Keep Britain and France from helping the Confederates, as it would make them look pro-slavery themselves.
Legally, for slave-owners, nothing. Tactically, for the Confederate government, the end of any hopes of getting diplomatic recognition and military aid from Britain and France.
No. It marked the failure of Lee's planned invasion of Pennsylvania, and his army was nearly destroyed. The battle also had a further significance that would lead to Confederate defeat - it gave Lincoln the credibility to issue the Emancipation Proclamation. This meant that Britain and France could not aid the South without looking pro-slavery.
Lincoln was a Republican when he ran for President. The party changed its name in 1864 in hopes of getting more votes. When he was elected to Congress, he was a Whig.
Lincoln managing to keep the four border-states loyal. The Emancipation Proclamation - keeping Britain out. Gettysburg - ending Lee's hopes of invading the North Vicksburg - ending the war in the West Grant promoted General-in-Chief - a winning strategy Lincoln winning the '64 election - the North votes to fight on
his use of this he hopes that the british will give up his use of non-violent protests will change their mind
The Battle of Antietam had no effect on Southern hopes for winning European allies. As part of the aftermath of the aftermath of that battle, Lincoln issued the Emancipation Proclamation. That Proclamation ended any possibility of the South gaining European allies.
The historic Proclamation was Lincoln's Emancipation Proclamation, effective from January 1st 1863. It did not end the war, but it did end Confederate hopes of official recognition and miitary aid from Britain and France. You could say it was the biggest factor in the eventual Confederate defeat.
Legally, for slave-owners, nothing. Tactically, for the Confederate government, the end of any hopes of getting diplomatic recognition and military aid from Britain and France.
Yes, they were pinning their hopes on it. But Lincoln skilfully headed them off, by issuing the Emancipation Proclamation, turning the war into an official crusade against slavery, so free nations abroad could not aid the Confederates without looking pro-slavery themselves.
No. It marked the failure of Lee's planned invasion of Pennsylvania, and his army was nearly destroyed. The battle also had a further significance that would lead to Confederate defeat - it gave Lincoln the credibility to issue the Emancipation Proclamation. This meant that Britain and France could not aid the South without looking pro-slavery.
It was a military decision. He proclaimed the slaves in the south "free" in hopes to create a rebellion. Thus consuming the south's resources. Yet in all the northern state he required the slaves to purchase their freedom with inscription into the Union army. Thus increasing the north's resources. The date was January 1, 1863. The north had suffered unexpected devastating losses in 1862, Lincoln was forced to act. Thus the Emancipation Proclamation. Failure of the Emancipation Proclamation, no slave rebellion in the south, resulted in the March 1863 -- The First Conscription Act. A military decision that forced northern men into the Union army.
During the US Civil War, slaves in the Confederacy knew about the Lincoln Emancipation Proclamation. They had hopes for an early freedom even before the war ended because as Union troops captured Southern territory, slaves their were freed by the Union army. Later after the war, an amendment, the 13th amendment to the US Constitution abolished slavery.
Not for the most part. While he was the president for the union side during the civil war, he temporarily suspended habeas corpus and other "natural rights" listed in the bill of rights, in order to keep Maryland from seceding from the union. At the time the Emancipation Proclamation was also cause for an uproar. Most people at that time were thinking about total abolition of slavery. Even a majority of the Northerners only wanted free soil to stay free, and Abe Lincoln was one of such people. The war was originally started to re-unite the union. However, with the North badly losing every battle, Lincoln knew he needed some way to take away the south's advantages. So he wrote the Emancipation Proclamation in hopes to attract slaves away from their masters to fight for the union. Other than this there were really no controversies.
Notice that he did not emancipate them; he just 'proclaimed' that they were emancipated. This was for the ears of the British and the French, who had been planning to help the Confederates. Now that the war had been made to look like a crusade against slavery, free nations abroad could not aid the South without looking actively pro-slavery themselves. The Proclamation totally fulfilled Lincoln's hopes. The other countries had to stay out of it.
The FFA Motto
The FFA Motto
Lincoln believed in the Union-- he believed the war could end and that the north and south could learn to live together and get along. So, one hope he had was that the Civil War would soon end. Another hope he had was that slavery would end, so that black people would have the opportunity to fully participate in American life as citizens; he knew signing the Emancipation Proclamation would not be a popular decision with everyone, but he had hope that in time, those who opposed it would learn to accept it.