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Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 119

LINCOLN, Abraham. Autograph manuscript, constituting an 11-line fragment of his last Annual Message to Congress, delivered in Washington, D.C., 6 December 1864.

Auction 09.10.2002
09.10.2002
Schätzpreis
250.000 $ - 350.000 $
Zuschlagspreis:
251.500 $
Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 119

LINCOLN, Abraham. Autograph manuscript, constituting an 11-line fragment of his last Annual Message to Congress, delivered in Washington, D.C., 6 December 1864.

Auction 09.10.2002
09.10.2002
Schätzpreis
250.000 $ - 350.000 $
Zuschlagspreis:
251.500 $
Beschreibung:

LINCOLN, Abraham. Autograph manuscript, constituting an 11-line fragment of his last Annual Message to Congress, delivered in Washington, D.C., 6 December 1864. 1 page, oblong 4to (6 7/8 x 8 3/8 in.), probably comprising the top portion of a folio sheet, numbered "39" in pencil at top, verso with contemporary ink inscription of John D. Defrees, Public Printer of the U.S.: "This is a portion of the last message if Mr. Lincoln in his own hand writing. To be given to Anthony Corwin Defrees..."; small repair to part of one fold, otherwise in excellent condition. Enclosed in a blue morocco gilt-lettered slipcase. LINCOLN URGES PASSAGE OF THE RESOLUTION FOR THE THIRTEENTH AMENDMENT, PROHIBITING "SLAVERY OR INVOLUNTARY SERVITUDE": A KEY PASSAGE FROM HIS LAST ADDRESS TO CONGRESS, DECEMBER 1864 A highly important fragment--one of the key passages from this critical wartime Presidential address--delivered only a month after Lincoln won re-election to a second term as President. In this passage, Lincoln emphatically calls upon Congress to reconsider the resolution proposing the 13th Amendment, which had failed to pass at the first session of the 38th Congress. In the end, it was the war itself, James M. McPherson writes, "that transformed and expanded the concept of liberty to include abolition of slavery, and it was Lincoln who was the principal agent of this transformation" ("Lincoln and Liberty," in Abraham Lincoln and the Second American Revolution , p.45). Since the outset of the Civil War, the struggle for the universal and permanent abolition of slavery had rapidly evolved from the avowed goal of a small, highly vocal group of extremists--the dedicated abolitionists--to become, in January 1863, a crucial and revolutionary part of the Union's military strategy, by virtue of the Emancipation Proclamation. Lincoln as Commander-in-Chief issued the Emancipation Proclamation--theoretically freeing slaves in the territories in rebellion--as a military measure, recognizing that it was not within the power of his office to summarily abolish slavery. That definitive act, Lincoln believed, required a Constitutional amendment. But the Republican platform of 1864, adopted under pressure from the party's most radical elements, boldly proposed an Amendment that would "positively prohibit" slavery, a practice it branded as "hostile to the principles of republican government, justice and national safety." Such an amendment would elevate the abolition of slavery to the status of a clear objective of the entire Union war effort. If adopted, it would constitute the first amendment to the Constitution in 60 years (since the Twelfth Amendment, ratified in 1804, specified separate electoral vote tallies for President and Vice-President). "An amendment to end slavery was so dramatic that Democrats denied that amending the Constitution in such a fundamental way could be Constitutional" (Eric Paludan, The Presidency of Abraham Lincoln , p.299). Resolutions calling for such an amendment had been drafted in the Republican-controlled Senate as early as April 1864, and the final version, largely the work of Connecticut Senator Lyman Trumbull, chairman of the Judiciary Committee, adopted wording strikingly similar to that used by Jefferson in 1787 for the Northwest Ordinance, prohibiting slavery in the new territories of the northwest. Lincoln, as one historian points out, "may have felt a special satisfaction about this because he had been pointing to that ordinance since 1854 as a symbol of hostility to slavery by the Framers of the Constitution" (Paludan, p.300)." While the Senate passed the momentous resolution quickly, on a vote of 38 to 6, the House of Representatives, with tenacious opposition from the Democratic representatives, defeated it on June 15, 1864 by a vote of 95 to 66. Here, Lincoln writes in a bold hand: "At the last session of Congress a proposed amendment of the Constitution abolishing slavery throughout the United States, passed the

Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 119
Auktion:
Datum:
09.10.2002
Auktionshaus:
Christie's
New York, Rockefeller Center
Beschreibung:

LINCOLN, Abraham. Autograph manuscript, constituting an 11-line fragment of his last Annual Message to Congress, delivered in Washington, D.C., 6 December 1864. 1 page, oblong 4to (6 7/8 x 8 3/8 in.), probably comprising the top portion of a folio sheet, numbered "39" in pencil at top, verso with contemporary ink inscription of John D. Defrees, Public Printer of the U.S.: "This is a portion of the last message if Mr. Lincoln in his own hand writing. To be given to Anthony Corwin Defrees..."; small repair to part of one fold, otherwise in excellent condition. Enclosed in a blue morocco gilt-lettered slipcase. LINCOLN URGES PASSAGE OF THE RESOLUTION FOR THE THIRTEENTH AMENDMENT, PROHIBITING "SLAVERY OR INVOLUNTARY SERVITUDE": A KEY PASSAGE FROM HIS LAST ADDRESS TO CONGRESS, DECEMBER 1864 A highly important fragment--one of the key passages from this critical wartime Presidential address--delivered only a month after Lincoln won re-election to a second term as President. In this passage, Lincoln emphatically calls upon Congress to reconsider the resolution proposing the 13th Amendment, which had failed to pass at the first session of the 38th Congress. In the end, it was the war itself, James M. McPherson writes, "that transformed and expanded the concept of liberty to include abolition of slavery, and it was Lincoln who was the principal agent of this transformation" ("Lincoln and Liberty," in Abraham Lincoln and the Second American Revolution , p.45). Since the outset of the Civil War, the struggle for the universal and permanent abolition of slavery had rapidly evolved from the avowed goal of a small, highly vocal group of extremists--the dedicated abolitionists--to become, in January 1863, a crucial and revolutionary part of the Union's military strategy, by virtue of the Emancipation Proclamation. Lincoln as Commander-in-Chief issued the Emancipation Proclamation--theoretically freeing slaves in the territories in rebellion--as a military measure, recognizing that it was not within the power of his office to summarily abolish slavery. That definitive act, Lincoln believed, required a Constitutional amendment. But the Republican platform of 1864, adopted under pressure from the party's most radical elements, boldly proposed an Amendment that would "positively prohibit" slavery, a practice it branded as "hostile to the principles of republican government, justice and national safety." Such an amendment would elevate the abolition of slavery to the status of a clear objective of the entire Union war effort. If adopted, it would constitute the first amendment to the Constitution in 60 years (since the Twelfth Amendment, ratified in 1804, specified separate electoral vote tallies for President and Vice-President). "An amendment to end slavery was so dramatic that Democrats denied that amending the Constitution in such a fundamental way could be Constitutional" (Eric Paludan, The Presidency of Abraham Lincoln , p.299). Resolutions calling for such an amendment had been drafted in the Republican-controlled Senate as early as April 1864, and the final version, largely the work of Connecticut Senator Lyman Trumbull, chairman of the Judiciary Committee, adopted wording strikingly similar to that used by Jefferson in 1787 for the Northwest Ordinance, prohibiting slavery in the new territories of the northwest. Lincoln, as one historian points out, "may have felt a special satisfaction about this because he had been pointing to that ordinance since 1854 as a symbol of hostility to slavery by the Framers of the Constitution" (Paludan, p.300)." While the Senate passed the momentous resolution quickly, on a vote of 38 to 6, the House of Representatives, with tenacious opposition from the Democratic representatives, defeated it on June 15, 1864 by a vote of 95 to 66. Here, Lincoln writes in a bold hand: "At the last session of Congress a proposed amendment of the Constitution abolishing slavery throughout the United States, passed the

Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 119
Auktion:
Datum:
09.10.2002
Auktionshaus:
Christie's
New York, Rockefeller Center
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