LAD #16: Lincoln's Gettysburg Address

Summarize:

President Abraham Lincoln recognizes that America was founded on the concept of universal freedom and equality. He recognizes the Civil War as a testament to the strength of a nation based on individual freedoms. Lincoln states that if they make it through this conflict they will be able to prove the tenacity of the new country. Lincoln later recognizes the many who died in the battle of Gettysburg and resolves to overcome the tragic amount of loss and dedicate the grief to further their fight for universal freedom.

The Gettysburg Address
Emancipation Proclamation
Abraham Lincoln's Emancipation Proclamation was a continuation of the ideas he expressed in the Gettysburg Address, and was more of a result of the feelings expressed in Lincoln's most famous eulogy ever given. These feelings were overcome with the freedom of enslaved individuals in America. The Emancipation Proclamation was a final statement made by Lincoln that granted this freedom.

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