Article Options
Popular Articles
  1. NAACP picks young activist as its new president
  2. Obama seals nomination: 'This is our moment'
  3. Ike survivors may wait weeks for hot meals, baths
  4. Obama chooses Lincoln’s Bible for inauguration
  5. Guest editorial...Celebrating Christmas
No popular articles found.
Popular Authors
  1. Courier Newsroom
  2. Associated Press
  3. Christian Morrow
  4. Deborah M. Todd
  5. C. Denise Johnson
No popular authors found.

Black America Book


SUBSCRIBE TODAY

Subscribe by Credit Card Online
 
Subscribe

 »  Home  »  National  »  Obama chooses Lincoln’s Bible for inauguration
Obama chooses Lincoln’s Bible for inauguration
By Associated Press | Published  12/24/2008 | National | Unrated
Obama chooses Lincoln’s Bible for inauguration

WASHINGTON (AP)—President-elect Barack Obama will use the same Bible at his inauguration that Abraham Lincoln used for his swearing in.

Obama will be the first president since Lincoln to use that Bible, part of the collection of the Library of Congress.


INAUGURATION BIBLE—Curator Clark Evans displays the burgundy velvet, gilt-edged Lincoln Inaugural Bible at the Library of Congress. President-elect Barack Obama will take his oath of office on the Bible Jan. 20, becoming the first president to use it since Abraham Lincoln at his swearing-in March 4, 1861.

“President-elect Obama is deeply honored that the Library of Congress has made the Lincoln Bible available for use during his swearing-in,” Presidential Inaugural Committee Executive Director Emmett Beliveau said in a statement.

Obama is also tracing the train route that Lincoln took and holding a welcome event at the Lincoln Memorial ahead of his Jan. 20 inauguration

The burgundy velvet Bible with gilded edges was purchased and inscribed by William Thomas Carroll, clerk of the Supreme Court.

It will be on display at the Library of Congress Feb. 12 to May 9 as part of an exhibition titled “With Malice Toward None: The Abraham Lincoln Bicentennial Exhibition.” The exhibit will then travel to five other American cities in commemoration of the bicentennial of Lincoln’s birth on Feb. 12, 1809.