The Lincoln Birthday Weekend, Part 1: The Tomb of Honest Abe

Indoor brown rectangular monument shaped like a tall sarcophagus. Inscribed on the front: "Abraham Lincoln 1809-1865". State flags line the curved yellow wall behind it, plus the quote "Now he belongs to the ages."

President #16, Abraham Lincoln, d.4/15/1865, age 56.

Previously on Midlife Crisis Crossover: in addition to our annual road trips, my wife Anne and I have a twice-yearly tradition of spending our birthdays together on some new experience. Sometimes there’ll be a convention or special event fortuitously scheduled for the occasion; other times, we’ll take a short road trip somewhere we haven’t been before. The time spent together is the best birthday gift, every May for me and every October for her. We’re the Goldens. It’s who we are and what we do.

I’d rather not relive how we spent my birthday this year, but I’m more than happy to leap-frog past it to May 2023 and recount a much cheerier experience. Perhaps “cheerier” is the wrong word considering our first stop was a cemetery.

On past trips we’d visited the graves, tombs, mausoleums and virtual posthumous palaces of 24 American Presidents in varying accommodations and budgets. As our sole long-distance driver and a part-time retro-gamer, I’ve enjoyed those little jaunts so much that our 2018 road trip was planned as a literal fetch-quest to check off nine Presidents in a single cross-country loop. Nobody handed me a trophy at the end, but it’s fun to pretend they did.

One of the biggest names ever to grace the White House kept eluding us: Abraham Lincoln, planted a mere three hours away in Springfield, Illinois. We’d long assumed he would be the first stop on the itinerary of some other, longer vacation someday. Nearly twenty years into this marriage, it dawned on me Springfield is never on the way to anywhere. So I figured: let’s make his tomb a trip headliner of its very own, not a warm-up act on the road to Branson or whatever. History is technically more Anne’s fervent interest than mine, but we found plenty to do beyond reading wordy educational placards.

Mind you, most of what we did was Lincoln-centered. Many Midwest cities and towns lay claim to various eras of his life, but Springfield owns plenty of legitimate bona fides. It’s where he met Mary, bought their first house, based his law practice, gave his first major speech, and more, more, more. We’ve visited other Springfields in Ohio and in Massachusetts, but Illinois’ Springfield loves Lincoln like no other, and they’ve got a plethora of tourist attractions to express it. We didn’t quite get to all of them, but we checked out a fair number, as if we haven’t already posted enough Lincoln statues and busts throughout our previous travels.

The week leading up to our big overnighter was a bit more hectic than I would’ve liked. Beyond patiently finished our work weeks, we had to wait on a narrowly scheduled plumber visit to replace all the faucets in our house after years of unchecked hard-water damage (which we’ve also taken steps to rectify for the future, which was a different project altogether). Eventually we tucked away our real-world encumbrances and fled the house early on Friday, May 19th. Impatient folks that we are, the Lincoln Tomb was our very first stop.

Metal arch reading "Oak Ridge Cemetery 1880 1900" above a road leading into a cemetery. A small brown sign points the way to Lincoln's Tomb.

Our destination lay inside Oak Ridge Cemetery, with tiny signs pointing the way.

Anne posing behind a stone rectangular sign for

As cemeteries with Presidents in them go, Oak Ridge was far more spacious and cultivated than others we’ve visited. His tomb has its own dedicated parking lot.

Tall white obelisk atop dual staircases with statues out front, including a giant Lincoln head.

Just look for the giant obelisk atop a high hill.

giant Lincoln statue head on a stone base. It's all gray except his nose is bright bronze.

The first Lincoln to greet you is recast from a head sculpted by Gutzon Borglum (the Mount Rushmore guy). The original is housed at the U.S. Capitol in DC.

Worms-eye view of a Lincoln statue holding out a rolled-up copy of the Emancipation Proclamation.

Above and behind the giant Lincoln head is another Lincoln offering you a copy of the Emancipation Proclamation.

Statues of Civil War soldiers wrestling next to a bucking horse.

To one side of that Lincoln, brother fights brother in the Civil War.

Inside the memorial, a rotunda of hallways loops through dual anterooms and leads back to the main burial room. A few minutes after we arrived, a school bus pulled up and unleashed a gaggle of schoolkids on a field trip, who quickly clogged up the place. We shot around them the best we could. That’s what we get for visiting on a weekday during the school year, but I imagine every school in Illinois probably takes turns busing its kids here for historical object lessons.

