Lincoln Slept in the David Wills House

Gettysburg Home Hosted President Night Before Historic Address

© Jim Rada

Dec 6, 2008
David Wills House 1890, Courtesy of Main Street Gettysburg
When Abraham Lincoln arrived in Gettysburg, Pa., he needed a place to stay for the night and finish his short speech that would become known as "The Gettysburg Address."

Gettysburg attorney David Wills owned the largest house on the downtown square and he had also been the person to invite the President to speak at the dedication. So in November 1863, it wasn’t surprising that he played host to the Abraham Lincoln.

Where the Gettysburg Address was Finished

It was Wills who convinced the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania to purchase 17 acres to become a cemetery for the soldiers killed in the Battle of Gettysburg that had occurred less than five months prior. He planned the cemetery dedication for November 19, 1863 with Edward Everett as the main speaker and President Lincoln who was expected to make “a few appropriate remarks.”

Lincoln arrived on a special train from Washington on Nov. 18, accompanied by members of his cabinet and foreign ambassadors. Lincoln was escorted to the David Wills house.

That evening Lincoln dined with Everett and others while a crowd gathered outside hoping to see the President. They began calling for Lincoln and he eventually appeared. He waved to them but he declined to speak.

Following that, he retired to his room where he put the finishing touches on his remarks, which would become immortalized as The Gettysburg Address after the cemetery dedication.

David Wills House Today

The David Will House is expected to reopen as a museum in downtown Gettysburg on February 12, 2009. It has gone through a $7.2-million renovation that has restored it to its Civil War appearance.

The museum will be part of the Gettysburg National Military Park and operated by Main Street Gettysburg.

The museum will include seven galleries, including the office where Wills coordinated the town’s clean-up and recovery from the famous battle and the bedroom where Lincoln stayed the night.

Artifacts at the Wills House

The museum will have artifacts related to Lincoln, the Gettysburg Address and Gettysburg that have never been displayed before.

“What is unique about the artifact display in the David Wills House is that we’ve been fortunate enough to get in touch with descendants of David Wills, and they’ve been very generous,” Gettysburg National

Military Park Supervisor of Museum Services Greg Goodell said in the Gettysburg Times.

The artifacts include the bed Lincoln slept on at the house, a saddle cover that Lincoln sat on as he rode to dedication ceremony, a figurine that belonged to Mrs. Wills; and a telegram sent to the president by Mary Todd Lincoln concerning the illness of their son, Tad. Also included will be artifacts from the park’s collection that pertain to the house.


The copyright of the article Lincoln Slept in the David Wills House in Pennsylvania Travel is owned by Jim Rada. Permission to republish Lincoln Slept in the David Wills House in print or online must be granted by the author in writing.


David Wills House 1890, Courtesy of Main Street Gettysburg
       


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