Description:

Describing Abraham Lincoln in the Lincoln Memorial, Ted Kennedy writes "His seated statue looks over Washington and our entire country to remind us that our dedication to the principles of freedom and dignity for all men shall never die ... President Kennedy often referred in his speeches to Lincoln's remarks, and quoted him on many occasions ..."

Typed Letter Signed "Ted Kennedy" as U.S. Senator, one full page, 8" x 10.5". Washington, D.C., May 14, 1968. To John G.W. Mahanna, Washington, D.C. On his U.S. Senate letterhead listing him as one of the 16 members of the Committee on Labor and Public Welfare including his brother Robert F. Kennedy who was assassinated just three weeks later. Three file loose leaf holes in left margin. Never folded. Fine condition.

In part, "I appreciate very much your sending me the text of your book, THE SEATED STATUE OF LINCOLN ... Massachusetts takes great pride in the fact that the sculptor of the Lincoln figure in the memorial, Daniel Chester French, is a native son of our state ... Abraham Lincoln, our nation's sixteenth president, has lived on in the hearts and minds of many generations, though his life was ended so abruptly and tragically over one-hundred years ago.

"His seated statue looks over Washington and our entire country to remind us that our dedication to the principles of freedom and dignity for all men shall never die. His grave but benevolent face reminds us that we must be firm and compassionate in administering social justice. President Kennedy often referred in his speeches to Lincoln's remarks, and quoted him on many occasions.

"May I close by quoting my own favorite passage of Abraham Lincoln: Let is hope ... that by the best cultivation of the physical world beneath and around us, and the best intellectual and moral world within us, we shall secure an individual, social and political prosperity and happiness, whose course shall be onward and upward, and which, while the earth endures, shall not pass away ..."

The words "sixteenth president, has lived on" has been typed over an erasure. The letter here offered was retyped. Both letters were authentically signed by Kennedy; both were sent to Mahanna.

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