The Emancipation Proclamation was issued in the middle of the Civil War by Abraham Lincoln. It was not intended to free all the slaves. It only freed the ones in the Confederate states, while the border states were not freed. Lincoln believed slavery was awful and morally wrong and wanted to help put an end to slavery once and for all. The Union issued this Proclamation to redefine the Civil War. Lincoln allowed slaves to cross over to the Union and join their army to help fight the Confederates. This helped increase the Union's population well above the South's and gave the Union the advantage. The main goal after the Proclamation was issued was to abolish slavery while uniting the country. This goal was achieved from the effects of Lincoln's
President Abraham Lincoln made further revisions to the Emancipation Proclamation and issued it on January 1, 1863 in efforts to free the slaves. I believe that President Lincoln issued the Emancipation Proclamation not for military reasons but for moral principles. President Lincoln issued the Emancipation Proclamation due to his belief that everyone
In this specific Proclamation, it was NOT at all for slavery, it was a war measure. “In a letter to his Treasury Secretary Salmon P. Chase, he admitted that the original proclamation had no legal justification, except as a military measure.” (37). It was also a way to continue trade with the Europeans because of their recent decision in abolishing slavery. The Europeans would not agree with Lincoln’s real agenda, being to continue slavery, so he used the Emancipation for that purpose as well.
Emancipation Proclamation is official document which is written by President Lincoln in 1863. Lincoln wanted to end civil war and reunite the nation, and Lincoln also wanted to end slavery. According to Lincoln’s Emancipation Proclamation all slaves would be declared forever free. It was a death note to slavery. Emancipation Proclamation By 1864 the country is soaked in the blood of its soldiers.
Between the start of the Civil War and the passing of the Emancipation Proclamation, opinions about emancipation took a turn for the better. During the Civil War, President Lincoln decided that the Union could use emancipation, or the freeing of slaves, as a weapon against the South and wrote the Emancipation Proclamation in September of 1862. The Emancipation Proclamation, put into effect on the first of January in 1863, was a document declaring the release of slaves from the cruel chains of slavery. In an October issue from 1861, the Sacramento Bee stated that the emancipation of slaves would only worsen things, because black people and white people can never live as equals. The superior race will always rise, and the lower race will
Lincoln’s message was delivered amidst the Civil War, therefore, it was imperative as to not anger the American public. Despite the expansive wording of the proclamation, it was in some ways very limited more so by the fact that the proclamation only applied to “states in rebellion against the United States.” Excluded were the border states between the Confederacy and the Union, as well as any territories taken from the C.S.A. Such was the case in Virginia, to which the proclamation would apply to, but excluded West Virginia who seceded from Virginia shortly after succeeding from the Union. Although providing many exceptions, the proclamation was concise and pleased everyone by addressing the problem at hand – slavery. With the delivery of the proclamation, the issue of slavery still remained unresolved long after the war had concluded.
By July 1862, the Union army was having an extremely difficult time gaining any victories or advances in the Civil War. After many, many losses to the Confederate Army, Lincoln was desperate to find a way to recruit soldiers that would be of help to the Union. After the bombardment of Fort Sumter, Lincoln’s fist concern was the preservation of the United States. Amrita Chakrabarti Myers, associate professor of history in the Indiana University Bloomington College of Arts and Science, stated that, “Lincoln was clear that this was not about slaves. It was about the Union and whatever he needed to do to save the Union, he would do.”
Northern freed slaves were encouraged to enlist on the basis that it was a citizen’s responsibility and they were now citizens charged with those responsibilities. Border state slaves, those who had not been immediately freed under the Proclamation were told they would be freed on the spot if they agreed to enlist on the side of the Union. This was a move to hasten the spread of slave freedom and was also a military action to grow the dwindling Union army and push the goal of the war. Though much of the Union army was not at first a friend to the idea, by Lincoln’s hand and encouraging words they came to the understanding that the eradication push was an intelligent move for the war, morally and militarily. By continuing to make the goal of abolition and the protection of the Union one in the same, Lincoln was ensuring that his people would stand behind him.
