Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum Adds Nearly 500 Images to Its Online Collection of High-Resolution Lincoln Pictures

0
38
DWD Featured Image Feb 9, 2026
DWD Featured Image Feb 9, 2026

From the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum:

The Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum has added nearly 500 images to its online collection of high-resolution Lincoln pictures, including photos of Lincoln’s assassin, the nation grieving Lincoln’s death and the places he lived throughout his life.

The ALPLM’s “Picturing Lincoln” collection now offers 1,485 photos, illustrations and cartoons related to America’s 16th president. The collection is hosted by the Secretary of State’s Illinois Digital Archives.

Source: ALPLM

Highlights of the newly posted images include:

  • Photos of assassin John Wilkes Booth and illustrations portraying him with the devil or showing him as a ghostly fugitive.
  • Images of the many places Lincoln lived, from log cabins to the White House.
  • Scenes related to Lincoln’s death, including photos of mourning crowds and illustrations of him in heaven with George Washington.

[Clip]

“Picturing Lincoln” was made possible by a $100,000 grant funded through the Illinois State Library. Several thousand other Lincoln images have already been scanned and will be added to the website over the coming months.

If there’s a thread running through the newly available images, it is the nation’s reaction to the assassination of the president. Viewers will find illustrations of Lincoln on his deathbed, ascending to heaven to take his place alongside Washington and being crowned with laurels by Liberty. Other images heap scorn on Booth. One shows him as a literal empty space defined by snakes, alligators and a grasping claw. In another, the fleeing assassin is haunted by a ghostly image of Lincoln.

Direct to Picturing Lincoln Digital Collection

Direct to Complete Post

Read original article: Read More


Discover more from DrWeb's Domain

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

Leave Your Comments

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.