Abraham Lincoln Gettysburg Address Analysis

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When people sit back and reminisce about the United States being one of the most prominent nations, they generally do not think that without one of the greatest presidents in the history of the United States, there could be chaos and uncivilized conditions. Without this president, our great nation could have been divided into two, the United States of America, and the Confederate States of America. Slavery, one of the most terrible forms of treatment imposed on a person, might still be in existence if it was not for our 16th president. Without Abraham Lincoln, no one would know, or even imagine where the country would be now. Abraham Lincoln was elected sixteenth president of the United Stated in the year 1860, defeating Douglas, John…show more content…
Aside from the end of slavery, it is not clear what Lincoln had in his mind for the former slaves in after the war. John Wilkes Booth shot Lincoln on April 14,1865; the president died the next morning. The job of the nation was then left for the Congress and Lincoln's successor, Vice President Andrew Johnson. The nation would need to experience a "new birth of freedom" so that "government of the people, by the people. for the people, shall not perish from the earth" Lincoln's call for a "new birth of freedom" was realized in the form of the three crucial constitutional amendments: the Thirteenth Amendment abolishing slavery, the Fourteenth Amendment's guarantees of due process and equal protection, and the Fifteenth Amendment's guarantee of the right to vote. Abraham Lincoln was committed to ending slavery as well as preserving the Union. In his first year in office, President Abraham Lincoln had stubbornly rejected the idea of abolishing slavery. But by 1862 he recognized that the best path to preserving the Union was by freeing the slaves. The Emancipation Proclamation played a central role in achieving this goal. It was the most revolutionary pronouncement ever signed by an American president, impacting four million black slaves and setting the nation's face toward the total abolition of slavery within three more
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