Tag Archives: National Civil War Museum

August News Digest

Museum Funding Targeted

Harrisburg Mayor Eric Papenfuse has asked the Dauphin County commissioners to cease channeling a portion of the countywide hotel tax to the National Civil War Museum.

Papenfuse said that he objects to an arrangement worked out by former Mayor Stephen Reed that funnels a certain amount of money each year to the 13-year-old museum, despite a county ordinance designating that the money be spent on promoting tourism in the city. In the last fiscal year, the museum received $290,000 out of the portion meant for promoting the city, which totaled around $500,000.

The museum, located in Reservoir Park, used that money to pay for operational costs as part of its $1.1 million budget.

Instead of giving that money to the museum, Harrisburg would be better off using it to promote other tourism initiatives, such as the city’s annual summertime festivals, Papenfuse said.

The city owns most of the museum’s artifacts, as well as the building, which it rents to the museum for $1 a year. The museum pays its operational expenses, but the city is responsible for maintenance and upkeep of the building.

Tax Abatement Discussed

The Harrisburg school board last month listened to a proposal to revive tax abatement for property improvements in the city.

Brian Hudson, executive director of the Pennsylvania Housing Finance Agency, shared with the board a plan to stimulate development and renovation in the city through a 10-year, citywide abatement program.

Mayor Eric Papenfuse is expected to push this fall for an initiative that would lead to no tax increases for property improvements over a decade. Instead, taxes would be levied for that time based upon the pre-improvement value of the properties.

In order for the program to take effect, the school board, the city and Dauphin County all would have to sign off on it.

New School Administrator

Education consultant Drue Miles, author of the education chapter in the Harrisburg school district’s state-sponsored recovery plan, last month was named the district’s new acting school improvement administrator.

The position, which pays $600 per day, was vacant after the departure of Sherry Roland-Washington, who left Aug. 15.

Gene Veno, the district’s state-appointed chief recovery officer, said that he recommended the emergency hiring of Miles while the superintendent searched for a permanent replacement for Roland-Washington.

City Audit Delayed

Harrisburg’s audit has been delayed several months due to a budget oversight that did not fund the outside assistance the city needed for prep work before the audit could begin.

The Thompson administration did not request—and City Council did not approve—funds for the engagement of Trout Ebersole & Groff, the accounting firm that has assisted the short-staffed budget office with audit preparation in recent years.

The oversight stemmed in part from a decision by the state Department of Community and Economic Development not to assist the city with audit prep this year, as it had in prior years under Act 47 and receivership.

After taking office, the Papenfuse administration worked to apportion the necessary funding for outside help, which will cost around $45,000. Brian Ostella, chair of the city’s audit committee, said that prep work was completed in mid-June and actual audit work began in mid-July.

Maher Duessel, the accounting firm that has performed the city’s audit for the last decade, expects to complete the audit by mid-November, Ostella said.

Sinkhole Probe Launched

Harrisburg City Council has approved hiring an engineering firm to conduct an emergency sinkhole investigation.

Camp Hill-based Gannett Fleming is performing the work, focused around the 1400-block of S. 14th St., where several sinkholes have formed in recent months. The probe, which will employ seismic surface waves and verification drilling to develop a site map, should be completed by year-end.

The cost of the investigation will be shared with Capital Region Water. It is estimated to cost $166,000.

Trash Fees Adjusted

Harrisburg’s small business owners have received some relief, after City Council temporarily lowered fees for trash collection.

For years, small businesses have complained that they were subject to high commercial collection rates, even though they generated little trash.

Under the new provision, small businesses will be charged the same rate as residential customers: $156 a year or $13 a month. To qualify for the lower rate, they must produce no more trash each week than can fit into two trashcans with lids.

The lower rate applies only until the end of the year. In November, the Department of Public Works will assess the impact of the reduction and report to council whether it should be made permanent.

Mansion Re-Named

The mansion in Reservoir Park last month was officially re-named in honor of Harrisburg Councilwoman Eugenia Smith.

The prominent building was named the Honorable Eugenia Smith Family Life Center during a ceremony featuring music, speakers and a release of doves.

