Thousands of people, including many in period costume, yesterday gathered at the Old State Capitol, where the 16th president lay in state, to pay tribute to the simple, country lawyer who saved the Union and thrust the nation toward abolishing slavery.
Lincoln was assassinated just after the American Civil War ended. He is widely considered America's greatest president by historians for preserving a unified US and declaring that black slaves in southern states would be freed.
Drums pounded out a funeral march and many of the 1,250 Civil War re-enactors strode by while a costumed chorus sang the "Star-Spangled Banner," and a man in a top hat with a black mourning sash trailing from it ran kid gloves over the coffin to prepare it for a bouquet of flowers.
"His legacy has withstood the test of 150 years, and our love for him has only grown stronger," the Republican said.
The re-enactment brought onlookers from far and wide, including many men donning top hats and women in hoop skirts carrying parasols. Even a century-and-a-half later, some felt compelled to attend.
It was a natural place to be for Noah Vaughn, a Springfield native steeped in Lincoln from childhood visits to the Civil War battlefield at Gettysburg National Park and Ford's Theater in Washington, DC where Lincoln was fatally shot.
