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America's 250th Anniversary

A Smithsonian magazine special report

An Illuminating New Museum Hidden Beneath the Lincoln Memorial Is Set to Open to the Public. Here’s What You Can Expect

night Lincoln
The Lincoln Memorial in Washington, D.C. Ramakrishna Gundra via Wikimedia Commons under CC BY-SA 4.0

In 2016, the National Park Service announced plans to transform the undercroft beneath the Lincoln Memorial into a new museum dedicated to the Washington, D.C. landmark. A decade later, the $69 million project is practically complete and tickets are available to reserve. Here’s what visitors have to look forward to ahead of its opening on June 25.

The new attraction is located in a part of the nation’s capital that’s been hidden in plain sight since the Lincoln Memorial was completed in 1922. Beneath the elegant marble columns of the neoclassical building is a 43,800-square-foot vault filled with 122 concrete columns providing structural support. This element of the design contributes to the sense of grandeur spectators experience when taking in the view of the memorial.

Cross section of the Lincoln Memorial showing the new undercroft exhibit area
Rendering of the new undercroft exhibition area NPS

“[The columns] are all here really just to raise Lincoln up and have him sitting up on the proverbial hill that you can see from the Capitol,” Sam Meyerhoff, the project’s program manager, tells NBC4 Washington’s Mark Segraves.

Up until now, the Lincoln Memorial’s undercroft has been strictly functional and off-limits to the public. That will change this summer when visitors are invited to learn about the structure from within its secret underbelly. The new 15,000-square-foot museum will feature exhibits highlighting both the memorial’s construction and its role in the country’s history in the century since. 

Major renovation to Lincoln Memorial adds museum | NBC4 Washington

In 1939, Black opera singer Marian Anderson performed a concert from the steps for 75,000 people after the Daughters of the American Revolution barred her from singing at Constitution Hall. Twenty-four years later, Martin Luther King Jr. delivered his famous “I Have a Dream Speech” from the Lincoln Memorial, further embedding the monument’s iconography in the story of America.

“You walk up today, you look at the statue, you look at the speeches,” Mike Litterst, spokesperson for National Mall operations under the National Park Service, tells DC News Now. “But you don’t understand the symbolism unless you have a really good guidebook with you or take the time. Now, with the museum, we’re going to point those features out.”

Rendering of floor of the immersive theater in the Lincoln Memorial undercroft with images of the memorial and its history projected onto the undercroft foundations
Rendering of an immersive theater space in the Lincoln Memorial undercroft  NPS

The undercroft museum also offers plenty for architecture buffs. Though visitors won’t be able to fully explore the space, its foundations will be visible through floor-to-ceiling panes of glass. The exhibition will extend into these inaccessible sections through multimedia content projected onto screens and the columns themselves.

The goal is to “try to make as much use of the space as possible,” Meyerhoff tells NBC4 Washington. “So that glass is serving a very critical component for the exhibition in making sure it’s successful.”

Did you know? Birthday celebrations

The completion of the Lincoln Memorial undercroft museum coincides with the 250th anniversary of America’s independence in 2026. Tourists in town for the semiquincentennial will have plenty of special attractions to check out, including the National Gallery of Art’s “Dear America” exhibition and the Smithsonian’s National Museum of American History’s display of 250 objects.
Tickets for timed entry became available starting on May 26. Visitors can reserve theirs either by calling 877‑444‑6777 or visiting recreation.gov. Same-day tickets will also be available from the Korean War Veterans Memorial kiosk when the museum opens on June 25.

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