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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: February
19, 2007
CAPITOL EXHIBITS CELEBRATE A LEGACY OF FREEDOM
Two Exhibitions Commemorating New York's Military Heritage and President
Abraham Lincoln's Albany Connections
Governor Spitzer today announced the opening of
two new exhibits at the State Capitol. The first, "United Under The Flag,"
features an exhibit of ten Civil War battle flags from the collection of the New
York State Division of Military and Naval Affairs (DMNA) that were carried into
battle by ethnic regiments from throughout the State. The exhibit provides a
silent testimonial to the more than 120,000 foreign-born immigrants, free
African-Americans and Iroquois who selflessly defended our liberties and
preserved the Union during the Civil War. The second exhibit, "Lincoln in New
York," celebrates Lincoln's impact on New York and is part of the commemoration
organized by the New York State Abraham Lincoln Bicentennial Commission in
recognition of the approaching 200th anniversary of Lincoln's birth in 1809.
"These two exhibitions in the State Capitol will help us to celebrate the
great President who led our Nation through four terrible years of Civil War, and
help us remember the debt we New Yorkers and our Nation owe the men of all
nationalities and backgrounds who fought to preserve both freedom and the
Union," said Governor Spitzer.
The battle flag exhibit is located on the second floor of the State Capitol
and features ten original Civil War battle flags that are part of a collection
of more than 1,800 flags that were entrusted to the New York State Division of
Military and Naval Affairs after the war. A joint project of DMNA and the New
York State Office of Parks and Recreation (OPRHP) to conserve the flags was
initiated in 2000. Since then, five different, theme-based, exhibitions of the
flags have been organized in the State Capitol and hundreds more have been
conserved.
The most recent exhibition, "United Under The Flag," includes the flags of
the 37th New York Infantry, an Irish regiment, the flag of the 39th New York
Infantry, a unit comprised of Italian immigrants and nicknamed, "The Garibaldi
Guard," flags carried by German-American units, as well as two rare flags that
were carried by African-American units, the 20th and 26th United States Colored
Troops regiments. One of the latter flags was presented to the regiment by the
"Ladies of New York" on March 27, 1864. In accepting the colors on behalf of his
African-American regiment, Colonel William Silliman said, "I cannot tell you how
dear to us will be this banner, the gift of loyal women of the North. We love
it, not chiefly for its rare and costly beauty, but for what is beyond all price
and more glorious than beauty."
The Adjutant General Major General Joseph Taluto, Jr., said: "These flags,
torn and tattered, sometimes bearing the painted honors of the battles they were
carried through, or often the bloodstains of those brave men who carried them,
are symbols of the fight to preserve freedom. It is a fight and a responsibility
that New Yorkers have willingly and selflessly accepted since the earliest days
of the Revolution."
The exhibition will remain in the Capitol until October 2007 and is open to
the public free of charge.
The "Lincoln in New York" exhibit is part of the State's first efforts to
commemorate the approaching 200th anniversary of Abraham Lincoln's birth in 1809
and was organized by the New York State Abraham Lincoln Bicentennial Commission,
OPRHP and the Heritage New York Program. The exhibit, consisting of four
impressive panels and two display cases of Lincoln memorabilia, including a bust
sculpture, "Meet Mr. Lincoln" by artist Robert Berks, is located on the first
floor of the State Capitol at the foot of the staircase in the southeast corner
of the Capitol building. It will remain on display through the celebration of
Lincoln's bicentennial in February 2009.
New York State helped to launch Abraham Lincoln onto the national stage. It
was Lincoln's landmark Cooper Union address in New York City in 1860 that
transformed the Midwestern lawyer into a national candidate for president.
Traveling by train, Lincoln made a cross-state journey to introduce himself to
New Yorkers on the way to his inauguration in 1861. From whistle stops to major
speaking events, New Yorkers cheered Lincoln onward to Washington. In 1865,
after his assassination, a funeral train transported his remains across New
York, retracing his inaugural route of four years earlier. Tens of thousands of
New Yorkers lined the tracks and the streets of the New York's cities to pay
final respects to this great man.
William F. Howard, Chair of the New York State Abraham Lincoln Bicentennial
Commission said: "I greatly appreciate Governor Spitzer's support and interest
in commemorating Abraham Lincoln's historical legacy in New York. This
exhibition, the first of many that will be organized throughout New York,
represents an effort to bring Lincoln back to people and tell his story in a way
that demonstrates that he should not be resigned merely to historical study and
biographies; he was a person who once traveled through our state, walked the
streets of our great cities, and whose voice and legacy still resonates."
Harold Holzer, Co-Chair of both the National Abraham Lincoln Bicentennial
Commission as well as the State Commission, and the author of twenty-seven books
on Lincoln said: "New York played a key role in Lincoln's, and America's
transformation. This is the state that gave him the forum to win Eastern
support, the votes to win the presidency, and the opportunity to reassure the
country that he would preserve the Union and the idea of majority rule. This
exhibition vividly reminds New Yorkers of their vital role in this historic
moment, and of their heartfelt mourning at Lincoln's death four years later.
There is no better way to understand what we are today than to recall what
Lincoln and New York did to save the country 150 years ago."
Richard White-Smith, Director of Heritage New York said: The "Lincoln in New
York" exhibit pays tribute to this great American President and reminds us of
his significant legacy to New York."
The New York State Abraham Lincoln Bicentennial Commission was announced on
February 19, 2006. The fifteen-member Commission is charged with planning events
and activities for the commemoration, in 2009, of the 200-year anniversary of
the birth of President Abraham Lincoln. The State Commission coordinates its
activities with that of a federal commission that has been established for
similar purpose
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