in 1916. Since the United States and Great Britain were fighting side by side in World War I at that time, it was appropriate that he was selected to deliver the main address. Charnwood told his audience that there was no statesman whose example was so often cited in Great Rritain as that of Abraham Lincoln. He reminded them that men were dying for the Lincolnian ideas "of democracy, of freedom, of equality."
34 |ILLINOIS HERITAGE Lincoln - The Circuit Lawyer
Abraham Lincoln first came to Bloomington, Illinois, in April 1837, just one month after he was admitted to the bar. During his long legal career, from After soliciting sketches from local sculptors, the Lincoln State Selection Committee unanimously selected then-Illinois State University faculty member Keith Knoblock for the commission. Knoblock was born in Sandusky Ohio. He earned his BFA degree at Kent State University and his MFA at Ohio State University. A. Lincoln-The Circuit Lawyer is a lifesized copper/bronze statue showing the beardless Lincoln in a relaxed pose. Knoblock depicts the young lawyer in his late 30s, the time in his life when he was most closely associated with McLean County. The statue was dedicated on August 28, 1977, and still stands in the lobby of the county's Law and Justice Center in
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