Emancipation Proclamation,
proclamation 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; historians regard it as one of the great state documents of the United
States.
After the outbreak 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 their freedom and that of
their fellow slaves. In these circumstances, a strict application of
established policy would have required return of fugitive slaves to their
Confederate masters and would have alienated the staunchest supporters of the
Union cause in the North and abroad.
Abolitionists had long been
urging Lincoln to free all slaves, and public opinion seemed to support this
view. Lincoln moved slowly and cautiously nonetheless; on March 13, 1862, the
federal government forbade 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 compensate 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.
Finally, after the Union
victory in the Battle of Antietam (September 17, 1862), Lincoln issued a
preliminary proclamation on September 22, declaring his intention of
promulgating another proclamation in 100 days, freeing the slaves in the states
deemed in rebellion at that time. On January 1, 1863, he issued the
Emancipation Proclamation, conferring liberty on about 3,120,000 slaves. With
the enactment of the 13th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution in effect in 1865,
slavery was completely abolished.
The results of the
Emancipation Proclamation were far-reaching. From then on, sympathy with the
Confederacy was identified with support of slavery. Antislavery sentiment in
France and Britain, whose governments were friendly to the Confederacy, became
so strong that it precluded the possibility of intervention by those
governments in behalf of the Confederacy. As a further result of the
proclamation, the Republican party became unified in principle and in
organization, and the prestige it attained enabled it to hold power until 1884.
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