Safeguarding and sharing President Lincoln's words and written record
Learn how Iron Mountain's Image Document Services have helped preserve President Lincoln's written articles and records for future generations to observe.
President Lincoln saved the Union, ended slavery and wrote some of the country's most beloved narratives including the Gettysburg Address and his Second Inaugural Address. But what do you know about President Lincoln the lawyer, husband, father, animal lover or patent holder?
The Papers of Abraham Lincoln is a long term project dedicated to identifying, imaging, transcribing, annotating, and publishing all documents written by or to Abraham Lincoln during his lifetime. Their collection offers scholars, students and the everyday, curious reader a fresh, new look at the words and works of America's most admired citizen as well as a closer look at the thousands of statesmen, politicians, and ordinary citizens whose lives he touched.
President Lincoln image scanning
The project is administered through the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum, a division of the Illinois Historic Preservation Agency, and is cosponsored by the Centre for State Policy and Leadership at the University of Illinois Springfield and by the Abraham Lincoln Association. Papers has already located nearly two hundred thousand documents from his legal and legislative careers, his personal and political life, and his Presidency and anticipates to find nearly 50,000 more documents. Now, through the Living Legacy Initiative, Iron Mountain is helping preserve and tell his story.
Through our expertise with records management, archiving solutions and high security, long term care and access of critical information, Iron Mountain is bringing our special capabilities as well as financial support to this historic mission. The Papers will use Iron Mountain's support to accelerate their efforts to acquire, archive and preserve the documentary record of Lincoln's life and career and make that information accessible to the public.
An archivist will be added to staff searching for documents at the National Archives in Washington, D.C. and an editor will be added to their staff in Springfield, Illinois contextualising the documents. Financial support will also provide assistance to develop a one of a kind public interface to make Lincoln's life and times come alive – linking all of the Lincoln documents together to tell a more complete story and help scholars, visitors and students of all ages see how they fit together and what they mean. Finally Iron Mountain is developing a long-term archival solution to safeguard the Papers' data in perpetuity.
If you have a Lincoln document or know of one in a friend or family member's possession; or if you have a connection or would like to know if you have a connection to a Lincoln document, please contact Dr. Daniel W. Stowell at dstowell@papersofabrahamlincoln.org.