Why History?
History as a Management Tool
What makes us different?
Workshop Types
Individual Training
Overview/Register Online
Schedule/Directions
FAQ's
Group Training
Find a Workshop
Schedules
Packages
Workshop Themes
Lessons from Lincoln
Lessons from Lewis & Clark
Lessons from
Eisenhower & Churchill

Lessons from Little Bighorn
Lessons from the Sea
Lessons from Pearl Harbor
Lessons from Fredricksburg
Lessons from Gettysburg
The Many Faces of Leadership
Lessons from Civil War Navies
Lessons from Antietam
Who We Are
About
Client Roster
Press Coverage
Faculty
Senior Faculty
Workshop Faculty
Newsletters
Contact
Home

Print Page


Individual Leadership Training

INDIVIDUAL TRAINING

At the request of countless customers, the popular Lessons from Lincoln workshop is now open for individual enrollments. No more waiting lists, no more group decisions on selecting a date to fit your department.

Our 2012 Spring Class Summary - May 1-3

LEADERSHIP FOR TIMES OF CHANGE:
LESSONS FROM LINCOLN

The Gettysburg Hotel
One Lincoln Square
Gettysburg, Pennsylvania

Register on-line today for this inspirational program, which has been packaged to include all of your logistical, as well as curriculum arrangements. Just mark the date on your calendar, register on-line, and meet us in Gettysburg.

REGISTRATION FEES

Click here to Register Online

$2,700 per person.

Registration includes program, tours, Kindle e-book reader with your workshop readings, 2 nights in the Gettysburg Hotel, and all meal events listed in the program.

  • Class size is limited to 25 people.
  • Payment will be accepted by credit card, purchase order, and check.
  • Space is limited, so register early.

Included in your Registration Fee

Your own Kindle e-book reader, pre-loaded with advance readings and a confirmation package for this workshop

  • No books to carry around, as your Kindle will contain the advance readings for this program
  • Confirmation letter, directions to the hotel, and class schedule will be on your Kindle.
  • A copy of Lincoln on Leadership, by Donald Phillips, is yours to continue your study of Lincoln after the workshop. A Kindle copy will be downloaded to your e-reader.

 

Two nights lodging at the Gettysburg Hotel, Est. 1797, and located in the heart of downtown Gettysburg, on Lincoln Square.

  • Each room supplied with a dataport for computer hookups
  • Hotel’s business center has fax and photocopying services
  • There are two on-site restaurants and room service available
  • Complimentary morning coffee and newspapers are available.
  • A room reservation will be made in your name when you sign up for the workshop.

Opening Reception at the historic Lincoln Train Station, where Lincoln arrived the day before delivering his immortal Gettysburg Address

  • The newly-restored Lincoln Train Station is just half a block from the Gettysburg Hotel.
  • Private reception begins the program for workshop participants.
  • A Licensed Town Guide will share the history of this structure and the part it played in Lincoln’s visit to Gettysburg in 1863.
  • Meet the other workshop participants and begin networking in this delightful facility.

Hot buffet breakfast is yours in the hotel dining room each morning of the workshop (see program schedule for details of meals)

Group Lunch on the day of the tour will keep activities running on schedule.

Guided battlefield tour

  • Your host is Gary Kross, Licensed Battlefield Guide, for a half day tour, focusing on key leaders who made a difference in the outcome of the Battle of Gettysburg, July 1-3, 1863
  • Bus tour covers key stops in the unfolding story of the battle.
  • Accommodations can be made for special needs

Dinner at the Dobbin House Restaurant and Tavern, site of an Underground Railroad stop

  • Gettysburg’s oldest home, built by the Reverend Alexander Dobbin in 1776, is listed
    on the National Register of Historic Places
  • Winner of Mobil Guide’s highest area rating, the Dobbin House is known for great food and high quality service.
  • Enjoy relaxed dining in a historic setting.
  • Visit the secret Underground Railroad stop, where runaway slaves were hidden, as they made their way north to freedom.

©2012 Historic Leadership Training™/Tigrett Corp.
Site Map : Legal