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				Edwards Place at 
				the Springfield Art Association
				Illinois State 
				Military Museum
				Lincoln Tomb and 
				War Memorial State Historic Site
				Elijah Iles House
				Lincoln Home National Historic Site Each site will offer a candlelight program based upon a quote 
			from the Emancipation Proclamation, which Abraham Lincoln signed 
			into effect Jan. 1, 1863: "I do order and declare that all persons 
			held as slaves within said designated States, and parts of States, 
			are, and henceforward shall be free." The issuing of the 
			Emancipation Proclamation was the first step of many that led to the 
			eventual end of slavery in the United States. Visitors can visit the sites in any order and are encouraged to 
			walk between the Lincoln Home and the Iles House. Below is each 
			site's program description. All programs are free. Edwards Place at the Springfield Art Association Visitors will step back in time to 1863 and witness the Edwards 
			family preparing for a Civil War-era reception. Benjamin and Helen 
			Edwards will greet their guests and discuss the local and national 
			issues of the day, including the recent battle of Gettysburg, the 
			Emancipation Proclamation, the work of the Soldiers' Aid Society and 
			President Lincoln's recent dismissal of Benjamin's brother Ninian as 
			commissary of subsistence of the Army. "Hidden in Plain Sight: The 
			Material Life of Early Springfield" will be on exhibit. 
			 Illinois State Military Museum Civil War re-enactors from the 114th Infantry Regiment Illinois 
			Volunteers Reactivated will hold an encampment outside the museum. 
			Visitors will learn about the day-to-day life of Civil War soldiers 
			as well as discuss the events of 1863 with soldiers in the field. 
			The museum will also be open for tours by the light of electric 
			candles.  
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 Lincoln Tomb and War Memorial State Historic Site Visitors will take a self-guided walk through the tomb and view a 
			special exhibit explaining the iconography of sculptor Larkin Mead's 
			ornamentation on the tomb's exterior. The exhibit will contain 
			information about the bronze sculpture of Lincoln holding the 
			Emancipation Proclamation and the four groups of bronze statutes 
			that represent the Civil War infantry, artillery, cavalry and navy. 
			Visitors will learn the meaning behind the levels of the upper deck 
			and how they reflect Lincoln's ability to issue the Emancipation 
			Proclamation. Elijah Iles House Visitors will be transported to 1863 as Civil War soldiers 
			discuss the anticipated effects of the Emancipation Proclamation 
			recently put forward by President Lincoln. For example: "How will 
			slaves in the Confederate states react?"; "How will this improve the 
			Union's position?"; and "What can be done for slaves in the North?" 
			These and other questions raised by the momentous document will be 
			examined. Lincoln Home National Historic Site The issuing of the Emancipation Proclamation affected the lives 
			of African-Americans. A National Park Service ranger will discuss 
			the response of many prominent African-Americans to this document, 
			including how the document affected the Underground Railroad 
			movement. For further information on the "The Fiery Trial: Civil War 
			Stories by Candlelight" programs, contact Pam VanAlstine at 
			217-741-9184 or Lincoln 
			Home National Historic Site at 217-391-3221. 
			[Text from 
			National Park Service 
			news release received from the 
             
			Illinois Historic Preservation Agency]
 
			
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