how did the Gettysburg address and Emancipation Proclamation help in bringing a change in american mindset
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The Emancipation Proclamation was issued by Abraham Lincoln, then American President who was known for his anti-slavery views, in 1862 which granted African slaves freedom and voting rights after the American Civil War . This dimmed the Southern States who were in favour of slavery for they used them in their plants . The Southern States treated slaves as their personal property , kept them in unhygenic conditions and did not allow them to read or write. This was felt as a social injustice by the Northern States and thus the American Anti-Slavery Society was formed under William Lloyd Garrison . These emotions were strengthened by the Emancipation Proclamation .
The Gettysburg Address by Abraham Lincoln,the great orator, is regarded as one of the most influencial speeches in the history . In that , he respected the brave soldiers who gave their lives in war and promised that their lives will not go in vain . The Speech spread the feelings of nation-pride and democracy among people . Even,the Indian Constitution's idea is taken majorly from it .
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In Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address, speech, the president attempted to convince the northern public to stay the course. He addressed cases of battle within the larger arc of American history, by connecting the work of Union soldiers at Gettysburg to the work of the Union’s founders at Philadelphia. He used the concept of all men were created equal, as a way. In this speech he emphasized the sacrifices of the Union deaths, quoting the “brave men” who struggled there had already “consecrated” the ground, “far above our poor power to add or detract.
In the Emancipation Proclamation, he relied on the examples of wartime powers of the executive to liberate slaves in the Confederacy. He used that as a tool of inciting motivation of the listeners. He called on the rest of the Americans to indulge themselves to “the unfinished work” of those who had fought at Gettysburg, and to join the America’s founding ideal of equality with African Americans’ aspirations for liberty.
This brought about a different mindset.