Thursday, November 14, 2019
The Emancipation Proclamation :: essays research papers
 The Emancipation Proclamation           The emancipation proclamation was issued by Abraham Lincoln on January 1,  1863, during the American Civil War, declaring all "slaves within any State, or  designated part of a State... then... in rebellion,... shall be then,  thenceforward, and forever free." The states affected were enumerated in the  proclamation; specifically exempted were slaves in parts of the South then held  by Union armies. Lincoln's issuance of the Emancipation Proclamation marked a  radical change in his policy.       After out break of the Civil War, the slavery issue was made acute by  the flight to Union lines of large numbers of slaves who volunteered to fight  for there freedom and that of there fellow slaves. In these circumstances, a  strict application of established policy would have required return of fugitive  slaves to their masters.       Abolitionists had long been urging Lincoln to free all slaves, and  public opinion suported that view. Lincoln moved slowly and cautiously nonethe  less; on March 13, 1862, the federal government fforbade all Union Army officers  to return fugitive slaves, thus annulling in effect the fugitive slave laws. On  April 10, on Lincoln's initiative, congress declared the federal government  would compenste slave owners who freed their slaves. All slaves in the District  of Columbia were freed in this way on April 16, 1862 . On June 19, 1862,  Congress enacted a measure prohibiting slavery in United States territories,  thus defying the supreme court decision in the Dred Scott case, which ruled that  Congress was powerless to regulate slavery in the territories.       Finaly, after the union victory in the battle of antietam, Lincoln  issued a preliminary proclamation on September 22, declaring his intention of  promulgating another proclamathion in 100 days, freeing the slaves in the states  deemed in rebellion at that time.  					    
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