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News Release
BOISE STATE NEWS RELEASE / February 9, 2009
Boise State History Center Creates Official Lincoln
Bicentennial Guide for Idaho
Although America’s 16th president never set foot in what later became the
43rd state, Abraham Lincoln’s influence continues to be felt in all corners
of Idaho. As the state prepares to join the nation in celebrating Lincoln’s
200th birthday, the Center for Idaho History and Politics and the Idaho
Abraham Lincoln Bicentennial Commission have joined to produce a book
introducing residents to the people, places and programs that bear the stamp
of “Honest Abe.”
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"Lincoln Never Slept Here: Idaho’s
Abraham Lincoln
Bicentennial Tour" Book Cover
Click to Enlarge Image |
“Lincoln Never Slept Here: Idaho’s Abraham Lincoln Bicentennial Tour” takes
a candid look at Lincoln’s creation of and sincere interest in the Idaho
Territory, his appointment of several key players in shaping the state’s
settlement and Indian policies and the profound influence of Civil War
veterans from both sides of the Mason-Dixon line on the state’s early mining
camps and homesteads.
Following an in-depth introductory essay, readers are invited to explore
Idaho’s highways and byways with a regional look at the places that best
reflect Lincoln’s influence, including the following:
- Atlanta: Named for the Georgia capital and the 1864 battle that was one of
the Confederacy’s most devastating defeats. Legend has it that the camp was
named Atlanta because news of the gold strike was every bit as big as news
of the battle that sealed the fate of the South.
- Meadows: The location of Packer John’s Cabin, the site of the 1863 meeting
of Idaho’s Democratic Party, where nominees for the newly established Idaho
Territory were selected. Republicans, the party of Lincoln, held their
convention there the following year.
- Leesburg and Grantsville: Adjacent mining towns named, respectively, for
the leaders of the Southern and Northern armies. The sons of the South
eventually won out and the town emerged as Leesburg.
- Dubois: Named for Fred T. Dubois, territorial delegate to the U.S. House
of Representatives and twice elected to the U.S. Senate. Dubois grew up
playing with Lincoln’s children as a neighbor in Springfield before emerging
as a key player in Idaho politics and unrepentant persecutor of the state’s
early Latter-day Saints.
- Bear River: This massacre site, located near Preston, is where the Union
army attacked a Shoshone encampment in 1863 and represents the prevailing
attitude at the core of the Lincoln administration’s Indian policy.
- Idaho City: The town at the heart of the biggest mining boom in the
history of the Pacific Northwest. The town was so populated with Copperheads
(Southern sympathizers) that local newsman T.J. Butler wrote that Lincoln’s
party was doomed. Republicans, he wrote, “stood about as good a show of
carrying the election as Satan does of re-entering paradise."
Written by Todd Shallat, director of the Center for Idaho History and
Politics, and Kathleen Craven Tuck, in the Office of Communications and
Marketing, the book includes a foreword by David Leroy, former attorney
general for the state of Idaho and chairman of the Idaho Abraham Lincoln
Bicentennial Commission. The book also features delightful whimsical
illustrations by Boise State art professor Bill Carman, as well as dozens of
artifacts, photos, maps and engravings that capture both the essence and
myths of the Lincoln era.
Additional contributors to the book include graphic designer Adele Thomsen,
photographer John Kelly and researcher Amber Beierle. Copies of the book are
available for $12 through the Division of Research, (208) 426-1574, at Trip
Taylor Bookseller at (208) 344-3311, the Idaho State Historical Museum Shop
at (208) 334-2120, at
http://lincolnbicentennial.idaho.gov or by calling (208) 426-3701.
A book signing at 2 p.m. Saturday, April 4, at Trip Taylor, 210 N. 10th St.
in Boise, will be followed by a downtown walking tour of Civil War and
Lincoln-related buildings and sites. For more information, call (208)
426-3701.
The book was published with generous support from United Heritage Financial
Group.
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Media Contact: Kathleen Craven Tuck, University Communications, (208)
426-3275,
kathleentuck@boisestate.edu
Boise State University is “The New U Rising” with record student
enrollment, new academic buildings, additional degree programs and a growing
research agenda. Learn more at
www.boisestate.edu.
The Office of Communications and Marketing - Boise State
University
1910 University Drive - Boise Idaho 83725-1030
Located in Capitol Village, 2225 W. University Drive
email
communications@boisestate.edu
Last reviewed on
Monday, February 09, 2009
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