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  • Lincoln's '63 New Year's

    Foner's one of the best . . .

    The Emancipation of Abe Lincoln

    By ERIC FONER

    ONE hundred and fifty years ago, on Jan. 1, 1863, Abraham Lincoln presided over the annual White House New Year’s reception. Late that afternoon, he retired to his study to sign the Emancipation Proclamation. When he took up his pen, his hand was shaking from exhaustion. Briefly, he paused — “I do not want it to appear as if I hesitated,” he remarked. Then Lincoln affixed a firm signature to the document.

    Like all great historical transformations, emancipation was a process, not a single event. It arose from many causes and was the work of many individuals. It began at the outset of the Civil War, when slaves sought refuge behind Union lines. It did not end until December 1865, with the ratification of the 13th Amendment, which irrevocably abolished slavery throughout the nation.

    But the Emancipation Proclamation was the crucial turning point in this story. In a sense, it embodied a double emancipation: for the slaves, since it ensured that if the Union emerged victorious, slavery would perish, and for Lincoln himself, for whom it marked the abandonment of his previous assumptions about how to abolish slavery and the role blacks would play in post-emancipation American life.

    There is no reason to doubt the sincerity of Lincoln’s statement in 1864 that he had always believed slavery to be wrong. During the first two years of the Civil War, despite insisting that the conflict’s aim was preservation of the Union, he devoted considerable energy to a plan for ending slavery inherited from prewar years. Emancipation would be undertaken by state governments, with national financing. It would be gradual, owners would receive monetary compensation and emancipated slaves would be encouraged to find a homeland outside the United States — this last idea known as “colonization.”

    Lincoln’s plan sought to win the cooperation of slave holders in ending slavery. As early as November 1861, he proposed it to political leaders in Delaware, one of the four border states (along with Kentucky, Maryland and Missouri) that remained in the Union. Delaware had only 1,800 slaves; the institution was peripheral to the state’s economy. But Lincoln found that even there, slave holders did not wish to surrender their human property. Nonetheless, for most of 1862, he avidly promoted his plan to the border states and any Confederates who might be interested.

    Lincoln also took his proposal to black Americans. In August 1862, he met with a group of black leaders from Washington. He seemed to blame the presence of blacks in America for the conflict: “but for your race among us there could not be war.” He issued a powerful indictment of slavery — “the greatest wrong inflicted on any people” — but added that, because of racism, blacks would never achieve equality in America. “It is better for us both, therefore, to be separated,” he said. But most blacks refused to contemplate emigration from the land of their birth.

    In the summer of 1862, a combination of events propelled Lincoln in a new direction. Slavery was disintegrating in parts of the South as thousands of slaves ran away to Union lines. With the war a stalemate, more Northerners found themselves agreeing with the abolitionists, who had insisted from the outset that slavery must become a target. Enthusiasm for enlistment was waning in the North. The Army had long refused to accept black volunteers, but the reservoir of black manpower could no longer be ignored. In response, Congress moved ahead of Lincoln, abolishing slavery in the District of Columbia, authorizing the president to enroll blacks in the Army and freeing the slaves of pro-Confederate owners in areas under military control. Lincoln signed all these measures that summer.

    The hallmark of Lincoln’s greatness was his combination of bedrock principle with open-mindedness and capacity for growth. That summer, with his preferred approach going nowhere, he moved in the direction of immediate emancipation. He first proposed this to his cabinet on July 22, but Secretary of State William H. Seward persuaded him to wait for a military victory, lest it seem an act of desperation.

    Soon after the Union victory at Antietam in September, Lincoln issued the Preliminary Emancipation Proclamation, a warning to the Confederacy that if it did not lay down its arms by Jan. 1, he would declare the slaves “forever free.”

    Lincoln did not immediately abandon his earlier plan. His annual message to Congress, released on Dec. 1, 1862, devoted a long passage to gradual, compensated abolition and colonization. But in the same document, without mentioning the impending proclamation, he indicated that a new approach was imperative: “The dogmas of the quiet past, are inadequate to the stormy present,” he wrote. “We must disenthrall our selves, and then we shall save our country.” Lincoln included himself in that “we.” On Jan. 1, he proclaimed the freedom of the vast majority of the nation’s slaves.

    The Emancipation Proclamation is perhaps the most misunderstood of the documents that have shaped American history. Contrary to legend, Lincoln did not free the nearly four million slaves with a stroke of his pen. It had no bearing on slaves in the four border states, since they were not in rebellion. It also exempted certain parts of the Confederacy occupied by the Union. All told, it left perhaps 750,000 slaves in bondage. But the remaining 3.1 million, it declared, “are, and henceforward shall be free.”