Smith, 53, died suddenly in April at the start of her second term as city councilwoman.

Changing Hands

Cumberland St., 119: R. Nordberg to JB Buy Rite LP, $50,000

Duke St., 2614: A. & V. Morelli to PI Capital LLC, $61,300

Ellerslie St., 2346: PA Deals LLC to D. Clark, $70,000

Fulton St., 1419: JP Morgan Chase to G. & D. Hanslovan, $63,000

Green St., 1112: M. Monathan & M. Taylor to M. Fitzgerald, $165,000

Green St., 1514: J. Couzens to E. Sheaffer & D. McCleskey, $180,000

Green St., 1711: R. Mehiel & L. Kackman to B. Rockwell & N. Gurley, $168,000

Green St., 1811: R. Ruiz to M. Bonsall, $100,000

Green St., 1921: J. & A. Webb to WCI Partners LP, $117,000

Green St., 2031: J. & A. Webb to WCI Partners LP, $119,000

Green St., 3234: R. Krasevic to T. Ash, $119,900

Locust St., 122: DLK Partners LLC to Pennsylvania Legal Aid Network Inc., $130,000

Luce St., 2332 & 2314½: R. & C. Sheetz to Care Properties LLC, $60,000

Mercer St., 2441: M. Davenport et al to O. Diallo & M. Barry, $46,000

N. 3rd St., 1408: F. & M. Cavanaugh to GreenWorks Development LLC, $139,900

N. 3rd St., 3026: L. Curtis to R. Daniels Jr., $35,000

N. 4th St., 2427: D. Seymore to B. Jones Sr., $35,000

N. 6th St., 3014: J. Hadfield & W. Grace to K. Dixon, $73,000

N. 6th St., 3212: R. & B. Snyder to RT Home Solutions Inc., $30,000

N. 12th St., 33: Kirsch & Burns LLC to LMK Properties LLC, $40,000

N. 18th St., 1000: JLB Properties LLC to S. Donald, $44,900

N. Front St., 111: J.A. Hartzler to BCRA Realty LLC, $250,000

N. Front St., 1525, Unit 101: A. Ferraiolo to A. Mohanavel, $156,500

N. Front St., 1525, Unit 602: M. & C. Heppenstall to R. Hostetter Jr., $250,000

Paxton St., 1924: L. Zaydon Jr. to Steve Fisher Rental Properties LLC, $125,000

Penn St., 1520: S. Litt to A. Fortune, $114,000

Penn St., 2411: J. Shockey to D. Wendt, $78,375

S. 2nd St., 314: J. Wansacz to D. Bowers & K. Shifler, $115,000

S. 3rd St., 19: P. Dobson to Dewberry LLC, $325,000

S. 13th St., 506: PA Deals LLC to J. & A. Garbanzos, $65,000

S. 19th St., 1133: M. & B. Faulkner to N. Colon & R. Romero, $85,000

S. 23rd St., 600: G., D. & M. Complese to S. Wright, $69,900

State St., 219: WCI Partners LP to B. & K. Sidella and J. & N. Jones, $225,000

State St., 1516: Kirsch & Burns LLC to LMK Properties LLC, $37,000

Susquehanna St., 1737: Secretary of Veterans Affairs to L. Reapsome, $43,500

Walnut St., 1206: Kirsch & Burns LLC to LMK Properties, $32,000

Walnut St., 1525: ABC Solutions LLC to Choukri Auto Services LLC, $40,000

Wiconisco St., 620; 621 Emerald St.; 2352 Derry St.; and 612 & 614 Seneca St.: R. Shokes Jr. & Shokes Enterprises to JDP 2014 LLC, $259,000

Harrisburg property sales for July 2014, greater than $30,000. Source: Dauphin County. Data is assumed to be accurate.

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At Mayor’s Behest, Council Offers “Show of Unity” on Civil War Museum Funding

The National Civil War Museum in Reservoir Park.

The National Civil War Museum in Reservoir Park.

