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Success Stories

Over the years, Spirit Enterprise has been actively involved with inspiring businesses and exciting personal achievements. Here you will find links to some of our shared success stories: challenges both physical and intellectual, local and global.

Mr. Lincoln's Virtual LibraryMR. LINCOLN'S VIRTUAL LIBRARY
Mr. Lincoln's Virtual Library
highlights two collections at the Library  of Congress that illuminate the life of Abraham Lincoln (1809-1865), the  sixteenth president of the United States. The Abraham Lincoln Papers housed in the Manuscript Division contain approximately 20,000 items including  correspondence and papers accumulated primarily during Lincoln's presidency.This project is being supported by a generous gift from Donald G. Jones, Terri L. Jones, and The Jones Family Foundation.

DIGITIZED LINCOLN LEGAL PAPERS PRESENTED TO LIBRARY OF CONGRESS
An five-person Illinois delegation led by Lura Lynn Ryan, wife of Illinois Governor George H. Ryan, presented the "Lincoln Legal Papers DVD Edition" to the Library of Congress in a ceremony held February 11, 2000 at the Library's Madison Building in Washington, D.C. The DVD is a digitized collection of more than 100,000 records associated with Abraham Lincoln's legal career from 1836 to 1861 and complements the Lincoln materials in the Library of Congress, many of which are available on-line in a Web presentation called "Mr. Lincoln's Virtual Library."
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THOMAS World Wide Web THOMAS.LOC.GOV
Acting under the directive of the leadership of the 104th
Congress to make Federal legislative information freely available to the Internet public, a Library of Congress team brought the THOMAS World Wide Web system online in  January 1995, at the inception of the 104th Congress. Enhancements in the types of legislative data available, as well as  in search and display capabilities, have been continuously added.

The Race Is On!AROUND THE WORLD
In 1908, when automobiles were in the infancy of a long and increasingly sophisticated life span, the seemingly preposterous suggestion was made that a race between American and foreign cars be run from New York's Times Square to Paris.  Surrounded by a throng of 250,000 spectators, the French came to the starting line with three entries, Italy, Germany, and the United States with each one.

The route of these six primitive open behemoths was made from New York to Chicago, across the West, to the Pacific Coast (before accomplished by only a few automobiles in the summertime), aboard ship to Japan, through the vast reaches of Siberia and Russia, and finally, over the european eontinent to Paris.

 
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