    The proclamation did not end slavery in the United States on the day it was issued. Indeed, it could not even be enforced in most of the areas where it applied, which were under Confederate control. But it ensured the eventual death of slavery — assuming the Union won the war. Were the Confederacy to emerge victorious, slavery, in one form or another, would undoubtedly have lasted a long time.

    A military order, whose constitutional legitimacy rested on the president’s war powers, the proclamation often disappoints those who read it. It is dull and legalistic; it contains no soaring language enunciating the rights of man. Only at the last minute, at the urging of Treasury Secretary Salmon P. Chase, an abolitionist, did Lincoln add a conclusion declaring the proclamation an “act of justice.”

    Nonetheless, the proclamation marked a dramatic transformation in the nature of the Civil War and in Lincoln’s own approach to the problem of slavery. No longer did he seek the consent of slave holders. The proclamation was immediate, not gradual, contained no mention of compensation for owners, and made no reference to colonization.

    In it, Lincoln addressed blacks directly, not as property subject to the will of others but as men and women whose loyalty the Union must earn. For the first time, he welcomed black soldiers into the Union Army; over the next two years some 200,000 black men would serve in the Army and Navy, playing a critical role in achieving Union victory. And Lincoln urged freed slaves to go to work for “reasonable wages” — in the United States. He never again mentioned colonization in public.

    Having made the decision, Lincoln did not look back. In 1864, with casualties mounting, there was talk of a compromise peace. Some urged Lincoln to rescind the proclamation, in which case, they believed, the South could be persuaded to return to the Union. Lincoln refused. Were he to do so, he told one visitor, “I should be damned in time and eternity.”

    Wartime emancipation may have settled the fate of slavery, but it opened another vexing question: the role of former slaves in American life. Colonization had allowed its proponents to talk about abolition without having to confront this issue; after all, the black population would be gone. After Jan. 1, 1863, Lincoln for the first time began to think seriously of the United States as a biracial society.

    While not burdened with the visceral racism of many of his white contemporaries, Lincoln shared some of their prejudices. He had long seen blacks as an alien people who been unjustly uprooted from their homeland and were entitled to freedom, but were not an intrinsic part of American society. During his Senate campaign in Illinois, in 1858, he had insisted that blacks should enjoy the same natural rights as whites (life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness), but he opposed granting them legal equality or the right to vote.

    By the end of his life, Lincoln’s outlook had changed dramatically. In his last public address, delivered in April 1865, he said that in reconstructing Louisiana, and by implication other Southern states, he would “prefer” that limited black suffrage be implemented. He singled out the “very intelligent” (educated free blacks) and “those who serve our cause as soldiers” as most worthy. Though hardly an unambiguous embrace of equality, this was the first time an American president had endorsed any political rights for blacks.

    And then there was his magnificent second inaugural address of March 4, 1865, in which Lincoln ruminated on the deep meaning of the war. He now identified the institution of slavery — not the presence of blacks, as in 1862 — as its fundamental cause. The war, he said, might well be a divine punishment for the evil of slavery. And God might will it to continue until all the wealth the slaves had created had been destroyed, and “until every drop of blood drawn with the lash, shall be paid by another drawn by the sword.” Lincoln was reminding Americans that violence did not begin with the firing on Fort Sumter, S.C., in April 1861. What he called “this terrible war” had been preceded by 250 years of the terrible violence of slavery.

    In essence, Lincoln asked the nation to confront unblinkingly the legacy of slavery. What were the requirements of justice in the face of this reality? What would be necessary to enable former slaves and their descendants to enjoy fully the pursuit of happiness? Lincoln did not live to provide an answer. A century and a half later, we have yet to do so.

    Eric Foner is a professor of history at Columbia and the author, most recently, of “The Fiery Trial: Abraham Lincoln and American Slavery.”

  • #2
    Re: Lincoln's '63 New Year's

    I like how the reality of the Emancipation Proclamation was underplayed: it was ultimately an attempt to attack the South economically.

    The article skims over the fact that the EP only applied to the states in secession. It is as 'revolutionary' as any hostile power 'recognizing' rebellious minorities in their opponent's lands.

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    • #3
      Re: Lincoln's '63 New Year's

      Originally posted by c1ue View Post
      I like how the reality of the Emancipation Proclamation was underplayed: it was ultimately an attempt to attack the South economically.

