THE LINCOLN MUSEUM

In 1905, Arthur Hall and a group of business leaders from Fort Wayne, Indiana, founded The Lincoln National Life Insurance Company. Hall, a lifelong admirer of Abraham Lincoln, wrote to the president's only surviving son, Robert Todd Lincoln, to ask for a photograph that the company might use on its letterhead. Robert replied, "I find no objection whatever to the use of a portrait of my father upon the letterhead of such a life insurance company named after him as you describe; and I take pleasure in enclosing you, for that purpose, what I regard as a very good photograph of him."

The company prospered, and in 1928 Hall took the opportunity to repay the Lincoln family by creating the Lincoln Historical Research Foundation, dedicated to the life and legacy of Abraham Lincoln. The Foundation, under the leadership of Dr. Louis A. Warren, began to collect Lincoln-related material in 1928, published Lincoln Lore in 1929, and opened the Lincoln Museum to the public in 1931.

Currently, Lincoln Financial Foundation, the owner and operator of the Lincoln Museum, is entertaining proposals to identify a new home for the museum's collection of Abraham Lincoln artifacts, memorabilia, and documents where they can enjoy greater visibility and public access. The Lincoln Foundation hopes to conclude its search by December 2008.

Hello future.
Lincoln Financial Group is the marketing name for Lincoln National Corporation and its affiliates.




LCN-2008248linmus