Summarize:
When Lincoln penned the Emancipation Proclamation he remembers the past words of America's founding fathers and relates their statements to the current issues over the freedoms of slaves. Therefore, Abraham Lincoln uses his power as President to designate the meaning of the civil war and to establish what the Union was fighting for, the freedom of all inhabitants of the United States, for that is what the country was built upon. Lincoln also lists the states that are rebelling against the rule of America. The Emancipation Proclamation also served as a call to action for slaves, as he ordered that as free people they are now able to fight for the safety of the Union and, therefore, their newfound freedom. Lincoln sums up this proclamation by attributing its necessity to the freedoms expressed in the Constitution, the needs of the military, and stated by God.
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Abraham Lincoln's Emancipation Proclamation |
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African American Troops in WWI |
In WWI many African Americans elected to fight once America pushed aside their neutrality. Similar to former slaves' efforts in the Civil War for freedom, these black soldiers fought for equality and rights. By helping the nation they hoped to receive respect and gratitude from their white counterparts.
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