Harrisburg’s City Council voted unanimously Tuesday evening to join Mayor Eric Papenfuse’s request to the Dauphin County commissioners to suspend the portion of hotel tax funding that is sent under contract each year to the National Civil War Museum.

The resolution, which did not appear on the agenda and was introduced towards the end of council’s first session back after summer vacation, cites the city’s recent “profound fiscal distress” as well as the museum’s inability to show “measurable, tangible economic benefit to tourism” in Harrisburg as reasons why its funding stream should be cut off.

In his presentation Tuesday night, Mayor Papenfuse said that an affirmative vote from council would be a “show of unity” to county commissioners that the city no longer wished to subsidize the museum’s operations.

Papenfuse made his initial request to the county commissioners at their July 30 hearing. During that presentation, he noted that the museum received around $300,000 per year from a portion of county hotel taxes designated by ordinance for promoting tourism within the city. That money, he said, went to cover a portion of the museum’s more than $1 million in operating expenses.

Additionally, Papenfuse said, the museum paid only $1 to the city in rent on a facility whose fair market value is listed in the museum’s own financial statements at $633,000 per year. The building was constructed with state RACP funding of $16.2 million.

The rent also includes the use of city-owned artifacts, which the city purchased over the course of several years for somewhere between $16 and $18 million.

Papenfuse added that the hotel tax funding and the rent were fixed by agreements that had been extended—one of them out to 2039—in the “waning days” of the administration of former Mayor Stephen Reed. Reed, who spearheaded the Civil War Museum’s construction, is listed in exhibits at the site as the museum’s founder.

Council members mostly expressed dismay Tuesday night at the extent of city subsidies of the museum, as well as the absence of any council vote or discussion on the agreements that stipulate the current funding arrangement.

Councilwoman Susan Brown-Wilson, who shook her head as the mayor quoted the museum’s rent payment, also suggested that the museum needed new board members that better reflected the community.

Councilman Ben Allatt, the chair of the budget and finance committee, said he would like to invite museum directors to make their case before council. He said he would invite them to a committee meeting on Sept. 16.

In addition to the hotel tax and the rent agreement, the city has also made several direct payments to the museum since 2000. On Tuesday before council, the administration cited a figure of $12 million for these payments, and the resolution refers to the same number in its recitals.

A budget printout previously provided to TheBurg, however, shows only $1.2 million in such payments. Bruce Weber, the city’s budget and finance director, later said the administration had misspoken, and that the correct figure was $1.2 million.

The hotel tax is a 5-percent tax on overnight lodging in Dauphin County hotels. Under county ordinance, the city currently receives around $750,000 per year in hotel taxes, which is sent directly to its general fund. A second portion, around $500,000 per year, goes to a visitors bureau to be spent on promoting tourism in the city. It is out of this second portion that the museum receives its contractually established payment of around $300,000.

The National Civil War Museum opened in February, 2001, and is open 361 days per year. After a first-year high of around 96,000 visitors, its annual attendance has fluctuated between 38,000 and 41,000 for the past five years. In a recent conversation with TheBurg, museum board members spoke proudly of their efforts to reduce the museum’s operating expenses, which once covered a much larger staff and totaled upwards of $2.5 million.

For an in-depth feature on Mayor Papenfuse’s request regarding the National Civil War Museum, including an extended interview with the museum board, see the September issue of TheBurg, which will hit newsstands Friday.

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Central PA as Classroom: International students & their hosts find that learning goes both ways.

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Many international students visit central Pennsylvania to learn about America, whether they are a high school exchange student, a college student taking classes, or a college student working an internship with a local business. And we learn from them, too.

One of the most valuable experiences I have had was serving as housing host to Polish graduate students. Over the past 10 years, I have opened my home to five young ladies who were between the ages of 21 and 23. These particular students have traveled extensively throughout Europe and could speak three different languages. It was my duty to make sure they had a ride to and from their jobs and to provide them with a nice home environment during their stay in central Pennsylvania. As the students practiced their English language skills, I shared my way of life with them while being exposed to their traditions.

