Custer House - Fort Abraham Lincoln Park
Tours of this historic home and museum, which has ties to General Custer, also include views of the Missouri River.
Tours of this historic home and museum, which has ties to General Custer, also include views of the Missouri River.
The nine-thousand square-foot Gettysburg Hotel started its run as a tavern on what is now Lincoln Square.
This church was originally established in 1813. Lincoln attended here on the day of the Gettysburg Address and Eisenhower was a member of this church.
The stately Gettysburg Lincoln Railroad Station stands tall over downtown Gettysburg to tell the stories of a prosperous town ravaged by war and raised by the determination of its citizens.
While postwar America struggled to make a place for its African American citizens, a group called the Sons of Good Will created the Lincoln Cemetery in 1867 to ensure "the proper burial of Gettysburg's African American citizens and Civil War veterans."
The family home of the Lincoln's before they left for Washington, D.C. This is the only home that President Lincoln owned.
The center of Gettysburg's Diamond and roundabout.
The Peterson House is located across the street from Ford's Theater and is the house in which President Abraham Lincoln died after being shot in the Ford's Theater.
Known as the location where Abraham Lincoln stayed and finished the Gettysburg Address, the Wills House sits on the square of Gettysburg.
The final resting place of the 16th President, Abraham Lincoln.