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Historical Perspectives (8)
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The most dangerous job in America is not, as the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics recently announced, fishing. Nor is it logging, flying, or steel manufacturing. The job with the worst mortality rate is the hardest one to get: President of the United States.

The Idea of Lincoln: Man and Memory
This exhibition features letters in Lincoln’s hand, some of which testify to the mythic idea of him – his kindness, honesty, and mercy; and some reflecting the gritty reality of his life – law cases about hogs, choosing pragmatism over principle, crafting an image.

Life’s lessons: John F. Kennedy advises a college student what classes to take for a life in politics.

The very man who defined the American presidency was probably the only man to occupy the office who did not want the job.

Dreams and Diplomacy in the Holy Land: American Consuls in Jerusalem in the 19th Century
This exhibition deals with the relationship that developed between the United States of America and the Holy Land, starting in 1844.

Lincoln Declares He is Not a “Man of Great Learning, or a Very Extraordinary One in Any Respect”
Lincoln was fifty-one years old, and in his own eyes, a common man, running for president against those infinitely more likely, and better favored, than himself. Lincoln’s identification of himself as unexceptional in any way reflected his intrinsic egalitarianism .

The Alfred Dreyfus Degradation Ceremony – Paris, France
The Dreyfus Affair was “one of the great commotions of history. ” It began in 1894 against a backdrop of espionage and antisemitism, when Jewish French Army captain, Alfred Dreyfus, was wrongly convicted of treason and sentenced to life imprisonment.
