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Constitution Day: Role of Government

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The Power of the Pen

 

Photos by Kevin Lamarque / Reuters. Keystone Pipline signing. www.http://www.nbcnews.com/politics/white-house/here-s-full-list-donald-trump-s-executive-orders-n720796

Emancipation Proclamation

"Emancipation Proclamation"

The Emancipation of the Negroes, January, 1863 - the past and the future.

Artist: Thomas Nast

 Emancipation Proclamation by President Abraham Lincoln on January 1, 1863.

Lincoln had been initially cautious about emancipating the slaves. Before becoming President, he had insisted that there was no federal authority to abolish slavery in states where it already existed. His goal was to stop its spread into the Western territories.

Once the Civil War began, President Lincoln rescinded an emancipation order issued by Union General John C. Frémont in Missouri. The president feared that the border states (slave states still loyal to the Union: Missouri, Kentucky, Maryland, and Delaware) might join the Confederacy. He did, though, make several unsuccessful attempts to convince the border states to free their slaves on a plan of gradual, compensated emancipation.

In the summer of 1862, Lincoln informed his cabinet that he would issue an emancipation order. His secretary of state, William Seward, convinced him to wait until after a major Union victory in order to announce the policy from a position of military strength, so that it would not seem like an act of desperation. Accordingly, after Confederate general Robert E. Lee's invasion of the North was repelled at the battle of Antietam in September 1862, Lincoln issued his Preliminary Emancipation Proclamation.

The document declared that if the Confederacy did not cease its rebellion by the first of the year, then all the slaves in Confederate-held territory would be freed. It excluded slaves in the Union border states and Southern areas controlled by the Union military on that date. The policy was aimed at inducing the Confederacy to surrender rather than lose their slaves, and it was based on what Lincoln considered to be a president's augmented constitutional authority during a national emergency.

 

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Executive Orders

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Contact:
Phone 404-978-2016
Fax 404-978-2113