FA03 Off a 52d Congress, | HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES, j Report 3d Session. \ ) No. 1294. LINCOLN MEMORIAL. ]/ / January 13, 1913. — Referred to the House Calendar and ordered to be printed. Mr. Evans, from the Committee on the Library, submitted the following REPORT. [To accompany S. Con. Res. 32.] The Committee on the Library, to which was referred Senate con- current resolution 32, to adopt a plan, design, and location for the Lincoln memorial, recommends that the concurrent resolution do pass. The Fine Arts Commission was created by the Sixty-first Congress for the purpose of furnishing advice to Members of the Congress upon subjects within the domain of the fine arts. So many mistakes had been made in the monuments and other works of art paid for out of the Public Treasury that that Congress wisely concluded that the great number of men engaged in the serious work of legislation could not naturally be,- expected to have the training or experience which would make them sufficient judges of good works of art, and accordingly the Fine Arts Commission was formed. That commis- sion has unanimously recommended the plan, design, and location for the Lincoln memorial for which the appropriation has heretofore been made, and in the opinion of the committee we have none of us individually such training or experience in the fine arts as quali- fies us to sit in judgment on the recommendations of the Fine Arts Commission, and we report that becoming modesty compels us to accept the recommendations of the commission. The committee has given a great deal of time and attention and have had a number of hearings upon the subject. Real estate and automobile interests have been given a thorough hearing. The committee in addition has considered a large number of suggestions from private individuals, and as a result of the consideration of this subject has unanimously come to the conclusion that but one thoroughly adequate and feasi- ble memorial has been proposed, and that is the memorial recom- mended by the Fine Arts Commission. Owing to misstatements of facts circulated by various interests upon this subject the committee deemed it advisable to report that the common statement and rumor " ' sT j LINCOLN MEMORIAL. that the Grand Army of the Republic favors the expenditure of the $2, 000, 000 heretofore appropriated for a Lincoln memorial for a road from Gettysburg to Washington lacks the element of veracity. The facts are these : At the meeting of the Grand Army of the Republic held in Rochester more than a year ago, on the last day of the meetings, and when less than 30 members out of 800 delegates were present, and without any report from any committee and after a statement made by Gen. Torrance to the effect that a committee of the Congress had reported in favor of a Lincohi memorial in the form of a highway from Washington to Gettysburg, a resolution indorsing that highway was passed. It will t>e noticed that the statement that a committee of the Congress had approved the high- way from Washington to Gettysburg was not in accordance with the facts. In September, 1912, the Grand Army of the Republic, at its annual meeting at Los Angeles, reversed the apparent conclusion reached at Rochester and resolved to support the Lincoln memorial as recom- mended by the Fine Arts Commission. The report of the meeting of the Grand Army of the Republic in Los Angeles is not yet printed; but the committee made this statement upon the authority of Rich- ard Watrous, secretary of the American Civic Federation, whose father is a member of the Grand Army of the Republic and who was present at Los Angeles, and, further, upon a telegram from Gen. Alfred B. Beers, commander in chief of the Grand Army of the Republic, sent to the chairman of the Library Committee, which telegram is as follows : Bridgeport, Conn., January 10. Hon. James L. Slaydex. M. C, Washington, D. C: Nineteen hundred and twelve encampment. Grand Army of the Republic, indorsed, by vote, the Cullom bill for Lincoln Memorial ( ommission to erect a monument to be located on the banks of the Potomac. Alfred B. Beers. Commander in Chief. In view of these facts, the misstatements hi regard to the support given by the Grand Army of the Republic to the proposed automobile road as a memorial for Lincoln need not further be considered. Furthermore, the committee is of the opinion that a roadway is not an adequate memorial and cite as an illustration the fact that in the city of Chicago there is a Lincoln Parkway, formerly called Lin- coln Park Boulevard, a boulevard far more expensive than could be built from Washington to Gettysburg with the present appropriation, and it is questionable whether any Member of this House or anyone else who has ever passed along that boulevard has connected it in any way with Abraham Lincoln; but when that same person reaches Lincoln Park in Chicago and comes to St. Gauden's statue of Lincoln he then feels what a memorial is and ought to be. The personality of the man is brought to the attention of the observer in one kind of memorial and is not in the other. It is said that Lincohi was a plain man and that the memorial should be one which the plain people can appreciate, and that there- fore the Gettysburg road should be adopted. Just how the plain people can be made to afford the purchase of automobiles to ride from Gettysburg to Washington has not been disclosed. If the road- way is to be made for the plain people there should be a trolley line built upon it so that the plain people can afford to use it, and the D,.