Show us your Lincoln collectables!
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11-18-2012, 01:47 PM
Post: #46
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RE: Show us your Lincoln collectables!
Thanks on behalf of my son Nathan. Hmmm... A ratio? Don't give me any ideas. Haven't gotten one since my Army days. It would look very cool as one, wouldn't it?
Bill Nash |
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11-18-2012, 02:30 PM
Post: #47
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RE: Show us your Lincoln collectables!
I liked Nathan's artwork so well that I asked Bill (and indirectly Nathan) if I could use it on my website. They both said yes, and I have added it here.
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11-20-2012, 01:42 PM
Post: #48
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RE: Show us your Lincoln collectables!
Uploaded with ImageShack.us This is an interesting piece. I purchased it years ago at the now closed Lincoln Museum in Ft. Wayne, Indiana. Of course, it depicts President Lincoln with Tad at their visit to Richmond, 1865. It is a copy of the actual statue located in Richmond that caused no small controversy when it was planned-and eventually placed (near the old Iron Works). Has anyone else been to the statue in Richmond? Bill Nash |
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11-20-2012, 03:25 PM
Post: #49
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RE: Show us your Lincoln collectables!
I love what appears to be the shelf that you have it displayed on! It appears to be the match for one that I have that was constructed out of the back-splash to a Victorian washstand.
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11-20-2012, 03:40 PM
Post: #50
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RE: Show us your Lincoln collectables!
Laurie: that ornate wood you are noticing is the top part of a cabinet that belonged in the family since the 1800's. You have a very keen eye!
Bill Nash |
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11-22-2012, 12:12 PM
Post: #51
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11-22-2012, 12:27 PM
Post: #52
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RE: Show us your Lincoln collectables!
Really, I had no idea! I just know it has been in the family for over a hundred years.
Bill Nash |
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11-25-2012, 08:33 AM
Post: #53
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RE: Show us your Lincoln collectables!
Quarter-sawn red oak became the wood of choice for Stickley's mission era style of furniture. They still use this same wood in their current Mission Oak line of arts-and-crafts furniture. I have quite a bit of it in my house.
Obviously your piece is not from this era as it appears much more ornate and is probably from an earlier period. I just love the grain pattern of quarter-sawn oak. |
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11-28-2012, 09:09 PM
Post: #54
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RE: Show us your Lincoln collectables!
It is very curious to me that JFK would be called an "emancipator." I'm a great admirer of JFK, but I have to ask: Who did he emancipate?
This also reminds of the Dion song from 1968 Abraham, Martin, and John where the lyrics say about Kennedy: Anybody here seen my old friend John? Can you tell me where he's gone? He freed a lot of people, But it seems the good they die young. I just looked around and he's gone. Who did JFK free? I was alive and kicking during the JFK years, did I miss something? Bill Nash |
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11-28-2012, 10:35 PM
Post: #55
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RE: Show us your Lincoln collectables!
People forget the almost euphoric wave of sympathy that followed President Kennedy's assassination. That is one reason why Johnson was able to clobber Goldwater in the 1964 election and pass the Civil Rights Bill and other major legislation. At the height of the martyrdom euphoria for Kennedy, some people started to say that he was one of the greatest presidents in US history. However, he really was unable to serve long enough to warrant such a judgement.
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11-29-2012, 08:21 AM
Post: #56
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RE: Show us your Lincoln collectables!
Rogerm: Exactly right. Actually, the most important thing I think he accomplished was the successful "stand-down" with the Soviets-avoiding nuclear war (that's always a good thing!)
Bill Nash |
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11-29-2012, 11:04 AM
Post: #57
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RE: Show us your Lincoln collectables!
I think it's ironic to call Kennedy an emancipator given that he was very reluctant to support the civil rights movement in the south, although he did make it so James Meredith could enroll at the University of Mississippi. I met Meredith when I was in college, and he talked about how President Kennedy fought for him to be able to go to school, although Kennedy was, at best, a reluctant warrior.
Best Rob Abraham Lincoln is the only man, dead or alive, with whom I could have spent five years without one hour of boredom. --Ida M. Tarbell
I want the respect of intelligent men, but I will choose for myself the intelligent. --Carl Sandburg
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11-29-2012, 11:25 AM
Post: #58
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RE: Show us your Lincoln collectables!
I agree that Kennedy does not have the stature of Lincoln in respect to being an "emancipator." In fact, I don't think that Lyndon Johnson gets the respect he deserves in regards to pushing through the Civil Rights Act of 1964.
Some have said that Kennedy could not have gotten that passed, and I agree. Personally, I don't think Johnson was a very likeable personality; but I do think that he was a master politician with a great deal of experience, cunning, and the knowledge of where Washington skeletons were hidden so that he could blackmail others into political positions. That's what it took to get that Act passed. |
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11-29-2012, 11:26 AM
Post: #59
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RE: Show us your Lincoln collectables!
Rob: Those were my thoughts too. Coupled with what you already said-Kennedy received pressure from Martin Luther King Jr. in a way that demanded his administration give Civil Rights the focus that it got.
Bill Nash |
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11-29-2012, 11:56 AM
Post: #60
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RE: Show us your Lincoln collectables!
Of course, Robert's passion for civil rights must have influenced his brother, too.
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