LAD #20: Lincoln's Second Inaugural Address

Summarize:

Lincoln begins by recognizing that the state of the United States has changed very little since his first inaugural address four years earlier. However, he then touches upon how the difference between the two events is that at the first address the majority of the country was attempting to avoid a civil war, but by the time Lincoln gave his second inaugural address a war had begun. Additionally, Lincoln addresses the main cause of disunion in America, slavery. He recognizes the many people enslaved in the United States, but laments the fact that rather than being distributed evenly throughout the country, slaves are concentrated in the South, the only area by this time that supported slavery. Lincoln also acknowledges how both sides of the war did not expect the war to drag on as long as it had and states that all participants were trying to attempt to end the war, but neither side was willing to back down. Finally, Lincoln advised his country to rebuild and fix the tensions between its inhabitants.
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Abraham Lincoln's Second Inaugural Address
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Neutrality Efforts in America
In many subsequent wars. such as WWI, WWII, and others, America has elected to keep the peace and union in their country. This is similar to Lincoln's Second Inaugural Address because Lincoln attempted to spread these same anti-war sentiments to reenact a tradition of peace in America.

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