Although the students have been screened to participate in such international programs, you never know what an individual will be like until they are actually living in your home. But that’s life…meeting new people and learning to appreciate different lifestyles. People often get stuck in their own circles of family and friends. In Europe, it’s very common to let a stranger stay in one’s home. This was a wonderful opportunity for me to expand my horizons, and I am glad that I embraced it.

The young women I hosted valued faith and family. They attended church every Sunday. The students were kind and especially well-mannered. I was amused that, after I asked my first student to take off her shoes when coming into my home, she and her friends would leave all of their shoes at the bottom of the stairs every time they entered the home—I never had to ask again. And every new student who stayed with me followed suit. They were happy to do so without any rumblings. I do not have any children of my own, but these students were a real treat to be a part of our temporary family.

Foreign students are fascinated by American history. Since my boyfriend is a history buff, we always had fun taking the students exploring noteworthy sights in Harrisburg and the surrounding areas. Places like the National Civil War Museum and Gettysburg broadened the students’ knowledge of the area. The students also went on weekend trips to Washington, D.C., Pittsburgh, Baltimore, New York, and they often made the excursions on their own.

On the flip side, they shared stories of their lives and travels. My most recent student and her family vacationed in Trou-aux-Biches, Mauritius, an island located in the Indian Ocean off the coast of Africa. It was exciting to hear about a beach—a place on the other side of the world, that I never imagined visiting myself.

Christmas is a major holiday in Poland. While in Harrisburg, the students contributed their culinary talents to celebrate the holiday by making pierogies from scratch, and bigos (hunters stew), made of sauerkraut and meat, that is a Polish national dish. The meal was a delicious variation from American traditions. In addition, we exchanged gifts and attended Mass on Christmas Eve.

Although they were thin, the students were concerned about gaining weight while living in the United States. They were not accustomed to eating processed foods. Even the local bread was too sweet for their taste buds. Other observations from the kitchen: The students preferred to drink water without ice, they liked dark beer, and frowned upon using plastic sandwich bags when packing their lunches, which were considered to be harmful to the environment.

Ten years ago, a European student could only make an occasional phone call to hear the voices of family abroad. Now, Skype allows face-time with loved ones. It’s instant communication from anywhere. And, thanks to Skype, the Polish students would talk for hours, especially with their boyfriends.

With every new student I hosted, I learned something new. I take pride knowing that I enhanced the lives of these young ladies. I consider myself to be very fortunate to have made these friendships. When you open your heart and your home to someone different, you will be surprised by the rewards.

 

Become a Host

If you have an interest in sharing your life with an international exchange student, here are several organizations to check out.

Nacel Open Door, Inc.
www.nacelopendoor.org

Pennsylvania Partnerships Abroad, Ltd.
www.ppa-ltd.org

AFS-USA
www.afsusa.org

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Groups Agree to “Adopt-A-Park” in Harrisburg

Harrisburg today announced participants in its “Adopt-A-Park” program, an effort aimed to help restore and maintain the city’s parks and recreational facilities.

More than a dozen individuals and corporations have pledged funds and/or projects to help keep the city’s parks attractive and safe, said Mayor Eric Papenfuse. Adopt-A-Park projects and activities include:

· The Kunkel Foundation pledged a $50,000 donation for conservation and creation of Kunkel Plaza.

· Gwen and Dave Lehman pledged donations through Physicians for Social Responsibility. The Lehman’s have maintained and developed the Peace Garden at Riverfront Park for the past 25 years. 

· United Way of the Capital Region will sponsor a beautification youth service project on April 4 on City Island. 

· Messiah College will sponsor a  “Day of Service” on April 10 and has recruited volunteers to assist with beautification, modification and/or restoration of select playgrounds.

· Harrisburg Young Professionals has pledged to adopt one park each season, including City Island, Riverfront Park, Italian Lake and Reservoir Park.

· The Italian Lake Coalition has pledged $2,000 to help maintain Italian Lake.

· The Jewish Community Center will perform maintenance on the Holocaust Monument  at Front and Verbeke streets on May 2 to 4.

