
Abraham Lincoln Birthplace National Historical Park
Kentucky
Abraham Lincoln Birthplace National Historical Park in LaRue County, Kentucky, preserves two significant farm sites where the 16th U.S. president was born and spent his early childhood. The Sinking Spring site marks Lincoln's birthplace in a one-room log cabin symbolically preserved inside a neoclassical memorial building designed by John Russell Pope. This Memorial Building, dedicated in 1911, features symbolic architectural elements reflecting Lincoln's life and presidency. Nearby, the Knob Creek Farm, where Lincoln lived from ages two to seven, is also part of the park, representing his formative frontier years. The park includes a visitor center at the Sinking Spring site, offering educational exhibits and guided tours. The preserved symbolic birth cabin, although not original, represents typical mid-19th century frontier life and connects visitors to Lincoln's humble origins. The park honors Lincoln's legacy and the frontier environment that shaped his character and leadership during the Civil War.
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Consiglio: Plan your visit during spring through fall for pleasant weather and full access to outdoor areas. Purchase tickets or join guided tours at the visitor center to enrich your experience. While the symbolic cabin is accessible year-round, check the park's official website for current hours and special events. Discounts may be available for seniors, veterans, and groups. Allow time to explore both the Birthplace Unit with the Memorial Building and the Boyhood Home Unit at Knob Creek for a comprehensive visit.
Fatti interessanti
- •The Memorial Building was designed by John Russell Pope, the architect of the Jefferson Memorial and National Gallery of Art.
- •The building features 16 windows, 16 rosettes, and 16 fence poles symbolizing Lincoln as the 16th president.
- •There are 56 steps leading up to the Memorial Building, representing Lincoln's age at death.
- •The original Lincoln birth cabin was dismantled before 1865 and no longer exists; the cabin inside the Memorial Building is symbolic, reconstructed from period logs.
- •Lincoln nearly drowned as a child at Knob Creek but was rescued by neighbor Austin Gollaher.
Storia
The park commemorates the birthplace of Abraham Lincoln, born on February 12, 1809, at Sinking Spring Farm where his family settled in 1808.
In 1911, a neoclassical Memorial Building was dedicated by President William Howard Taft, housing a symbolic log cabin representing Lincoln's birth home.
The original cabin was dismantled before 1865, and the symbolic cabin inside the memorial was reconstructed from logs of similar period cabins.
Lincoln lived at Sinking Spring until age two before moving to Knob Creek Farm, where he stayed until age seven.
The Knob Creek cabin was later dismantled and repurposed, eventually lost to flooding.
The park preserves these sites to honor Lincoln's early life and frontier heritage.
Guida del luogo
The Memorial Building1911
A Beaux-Arts neoclassical structure housing the symbolic birth cabin, featuring architectural symbolism related to Lincoln's life and presidency.
Symbolic Birth CabinEarly 20th century reconstruction
A reconstructed log cabin inside the Memorial Building representing the one-room cabin where Lincoln was born, built from logs of similar 19th-century cabins.
Knob Creek Farm UnitEarly 19th century
The site where Lincoln lived from age two to seven, featuring the location of his boyhood home and surrounding farmland.
Contatto
Telefono: (270) 358-3137