Park City Library: November 3 - December 22, 2006
Forever Free is a traveling panel exhibit that reexamines President
Lincoln's efforts toward the abolition of slavery during the Civil
War. Organized by The Huntington's John Rhodehamel, Norris Foundation
Curator of American Historical Manuscripts, the exhibit will consist
of reproductions of rare historical documents from The Huntington's
collections and those of the Gilder Lehrman Institute, and will
draw on the latest scholarship in the field.
Two copies of the exhibit will travel to 40 libraries around the
country between September 2003 and December 2006. Each copy consists
of two six-section, 75-foot-long panels that contain reproductions
of rare historical documents, period photographs, and illustrative
material, such as engravings, lithographs, cartoons, and political
ephemera. The sections of the exhibition focus on young Lincoln's
America, the House dividing, war for the Union, the Emancipation
Proclamation, the role of black soldiers in the Civil War, and
the final months of the Civil War and Lincoln's life.
Forever Free is organized by The
Huntington Library and the Gilder
Lehrman Institute of American History in cooperation with
the ALA Public Programs
Office and funded by a major grant from the National
Endowment for the Humanities (NEH).