· The Boy Scouts and Pride of the Susquehanna will work on a “Fallen Heroes” memorial starting in April at Riverfront Park.

· Inspirations Bath and Kitchen Studio by Hajoca has pledged to continually maintain the entrance to Market Street Bridge.

· Pennsylvania State Fraternal Order of Police is preparing a feasibility study for a memorial statue and garden to fallen soldiers in Reservoir Park.

· Jump Street is coordinating efforts from area Eagle Scouts to maintain the  drummer boy statue near the garden at the Civil War Museum.

In addition, Riverfront Park was accepted into Macy’s “Heart Your Park” campaign in partnership with National Recreation and Park Association during March. Macy’s matched money that shoppers donated to the fund and will present it to the city in June. 

 

 

 

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Bit of Change: Harrisburg’s new parking regimen has hit an unexpected snag, but an innovative solution may be at hand.

Screenshot 2014-03-30 10.59.09Terry Sweeney stopped coming to downtown Harrisburg last month, even though several of the restaurants on 2nd Street are among his favorites.

He felt he had no choice. The increased cost of parking was putting a huge dent in his monthly budget.

“I simply can’t afford the parking or the tickets,” said the Mechanicsburg resident. “I’m not sure anyone can.”

Sweeney was more accurate in his assessment than he may have realized.

Parking operator Standard Parking last month said its internal studies revealed that there is not enough dollar-denominated currency in circulation in the greater Harrisburg area to pay for the new parking rates.

So, according to spokesman Rob Porter, it’s begun to retrofit its new meters to accept bitcoins, the digital currency that some regard as a legitimate form of money.

“We took a closer look at our budget for 2014 and realized that, in fact, the citizens of Harrisburg do not actually have sufficient American currency—or really sovereign currency of any kind—to meet our revenue projections,” Porter said. “And one way to close that gap is for residents to tap into the shadowy, unregulated underworld of a Japanese software eccentric’s technological fantasy.”

Software developer Satoshi Nakamoto created bitcoin just five years ago as an alternative to traditional, country-sanctioned forms of money. Bitcoins are not controlled by nations or central banks, but use computers on a network to confirm bitcoin transactions and mint new currency.

Mayor Eric Papenfuse said that he “warmly welcomes” the prospect of bitcoin-compatible parking meters.

“It’s just so exciting,” he said. “It’s a terrific example of exactly the kind of public/private/shadow economy partnership that I’ve been touting all along. Once again, Harrisburg is on the cutting edge of creative financing.”

Papenfuse then went on to list all the “really neat things” the city would be able to buy when Harrisburg receives its share of bitcoin revenue: sushi from a restaurant in Palo Alto, Calif.; a college degree from the University of Cyprus; black market cigarettes; the ability to wager in online casinos.

Other city officials were taking a more cautious approach to the development.

“The founding fathers and Ronald Reagan didn’t need any bitcoin,” said Councilwoman Sandra Reid. “I say this to un-American bitcoin: Four score and seven years ago!”

Reid added that, following several neighborhood hearings, she would urge the city to reconsider its embrace of the virtual currency. When reminded that the city no longer owns or controls the parking system, she responded, “When did this happen? Why wasn’t I consulted?”

Council President Wanda Williams said she was still studying the issue, but would read an hour-long, prepared statement defending her position once she makes up her mind.

Indeed, bitcoin has become increasingly controversial since it began to be embraced last year, mostly by day traders, tech geeks and people who believe that modern civilization is a fiction whose time of reckoning is at hand.

One problem is the potential that the currency will collapse altogether, a possibility heightened by events like February’s theft of $477 million in bitcoins from Mt. Gox, a virtual currency giant, by online hackers.

If that happens, said spokesman Porter, Standard Parking may have to fall back on its “Plan B”: accepting the city’s physical assets as a form of substitute payment.

“We’ll take anything, really,” Porter said. “Civil war museums, minor league ballparks, state Capitol buildings, parking systems. Oh right, we already got that last one.”

He said, in a pinch, he’d even accept private houses.

“We’d generously lease them back to the old owners,” he said, “as long as their tribute—I mean rent—is paid in bitcoins.”

