Tuesday was not the best day for
the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Museum to receive the
carriage that took Abe and Mary to Ford’s Theater on
April 14, 1865, the night the president was
assassinated.
“Anything beyond no sun, 70 degrees and 45 percent
humidity makes me nervous,” said William Snyder,
registrar at the museum.
Snyder was among several museum officials helping
unload the carriage at the museum early Tuesday
afternoon. It took Chicago-based art movers Terry Dowd
Inc. a while to shrink-wrap the carriage inside the back
of their truck and erect a plastic-tarp tent to protect
the carriage from near-freezing temperatures, gusty
winds and lots of rain.
Eventually, the carriage was rolled safely into the
museum, past dozens of workers and guests and a replica
of the White House.
“It’s been 140 years since this carriage drove by the
White House,” said Richard Norton Smith, director of the
Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum. “This is what
it’s all about.”
The carriage is on loan from the Studebaker National
Museum in South Bend, Ind., for the Lincoln museum’s
six-month temporary exhibit that premiers on opening
day, Tuesday, April 19. The carriage will be one of the
centerpieces of the exhibit, an in-depth examination of
Lincoln’s assassination.
The temporary show also will include Lincoln’s
deathbed and several other loaned artifacts, many of
which have rarely or never left their current homes.
The black, leather-clad carriage is significant in
many ways. It was a gift from the people of New York
City, who presented it to the president in 1865, shortly
before his second inauguration. The mountings are solid
silver, and the door was engineered so that the steps
automatically folded out when the door opened.
The carriage also played a central role in an
intimate moment between the Lincolns, which Mary later
related to William Herndon. Mary and her husband had
been riding in the carriage earlier on the 14th, Good
Friday. The Civil War, though finally over, had taken
its toll on the couple, as had the death of their son
Willy in 1862. They sat in the carriage and talked.
“We must both be more cheerful in the future,”
Lincoln told Mary. “Between the war and the loss of our
darling Willy - we have both been very miserable.”
Pete Sherman can be contacted at 788-1539 or
pete.sherman@sj-r.com.