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To: nolu chan
Pressing that issue, Black and White abolitionists organized a national campaign in favor of Black soldiers, but Lincoln refused to budge.

That is not true. Feeling in the north generally, and in the army, was that it would sully the noble cause of fighting for democratic government to bring emancipation into the equation.

"``What good would a proclamation of emancipation from me do, especially as we are now situated? I do not want to issue a document that the whole world will see must necessarily be inoperative, like the Pope's bull against the comet! Would my word free the slaves, when I cannot even enforce the Constitution in the rebel States? Is there a single court, or magistrate, or individual that would be influenced by it there? And what reason is there to think it would have any greater effect upon the slaves than the late law of Congress, which I approved, and which offers protection and freedom to the slaves of rebel masters who come within our lines? Yet I cannot learn that that law has caused a single slave to come over to us. And suppose they could be induced by a proclamation of freedom from me to throw themselves upon us, what should we do with them? How can we feed and care for such a multitude? Gen. Butler wrote me a few days since that he was issuing more rations to the slaves who have rushed to him than to all the white troops under his command. They eat , and that is all, though it is true Gen. Butler is feeding the whites also by the thousand; for it nearly amounts to a famine there. If, now, the pressure of the war should call off our forces from New Orleans to defend some other point, what is to prevent the masters from reducing the blacks to slavery again; for I am told that whenever the rebels take any black prisoners, free or slave, they immediately auction them off! They did so with those they took from a boat that was aground in the Tennessee river a few days ago. And then I am very ungenerously attacked for it!"

Of course when Lincoln wrote those words, he had every intention of issuing an emancipation proclamation as soon as he felt the country would support it.

Walt

1,253 posted on 07/04/2003 2:52:06 AM PDT by WhiskeyPapa (Virtue is the uncontested prize.)
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To: WhiskeyPapa
[Walt} That is not true. Feeling in the north generally, and in the army, was that it would sully the noble cause of fighting for democratic government to bring emancipation into the equation.

Sergeant Walker was executed on February 29, 1864. The men were being underpaid and refusing said pay in 1864. Your entire post is irrelevant.

1,262 posted on 07/04/2003 12:14:39 PM PDT by nolu chan
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