“Anything except sewer pipes,” he added. “You can keep those.”

The potential downside, however, does not concern former city receiver William Lynch, who said he approves of what he called bitcoin’s “essential characteristic”: the fact that no one really understands what it is or how it works.

“That same characteristic was the key to the whole receivership and the recovery plan,” said Lynch, who then winked, boarded a helicopter and flew away up the Susquehanna.

Upon further reporting, TheBurg has learned that nothing in this story actually happened, was said by the individuals quoted or paraphrased or is otherwise accurate. Happy April Fools, Harrisburg! (with inspirational credit to #ScotchinTheBurg)

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Harrisburg’s Mr. Lincoln: James Hayney has built a career portraying the Great Emancipator.

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“My mission is to keep history alive.”

So says James Hayney about his role as an Abraham Lincoln presenter. Hayney, a Camp Hill resident, has been keeping history alive around central Pennsylvania and beyond for most of the last decade.

He certainly looks the part. Hayney’s body is long and lean; he stands well over 6 feet tall and sports the trademark beard worn by the 16th president. Hayney states, with a wink, that he is about the same age as Lincoln at the end of his presidency.

Hayney took a circuitous route to the role of Abraham Lincoln, which he now plays full-time. He explained that, during his 20s and 30s, he was a telephone man, but had this dream of becoming an actor. As he approached his 40s, he saved enough to take a leap of faith and follow his dream. He resigned from corporate life and spent some time in New York, expanding his acting skills and trying to break into commercials. After a few months, he moved back to the Harrisburg area to work in the local theater scene.

“I’m a Harrisburg guy,” he explains, noting the terrific location for a professional Lincoln portrayer. “My roots are here. My son was born here.”

He began to find acting gigs around central Pennsylvania. He acted in Harrisburg’s Open Stage and Gamut Theatre. He soon began getting parts at Allenberry Playhouse and became a regular there. Then he received an unexpected break.

In 2002, the National Civil War Museum contacted him about playing the role of Lincoln for one of its fundraisers. Hayney accepted and began to research his new role, as any good actor would. He soon found that Lincoln fascinated him.

A short time later, Hayney began to look for a one-man play about Lincoln, one that spoke to him. He found it—“Mr. Lincoln”—by Herbert Mitgang. The one-man play begins at Ford’s Theater just as Lincoln is about to be assassinated. Lincoln sees his life in a series of flashbacks just as Booth pulls the trigger: from his early days as a rail-splitter to his latter years as a lawyer and politician.

Hayney presented “Mr. Lincoln” on Lincoln’s birthday and President’s Day at theaters in Carlisle and Harrisburg. As he continued to play the role, he began to wonder if he could work full-time as a Lincoln portrayer.

Jim Getty, the long-time Lincoln presenter from Gettysburg, became an early mentor to Hayney. After Hayney approached him, Getty explained the thorough research he had conducted for the role and allowed him to peruse his extensive library.

Getty also put him in touch with people and organizations that helped him make his start.

“Jim Getty is a terrific guy and was a tremendous help to me,” Hayney said.

Hayney started to build his own Lincoln library, which includes David Herbert Donald’s “Lincoln,” Harold Holzer’s “Lincoln President-Elect” and “Team of Rivals” by Doris Kearns Goodwin, among many other writings and biographies. Hayney purchased the complete collection of Lincoln’s writings and studied them extensively. He discovered that, the more he learned about the Great Emancipator, the more he admired him. 

“There is no point of diminishing returns with Lincoln,” Hayney states.  “The more I learn about him, the better he gets.”

Hayney turned his love for Lincoln into a career in 2005.  He now spends a lot of time at Gettysburg, performing or giving presentations at the Battle Theater, the Dobbin House and the Fairfield Inn, just outside of the city. He also speaks to many corporate and school groups. 

He explains that he prepares for his presentations by researching the group he will be speaking to and makes sure his knowledge of Lincoln coincides with their interests and their mission. Then he takes off his wedding ring—Lincoln never wore one—and puts on the mole. When he speaks to a group, he presses forward with a two-pronged attack.

