As the president with arguably the most monuments, tributes, statues, and memorials in American history, it is no surprise that Abraham Lincoln's Tomb is a grand piece of work. What is a bit surprising however is the odd compulsion to rub the 16th president's nose for good luck that seems to come over visitors to his gravesite.
Finished in 1874, the towering tomb comprises a tall central tower atop the squat mausoleum building that holds the president's remains, all made of the same brilliant granite. Four large bronze statues of soldiers and infantrymen surround the central obelisk each featuring ornate stonework at their bases as well. At the foot of the tomb is a large bronze replica of Lincoln's head, cast from the bronze statue at the capitol. It is the nose of this replica bust that visitors have taken to rubbing for good luck, buffing the schnoz to a golden shine. No one is quite sure how this superstitious habit began, but today thousands of visitors from across the country make a special point to rub the nose of the man who ended the Civil War.
In addition to President Lincoln, whose remains are kept in a grand central sarcophagus, the tomb holds the bodies of his wife and three of his children in subterranean stone vaults. Lincoln too was once kept in an underground tomb after a pair of criminal masterminds attempted to steal his bones for ransom, but he was moved back to his showy, above-ground casket in later years.
Visitors to the grave can enter the tomb to take a peek at Lincoln's enviable coffin, but trying to rub it is probably bad luck. Stick to the nose.