Head-on view of the Lincoln monument in the main burial room. Six feet tall, several feet wide, rectangular, brownish-red, same details as our lead photo.

His body is actually buried ten feet below this marble monument. Lining the back wall are seven state flags marking his various residences, as well as the American and Presidential flags.

Etched in the wall behind Lincoln's monument are the words "Now he belongs to the ages." Flags flank each side. Lighting is yellowish.

On the wall is a quote from his Secretary of War, Edwin Stanton, reportedly spoken at Lincoln’s deathbed.

Off-white marble crypt labeled Mary Todd Lincoln 1818 - 1882".

Also interred on site are wife Mary Todd Lincoln…

Off-white crypt labeled "Edward Eddie Baker Lincoln 1846-1850" and "William Willie Wallace Lincoln 1850-1862".

…their sons Eddie and Willie, who each died of illness in childhood…

Off-white crypt labeled "Thomas Tad Lincoln 1853-1871".

…as well as son Tad, who just barely reached adulthood before doing the same.

Off-white marker labeled "Robert Todd Lincoln 1846-1926 Buried National Cemetery Arlington Virginia".

A marker for other brother Robert Todd Lincoln completes the set. As a Civil War veteran and U.S. Secretary of War under James Garfield and Chester Arthur, Robert was buried in Arlington National Cemetery per the wishes of his widow Mary.

Black plaque containing the entire speech Lincoln gave before leaving

Around the walls are plaques bearing transcripts of some of his more famous speeches, such as the farewell address he gave here in Springfield before moving out to DC.

Apropos of our aforementioned travels, the site is loaded with still more Lincoln statues inside, standing on guard in each of the anterooms.

Small-scale replica of the Lincoln Memorial statue in the center of a room.

A series of replicas of Lincoln statues in other states naturally includes the Lincoln Memorial as their centerpiece.

Statue of Lincoln standing with his head bowed and one hand holding his jacket lapel.

Replica of a statue in Chicago that we’ve apparently missed on our numerous Windy City expeditions.

Statue of Lincoln sitting in a chair with good posture.

Replica of a statue in Hodgenville, Kentucky.

Statue of Lincoln with head bowed and hands clasped at his waist, wearing a long dress jacket.

Replica of Lincoln, Nebraska’s Lincoln Monument.

Statue of Lincoln with no beard and his hands clasped behind his back.

Another series of statues commemorates his ages and phases. Lincoln the Debater is an obvious, solid choice. The original stands in Freeport, IL.

Statue of young Lincoln with a sheathed sword and his jacket draped on his arm.

Lincoln the Soldier recalls that time in 1832 when he fought in the Black Hawk War. The original statue is in Dixon, IL.

Statue of young Lincoln on a horse, holding a rifle and wearing a hat.

Lincoln the Ranger is a Lincoln Tomb exclusive design and likewise marks his short military service, which lasted all of 80 days at best.

Statue of young-adult Lincoln on a horse, wearing a top hat and holding the reins. His face is weirdly shadowed.

Also a Tomb exclusive, Lincoln the Circuit Rider remembers the slightly older lawyer who often rode hundreds of miles from one courtroom to the next.

The photos don’t quite bear it out, but we felt so rushed that we ended up coming back here Saturday afternoon before we left town, just so we could retake a few of these without any grade-schoolers mobbing around us. Darn schoolkids, always needing their lessons about the Great Emancipator and whatnot.

To be continued! Other chapters in this special MCC miniseries:

Part 2: More Wars, More Memorials
Part 3: The Illinois State Capitol
Part 4: Around the Capitol Complex
Part 5: Generation X Belongs in a Museum
Part 6: Misc. Museum
Part 7: His Presidential Library & Museum
Part 8: The Lincoln Museum Minus Lincoln
Part 9: ‘Round Springfield
Part 10: Lincoln Home & Law & Gifts


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2 responses

  1. Wow! What a great entry of MCC! and my thanks to you, as always, for writing it up and sharing it with the world!

    I bring to your attention a possible inadvertently doubled letter ‘e’ in the following sentence : “Beyond patiently finished our work weeks, wee had to wait on a narrowly scheduled plumber visit to replace all the faucets in our house after years of unchecked hard-water damage (which we’ve also taken steps to rectify for the future, which was a different project altogether).” And the word ‘tomb’ appears to be misspelled as ‘tmob’ in the caption beneath the third photograph.

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