WORLD> Newsmaker
New penny chronicles Lincoln's humble beginnings
(Agencies)
Updated: 2009-02-13 15:08

HODGENVILLE, Ky. -- The first of four new pennies chronicling Abraham Lincoln's rise from a small Kentucky cabin will be put into circulation Thursday to honor the 16th president's 200th birthday.

 

This image provided by the US Mint shows the newly redesigned one-cent coin (penny) in 50 years which will be presented Friday Feb. 12, 2009 at the National Park Service's Abraham Lincoln Birthplace National Historic Site, in Hodgenville, Kentucky. [Agencies] 

Related readings:
 Obama marks Lincoln bicentennial at US Capitol
 From kids to Obama, US marks Lincoln's 200th
 Exhibits, events mark Lincoln bicentennial Feb. 12
 Obamas, Bidens enjoy Lincoln Memorial concert

The coin's front is unchanged, but the reverse depicts a tiny log cabin, representing the one-room dwelling where Lincoln was born near Hodgenville, Kentucky.

The new one-cent piece is being unveiled by the US Mint as part of Lincoln's bicentennial celebration, being held Thursday morning near his birthplace.

The remaining coins, set for release later this year, show other phases of Honest Abe's life: a young man reading while sitting on a log during his formative years in Indiana; Lincoln the state legislator speaking in front of the Illinois capitol; and the unfinished dome of the US Capitol.