 My favorite object in our collection is Dolly Massen's engagement ring, which was given to her by husband James Madison. It's a really personal item. It shows their private life. Someone who's more known for their political and social impact as James's father of the Constitution. Dolly is one of the most popular first ladies in history. And so we don't really hear about their private lives, which is... My favorite object in our collection is our life-size bronze sculpture of President Lincoln and a horse, which is out in front of the cottage. It's my favorite object because it symbolizes his commute that he made between the cottage and the White House during his days at the Soldiers' Home. But it also made him accessible to this commute by meeting with wounded soldiers, contraband in their camps, and then everyday citizens. And the sculpture is made like that as well. My favorite object is a set of 18 campaigned plates, and they were gifts to President Wilson from the King and Queen of Belgium in 1919. And they're my favorite because there's a really sweet story that Wilson was examining each campaigned plate with magnified glass. So we know that they meant something to him, and they also depict sites that were damaged or were worn, so they're especially important. My favorite object in our collection is a pair of yucca sandals, and they're sandals that are woven with a yucca plant. And they're really old shoes that our ancestors wore. We don't wear them anymore. They're really unique. We only have one pair. My favorite object is Daniel Chester French's six-foot vinyl plaster model for the figure of Abraham Lincoln for the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, D.C. My favorite object in the inventory is the parxinoscope. It's a transitional piece, an ocean picture, a very early attempt at capturing ocean images. And I like to interpret it because it's fun to point out that this is a wireless form of entertainment. It also, basically, foreshadows new technology for its era. My favorite object is a director-spiled chair that's in the collection of Philippine Alley. I like this chair because of the simple lines and design, and it has the napolonic v in the pattern. And as many objects as Philippine I have, this is one of my favorite ones. My favorite object from our collection is a 1920s turkey curry powder can. It's one of my favorites because I was recently discovered in one of the ceilings in the building, so points to the fact that our building is still a kind of ongoing archaeological excavation. And it helps me to think about the ways in which late 19th and 20th century European immigrants participated in mass-consumer culture. An interesting object in the Drayton Hall collection is something that we once thought was an indigo brand. It has the name Drayton on it. We had thought that it was used for stamping bags of indigo, but some recent research has determined that it was actually used on the enslaved workers at Drayton Hall to actually brand flesh. So it's a new discovery for us and one that's causing us to rethink and change our excavation.