|
During my recent
visit to Springfield, Illinois, I visited Oak Ridge Cemetery where
President Abraham Lincoln was buried after his assassination in
Washington DC in April 1865.

His tomb is
located about 7 miles northwest from his home shown on
the Abraham Lincoln's Home page. Lincoln's funeral procession marched past his home on
its way to this cemetery.
Upon arrival at the cemetery,
his body was laid in the "public receiving vault"
at the bottom of a hill behind
the permanent tombs.

As I stood in front of this vault, I remembered a history
book I had as a child which showed two Union soldiers posted at
parade rest on either side of the vault's doorway shortly after the
burial.
A short
distance away, on the side of a memorial bell tower, this tablet is
preserved which states it held the mortal remains of Abraham Lincoln
when he was placed in the receiving vault. The elements have
taken a great toll on the engraving as the depth of the letters
starts to disappear as you go further down the tablet from the
top.
After
looking at this tablet, I concluded it must have been used to
cover the open doorway to the receiving vault since it states it
held the "mortal remains" of President Lincoln. If you look at
the front of the receiving vault, it looks as if this tablet could
fit right in the entrance opening.
From
when President Lincoln was laid in the receiving vault until he was
buried in the permanent tomb, his body was moved more than a dozen
times. At one point, it was removed from the receiving vault
and buried in a temporary vault at the site of this marker while the
permanent tomb, in the background, was built in 1900.
Again, the elements are
taking a toll. The engraving is just about missing from this
stone.
If you look closely behind the
stone's right corner, you'll see a small window at the rear of the
tomb. This is a stained glass window which looks out from the
interior rotunda of the Lincoln mausoleum.
The horizontal
bar across the wrought iron gate reads "A. Lincoln". The gate
reaches the ground, but you'll notice the doorway is really just a
pseudo-opening as it is closed in with granite
blocks.
When you enter the Lincoln
Tomb, you walk down marble-lined hallways until you come to a
rotunda where the President is buried beneath the red marble
marker. Mrs. Lincoln and all but one of their children are
buried in the wall opposite the President. A remaining child
is buried at Arlington National Cemetery in
Virginia.

The flags on the left half of
the rotunda represent the states from which his ancestors came,
namely Massachusetts, New Jersey, and Virginia while the flags on
the right hand side represent the states of Kentucky and Illinois,
where he lived and the Presidential flag.
|