A few weeks ago, the New Yorker ran an article about the Lincoln Memorial and how the role of Abraham Lincoln in the American memory has changed over time. Next year is Lincoln’s bicentennial, and the Lincoln Memorial will be rededicated in the spring. The piece ends this way:
In 1909, the Reverend L. H. Magee, the pastor of the African Methodist Episcopal Church in Springfield, Illinois, voiced his disgust at the exclusion of blacks from the town’s centennial dinner, but he imagined that by the time of the bicentennial, in 2009, racial prejudice would be “relegated to the dark days of ‘Salem witchcraft.’ †Next year’s Lincoln commemorations in Washington will include the reopening of Ford’s Theatre, restored for performances for the second time since 1893, when its interior collapsed, killing twenty-two people. Congress will convene in a joint session on February 12th, and on May 30th the still new President will rededicate the Lincoln Memorial. The look and the emphasis of the occasion will have changed—measurably, for certain; astoundingly, perhaps—in the fourscore and seven years since 1922.
So President Obama will speak at the Lincoln Memorial next May. It will be stirring.
According to the Lincoln Bicentennial website, the rededication of the Lincoln Memorial will occur on February 12, 2009 – the 200th anniversary of Lincoln’s birth.
Actually, the rededication is a series of events at the Lincoln Memorial over several months, but I believe the wreath laying service and speech by then-President Obama will be on February 12. Keep an eye on the website for up to date details on all events:
http://www.lincolnbicentennial.gov/the-bicentennial/programs-and-events/default.aspx?ekmensel=c580fa7b_26_238_btnlink