|  "Boys in Blue: When Will This Cruel War Be Over?" also covers the 
			Battles of Vicksburg and Gettysburg and President Lincoln's decision 
			to issue the Emancipation Proclamation. The exhibit, which is free 
			of charge, opened Jan. 15 and runs seven days a week through March 
			of 2014. Visitors can see prisoners' drawings of the horrible 
			conditions at Union and Confederate POW camps, a medical kit used by 
			an Army surgeon, a prisoner's coat, and more. "Boys in Blue" is part of the Illinois Historic Preservation 
			Agency's commemoration of the Civil War's 150th anniversary and the 
			role played by soldiers from the Land of Lincoln. More than 90,000 
			people visited the first two stages of the exhibit, which will 
			continue with a fourth stage next year.  Staff at the presidential library combed through thousands of 
			original letters, photographs, newspapers, books and artifacts to 
			tell the stories of Illinois soldiers from all backgrounds. 
			 After the Emancipation Proclamation was issued, nearly 200,000 
			former slaves and free men served in the Union Army and Navy. Army 
			discharge papers for John Williams of the 29th U.S. Colored Troops 
			are included in this exhibit. Immigrants living in Illinois had come from Ireland, Poland, 
			Prussia, Sweden, Germany and Hungary, and many of them served during 
			the war. The Irish Brigade fought well in many battles, including 
			Antietam. Jewish soldiers from Illinois also fought and died. Capt. 
			Noah E. Mendell of the 7th Illinois Infantry was the first soldier 
			from Sangamon County to fall in the war. 
			[to top of second column] | 
 
			 The notorious Confederate prisons camps Andersonville and Libby 
			are featured in "Boys in Blue," as are Union prisons Camp Douglas in 
			Chicago and Camp Butler east of Springfield. An oversized drawing of 
			Andersonville is particularly striking, but there are more personal 
			items, too. Twenty-one-year-old Thomas Doremus Vredenburgh of Springfield was 
			taken prisoner after the Battle of Vicksburg in 1863. A local woman 
			gave him a Confederate jacket to keep warm in prison. That jacket is 
			now part of the exhibit. The Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library, 112 N. Sixth St. in 
			Springfield, is home to nearly 13 million items pertaining to 
			Illinois history. "Boys in Blue" will be open to the public daily 
			from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., although the library's reading room and other 
			departments are closed on weekends. The library is adjacent to the Abraham Lincoln Presidential 
			Museum, which is open seven days a week and requires paid admission. 
			The museum brings Abraham Lincoln's story to life through immersive 
			exhibits and displays of original artifacts. In addition to its 
			permanent exhibits, the museum is presenting "To Kill and to Heal: 
			Weapons and Medicine of the Civil War." Visit 
			www.presidentlincoln.org for more information about programs and 
			exhibits at the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum. 
            [Text from
Abraham 
			Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum 
			file received from the
			Illinois Historic 
			Preservation Agency] |