On
September 22 1862, Abraham
Lincoln issued his preliminary Emancipation Proclamation, in which he
declared that as of January 1, 1863, all slaves in states in rebellion against
the Union "shall be then, thenceforward, and forever free." To
commemorate the occasion, we invite you to consider some surprising facts about
Lincoln's views on slavery, and the complex process that led him to issue the document he later called
"the central act of my administration, and the greatest event of the 19th
century."
Lincoln wasn’t an abolitionist.
Lincoln did believe that
slavery was morally wrong, but there was one big problem: It was sanctioned by
the highest law in the land, the Constitution. The nation’s founding fathers,
who also struggled with how to address slavery, did not explicitly write the
word “slavery” in the Constitution, but they did include key clauses protecting
the institution, including a fugitive slave clause and the three-fifths clause,
which allowed Southern states to count slaves for the purposes of
representation in the federal government. In a three-hour speech in Peoria,
Illinois, in the fall of 1854, Lincoln presented more clearly than ever his moral, legal and economic
opposition to slavery—and then admitted he didn’t know exactly what should be
done about it within the current political system.
Abolitionists, by contrast,
knew exactly what should be done about it: Slavery should be immediately
abolished, and freed slaves should be incorporated as equal members of society.
They didn’t care about working within the existing political system, or under
the Constitution, which they saw as unjustly protecting slavery and slave
owners. Leading
abolitionist William Lloyd Garrison called the Constitution “a covenant with
death and an agreement with Hell,” and went so far as to burn a copy at a
Massachusetts rally in 1854. Though Lincoln saw himself as working
alongside the abolitionists on behalf of a common anti-slavery cause, he did
not count himself among them. Only with emancipation, and with his support of
the eventual 13th Amendment, would Lincoln finally win over the most committed
abolitionists.
Lincoln didn’t believe blacks should
have the same rights as whites.
Though Lincoln argued that
the founding fathers’ phrase “All men are created equal” applied to blacks and
whites alike, this did not mean he thought they should have the same social and
political rights. His views became clear during an 1858 series of debates with
his opponent in the Illinois race for U.S. Senate, Stephen Douglas, who had accused
him of supporting “negro equality.” In their fourth debate, at Charleston,
Illinois, on September 18, 1858, Lincoln made his position clear. “I will say then that I am not,
nor ever have been, in favor of bringing about in any way the social and political
equality of the white and black races,” he began, going on to say that he
opposed blacks having the right to vote, to serve on juries, to hold office and
to intermarry with whites. What he did believe was that, like all men,
blacks had the right to improve their condition in society and to enjoy the
fruits of their labor. In this way they were equal to white men, and for this
reason slavery was inherently unjust.
Like his views on
emancipation, Lincoln’s position on social and political equality for African-Americans
would evolve over the course of his presidency. In the last speech of his life, delivered on April 11,
1865, he argued for limited black suffrage, saying that any black man who had
served the Union during the Civil War should have the right to vote.
Lincoln
thought colonization
could resolve the issue of slavery.
For much of his career, Lincoln believed that colonization—or
the idea that a majority of the African-American population should leave the
United States and settle in Africa or Central America—was the best way to
confront the problem of slavery. His two great political heroes, Henry Clay and
Thomas Jefferson, had both favored colonization; both were slave owners who
took issue with aspects of slavery but saw no way that blacks and whites could
live together peaceably. Lincoln first publicly advocated for
colonization in 1852, and in 1854 said that his first instinct would be “to
free all the slaves, and send them to Liberia” (the African state founded by
the American Colonization Society in 1821).
Nearly a decade later, even
as he edited the draft of the preliminary Emancipation Proclamation in August of
1862, Lincoln hosted a delegation of freed slaves at the White House in the
hopes of getting their support on a plan for colonization in Central America.
Given the “differences” between the two races and the hostile attitudes of
whites towards blacks, Lincoln argued, it would be “better for us both,
therefore, to be
separated.” Lincoln’s support of colonization provoked great anger among
black leaders and abolitionists, who argued that African-Americans were as much
natives of the country as whites, and thus deserved the same rights. After he
issued the preliminary Emancipation Proclamation, Lincoln never again publicly
mentioned colonization, and a mention of it in an earlier draft was deleted by
the time the final proclamation was issued in January 1863.
Emancipation
was a military policy.
As much as he hated the institution of slavery, Lincoln didn’t see the
Civil War as a struggle to free the nation’s 4 million slaves from bondage. Emancipation, when it came,
would have to be gradual, and the important thing to do was to prevent the Southern rebellion from
severing the Union permanently in two. But as the Civil War entered its
second summer in 1862, thousands of slaves had fled Southern plantations to
Union lines, and the federal government didn’t have a clear policy on how to
deal with them. Emancipation,
Lincoln saw, would further undermine the Confederacy while providing the Union
with a new source of manpower to crush the rebellion.
In July 1862 the president
presented his draft of the preliminary Emancipation Proclamation to his
cabinet. Secretary of State William Seward urged him to wait until things were
going better for the Union on the field of battle, or emancipation might look
like the last gasp of a nation on the brink of defeat. Lincoln agreed and
returned to edit the draft over the summer. On September 17 the bloody Battle
of Antietam gave Lincoln the opportunity he needed. He issued the preliminary
proclamation to his cabinet on September 22, and it was published the following
day. As a cheering crowd gathered at the White House, Lincoln addressed them
from a balcony: “I can only trust in God I have made no mistake … It is now for
the country and the world to pass judgment on it.”
Emancipation
Proclamation Hero
The Emancipation Proclamation didn’t
actually free all of the slaves.
Since Lincoln issued the
Emancipation Proclamation as a military measure, it didn’t apply to border slave states like Delaware,
Maryland, Kentucky and Missouri, all of which had remained loyal to the Union.
Lincoln also exempted
selected areas of the Confederacy that had already come under Union control in
hopes of gaining the loyalty of whites in those states. In practice, then, the
Emancipation Proclamation didn’t immediately free a single slave, as the only
places it applied were places where the federal government had no control—the
Southern states currently fighting against the Union.
Despite its limitations,
Lincoln’s proclamation marked a crucial turning point in the evolution of
Lincoln’s views of slavery, as well as a turning point in the Civil War itself.
By war’s end, some 200,000 black men would serve in the Union Army and Navy
(approximately 10% of the Union military), striking a mortal blow against the
institution of slavery and paving the way for its eventual abolition by the
13th Amendment.
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