      The article skims over the fact that the EP only applied to the states in secession. It is as 'revolutionary' as any hostile power 'recognizing' rebellious minorities in their opponent's lands.
      Uncharacteristic comments by c1ue.

      Contrary to legend, Lincoln did not free the nearly four million slaves with a stroke of his pen. It had no bearing on slaves in the four border states, since they were not in rebellion. It also exempted certain parts of the Confederacy occupied by the Union. All told, it left perhaps 750,000 slaves in bondage.
      That's skimming over? It was an article, not a treatise.

      Attacking the South economically wasn't fair play in a civil war?

      The ACW is often cited as the first modern war, meaning, among other things, Total War, where the manpower and productive capacity made a battlefield resolution all but impossible. Years of wearing down the enemy was the new normal.

      Fair? When does a central government play fair when threatened with its existence? To think otherwise is naive. It takes little group autonomy today to draw a government response. Some are tolerated, like the Amish. Some are crushed, like the Davidians.

      Half the country seceding from the Union are not "opponent's lands" where a "rebellious minority" resides.

      Two radically different economic systems - one semi-feudal with a free and slave mixed working class, the other a burgeoning capital & labor economy, were a national contradiction brought to the boiling point by the western land question. Free or slave? The Emancipation Proclamation is an important event in that resolution process. It neither created it nor ended it. The triumph of industrial capitalism was as revolutionary in America as it was in Europe. It just had baggage of a different type.

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Lincoln's '63 New Year's

        Originally posted by don
        That's skimming over? It was an article, not a treatise.
        Yes, because Lincoln did not apply the Emancipation Proclamation to the North at all - an area which he fully controlled as the duly elected executive.

        The article as written makes it seem that the 750K slaves were in the border states or in the areas of the South occupied by the North, when in fact the majority were in New England, Illinois or New York.

        Thus to say that the Emancipation Proclamation was intended as anything moral as opposed to a hard headed wartime strategem is a fabrication.

        Originally posted by don
        Attacking the South economically wasn't fair play in a civil war?
        Perfectly fair play, but far from a big moral stand.

        For one thing, isn't it totally obvious that the best way to attack the South economically would be to give its gigantic slave labor force both a haven and a legal justification to flee?

        If so, why then was the EP so groundbreaking and unusual?

        Originally posted by don
        The ACW is often cited as the first modern war, meaning, among other things, Total War, where the manpower and productive capacity made a battlefield resolution all but impossible. Years of wearing down the enemy was the new normal.

        Fair? When does a central government play fair when threatened with its existence? To think otherwise is naive. It takes little group autonomy today to draw a government response. Some are tolerated, like the Amish. Some are crushed, like the Davidians.

        Half the country seceding from the Union are not "opponent's lands" where a "rebellious minority" resides.

        Two radically different economic systems - one semi-feudal with a free and slave mixed working class, the other a burgeoning capital & labor economy, were a national contradiction brought to the boiling point by the western land question. Free or slave? The Emancipation Proclamation is an important event in that resolution process. It neither created it nor ended it. The triumph of industrial capitalism was as revolutionary in America as it was in Europe. It just had baggage of a different type.
        I think you're engaging in some other argument - nowhere have I said the EP was either unfair or unjustified.

        What I've said is that the acclamation attached to the EP as some form of magical elevation in moral behavior is complete crap.

        To say that it was a step in the right direction is equally crap: the victorious North could hardly re-enslave the emancipated Southern slaves, and equally could not maintain a 'separate but unequal' status of slavery in the areas which the EP did not cover - once the Civil War was won.

        So where exactly was a principled stand made? What exactly did Lincoln do that any other remotely intelligent person in his place would not have done?

        He wrote nice speeches, but ultimately as a leader he had very little to distinguish himself by.

        Strike you like any other President?
        Last edited by c1ue; January 04, 2013, 02:41 PM.

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: Lincoln's '63 New Year's

          What I've said is that the acclamation attached to the EP as some form of magical elevation in moral behavior is complete crap.
          That's what you said? I must not be reading between the lines, though I agree it was a hard nosed wartime decision. Morality play little or no part in power politics.

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: Lincoln's '63 New Year's

            Look, it is time for the media and government to make a hero out of Lincoln. We have had at least 3 major movies this year about him. I suspect that platinum trillion dollar coin that Obama will deposit at the Fed will have Lincoln's head on it. If you argue against it, you are a racist.

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