Chicago Sun-Times

GO FUND PLEA

Lincoln foundation resorts to GoFundMe campaign to avoid selling off Abe’s artifacts

- BY MITCHELL ARMENTROUT, STAFF REPORTER marmentrou­t@suntimes.com | @ mitchtrout

So far, Mike Madigan and Bruce Rauner haven’t turned to GoFundMe to solve their budget crunch. But Abe Lincoln has. Actually, it’s the Abraham Lincoln Presidenti­al Library Foundation, whose officials are turning to 21st- century technology to try to hang on to a trove of the president’s 19thcentur­y artifacts, including one of his supposed stovepipe beaver- fur top hats.

The foundation announced this month that it could be forced to put the iconic headwear and other Lincoln artifacts on the auction block to pay off millions in loan debt, and this week they launched an online fundraisin­g campaign asking people to pass the hat.

“All of us today, who, because of Lincoln, experience a more free and just society, must rise up, contribute and ensure justice for him,” foundation CEO Carla Knorowski wrote in a post on the GoFundMe page.

“If a single Lincoln artifact goes to auction, taken from the public realm, then we, as a nation are collective­ly diminished and must look ourselves in the mirror and take responsibi­lity. It is not any one individual’s or group’s responsibi­lity to bear; it is all of ours to bear,” she wrote.

By late Thursday, 65 people hadmade donations totaling about $ 3,000.

The foundation will need a lot more to reach its goal of $ 9.7 million, the remainder of a $ 23 million loan they used a decade ago to purchase the Barry and Louise Taper Collection. That note comes due in October 2019.

The state operates and funds the Lincoln Presidenti­al Library and Museum where the artifacts are on display in Springfiel­d, but the foundation that supports it is not state- funded.

Foundation officials say they have reached out to Rauner’s office to secure money from the cash- strapped state but received no commitment­s. The governor’s office has said they “are certainly working with the Abraham Lincoln Library Foundation as they work through their options.”

“What would Lincoln do if faced with this problem? He would solve it and not let us down,” Knorowski wrote. “In that same vein, we must solve it and not let him down. We should, posthaste, set our hearts, minds and yes, money to the task we have before us.”

In addition to the famous hat, the Taper collection includes the blood- stained gloves Lincoln wore the night he was assassinat­ed, an 1824 book containing the first known example of Lincoln’s handwritin­g, unpublishe­d letters from Mary Todd Lincoln and items from assassin John Wilkes Booth.

It’s not clear how much the items in the collection could fetch at auction. The prized stovepipe hat was valued at $ 6.5 million in 2007, but its authentici­ty has been called into question in recent years. Museum and foundation officials have insisted Lincoln donned the hat, though they acknowledg­ed to the Chicago Sun- Times in 2012 that they could not pin down how the hat ended up in the hands of a farmer in the 1850s, and passed through the generation­s until it wound up in the Taper collection.

 ?? SUN- TIMES FILES ?? The purported Lincoln hat included in the Taper collection.
SUN- TIMES FILES The purported Lincoln hat included in the Taper collection.

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