“I always try to start out with humor,” Hayney says. “Lincoln was an extremely funny guy. Back in Illinois during his circuit-riding days, people would travel from miles around to hear him tell his stories at the taverns at night. He was almost a stand-up comedian.”

Once Hayney has his audience chuckling at one of his Lincoln stories, he hits them with a finishing punch. “When I get folks good and relaxed, then I sneak in some history lessons,” he says with a laugh.

In 2009, the National Civil War Museum contacted him about a project. The museum wanted Hayney to become the Lincoln that it displays on a daily basis. The “Meet Mr. Lincoln” video, which can be found both in the museum and on its online website, is Hayney’s portrayal of Lincoln answering questions about the Civil War, slavery and his presidency. 

Hayney traveled to Carnegie-Mellon University in Pittsburgh to film the project. “It was an exhausting experience,” he remembers. “We worked 12-hour days doing the filming.  I had to be at the top of my game every minute.”

But Hayney remains thrilled about the final product, which puts his talents on full display. He is grateful that the museum gave him such an opportunity.

“The folks at the museum—Wayne Motts, Trini Nye and Kate McDermott—do such great things and have been so supportive,” he said. “I love to go there whenever I can.”

Being a Lincoln presenter has given Hayney a wide range of opportunities. He performed at the National Portrait Gallery in Washington, D.C., on the day of President Obama’s first inauguration. He received the key to the town of Hummelstown and, earlier this year, was grand marshal for the Pennsylvania Farm Show. He even threw out the first pitch at a Harrisburg Senator’s baseball game.   

Hayney sometimes appears with other historical presenters, including a woman who plays the part of Mrs. Lincoln, a man who portrays the powerful abolitionist, Frederick Douglass and, of course, another presenter who portrays Lincoln’s favorite general, Ulysses Grant. On occasion, Hayney even gets on television. He recently completed a commercial for the History Channel.

When asked which of Lincoln’s speeches is his best, Hayney immediately points to the second inaugural address. He also considers Lincoln’s first inaugural speech important, simply because of the gravity of a nation in crisis. Naturally, Hayney admires the Gettysburg Address, as he feels the president’s “few appropriate remarks” were exactly right for the occasion.

“Of course, not everyone was thrilled with that speech,” Hayney chuckles. “Some folks didn’t like it at all, like the Harrisburg Patriot.” 

Hayney remains more than a little amused that the Patriot finally apologized for bashing Lincoln’s speech at Gettysburg as the “silly remarks of the President” that “shall be no more repeated or thought of.” Hayney acknowledges that pointing out the Patriot’s lack of vision gets him lots of laughs and applause. 

“When I point out that editorial, I always like to add that it’s no wonder that the Patriot is only now published three days a week,” he said, smiling. “People always burst out laughing and clapping about that line.”

Hayney readily admits he has had to change with the times. When he started out doing his Lincoln research, he usually bought books, many of them hardcover. Now, he downloads them and reads them on his Kindle. When he started out in 2005, he had a brochure, with his address and phone number. Now, he has a website where people can get all his contact information, as well as information, pictures and testimonies about his Lincoln presentation.

One thing that hasn’t changed is the support Hayney gets from his wife, Beverly.  Though she prefers to stay in the background, she clearly is very important to him.

“She is the love of my life,” he said. “We have been married 11 years, and I have loved every day.” Beverly is a nurse practitioner and works for the PinnacleHealth, where Hayney also volunteers one day a week.

When Hayney is asked how portraying Lincoln has touched his life, he is quick to answer. “Lincoln makes me a better person. Whether I am dressed like Lincoln or I am wearing a ball cap and T-shirt and just driving around town, I don’t want to do anything to denigrate his name.”   

Spend any amount of time with James Hayney talking about Abraham Lincoln, and his admiration for the man is bound to rub off on you.

You can find out more information about James Hayney at his website, www.lookingforalincoln.com. He also appears in the video, “Meet Mr. Lincoln,” at the National Civil War Museum and at the museum’s website.

 

 

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