“As president, Lincoln could issue no such declaration; as commander in chief of the armies and navies of the United States he could issue directions only as to the territory within his lines; but the Emancipation Proclamation applied only to territory outside of his lines,”This quote shows how Lincoln could not issue a declaration like that because of his position as Commander in Chief he could only do so much of the armies and navies of the U.S. “The Emancipation Proclamation did more than lift the war to the level of a crusade for human freedom. It brought some substantial practical results, because it allowed the Union to recruit Black soldiers,” It helped people of color get out of slavery but they did have to help fight in the civil war. “Emancipation would redefine the Civil War, turning it from a struggle to preserve the Union to one focused on ending slavery, and set a decisive course for how the nation would be reshaped after that historic conflict,” The Civil War helped end slavery and it also helped decide what our nation today would turn out like in the future. The Emancipation Proclamation that Lincoln created only freed so many slaves in the long run but did help out to end
September 22 marks if Abraham Lincoln’s preliminary Emancipation Proclamation, in which he declared that as of January 1, 1863, all slaves in states in rebellion against the Union will be forever free. President Lincoln once said in his speech,”If the slavers were not wrong, nothing had wrong.” The problem was when he saw the time when he was the lawyer that the Constitution of protecting slavers in United States had already existed, he went on the struggling throughout the 1800s and 1900s the North were not the majority that the Emancipation should be goal of the Union. And actually there were fears that the soldiers realized even he could not get out to a congressional law that he could possibly created on his comment sheet from his war power,
Whether or not this classification of the Emancipation Proclamation accurately defined one of Lincoln’s main objectives for the proclamation, or merely was to provide constitutional justification for the proclamation, there is no denying the effectiveness of the proclamation in weakening the south. Upon the activation of the proclamation on January 1st 1863, the result of the proclamation was extremely prevalent. The south went absolutely haywire as slaves fled their respective plantations to head north, newly invigorated at the prospect of legal freedom, leaving empty and unmanned plantations in their wake. In many places in the south, slave labor was the thing that allowed free white men to take up arms and go to war against the Union, however, without the slave labor keeping the farms running back home, many of those free white men had to return home to assess and/or replace the void of labor that the slaves had left behind in their flight. As General-in-Chief Henry Halleck explained, “Every slave withdrawn from the enemy is the equivalent of a white man put hours de combat.”
From the beginning of his administration, Abraham Lincoln got a lot of pressure from those who supported the abolition of slavery and radical Republicans to issue an Emancipation Proclamation. At that time, Abraham Lincoln was debating upon linking abolition to the war. On July 17th, 1862, the Congress passed the Second Confiscation Act that gave freedom to the salves, who were owned by the supporters of the Confederacy. Thus, it was the signal that Lincoln waited to issue the declaration (Woog, 2009, p. 40). Emancipation Proclamation was an executive order issued by President Abraham Lincoln that freed the slaves in those states that were in rebellion.
In 1863, President Lincoln had the Emancipation Proclamation declaring “all persons held as slaves within any States, or designated part of a State, the people whereof shall then be in rebellion against the United States, shall be then, thenceforward, and forever free.” However, the Emancipation Proclamation did not end slavery in the nation it was more of a freedom for a slave where slavery was free emotionally but not physically. Many slaves knew they were free but their owner convinced them to continue working out of loyalty and because they had nowhere to go. Some slaves didn’t believe they were free and they believed that if they left their owner that their safety wasn’t guaranteed. The proclamation didn’t free all slaves
The Emancipation Proclamation opposed discrimination. It allowed black slaves to serve in the army and get other jobs, or continue to work on plantations, as employees making money. The Proclamation didn't affect slaves in southern areas already under Union control. The Emancipation Proclamation helped destroy the issue of slavery. Slavery was completely crushed with the 13TH amendment.
After reading and reviewing many online articles it came to my attention that The Emancipation Proclamation was a very important issue in the 1800s. To be honest I knew very little about it all I knew is what I was told in high school. Meanwhile I read an article called the Emancipation Proclamation that gave me plenty knowledge about this topic. I found that the Emancipation Proclamation was important because it was issues by President Lincoln as an attempt to free slaves. However this goes into more depth than just freeing slaves.
repeated his reasoning for war was to not abolish slavery, but to completely save the Union. Thus, the war had not begun due to slave soil and free soil, but it was a war for the Union, with slaveholders on both sides, and proslavery supporters in the North. In Abraham Lincoln's letter to Horace Greeley in 1862, Lincoln stated he believed the Union could be saved without destroying slavery. To calm the northern anti-slavery forces, Abraham Lincoln used his constitutional powers to issue what is known as the Emancipation Proclamation, which slowly freed slaves who presided in rebellious states, but he did not issue the Emancipation to the border states, which he did to ultimately keep them from succeeding from the Union. These Border States were important to winning the war, because of their location and population.