Frederick Douglass And Abraham Lincoln's The Radical And The Republican

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The book, The Radical and the Republican, is about two very different men, Frederick Douglass and Abraham Lincoln and their views on politics, slavery, and emancipation. Both men hated slavery, but for different reasons and in different ways. Douglass a slave himself, had a strong hatred for slavery, not just because he once was a slave, but because he found it to be inhumane, a disease that needed to be eradicated. Lincoln grew up in a home that was against slavery, the church he attended preached against slavery. He believed slavery was morally wrong and that blacks should have the same rights as white men. The book addresses how Douglass and Lincoln’s views and relationship change as they fought to end slavery.
Douglass was not always an …show more content…

Stating that the president “took too long to make decisions regarding emancipation and the enlistment of black troops.” On August 10, 1863, Douglass and Lincoln met for the first time. Douglass was impressed as Lincoln received him as any other gentlemen and his patience in which he listened and replied. But it was not until their second meeting on August 25, 1864, that their relationship grew into a friendship. Lincoln was concerned that slaves in the South were not coming North because they did not know about the Emancipation Proclamation. Douglass pointed out “the masters had ways to keep news of the proclamation away from slaves.” Lincoln asked Douglass to devise a plan to spread the word of emancipation to the slaves in the South, which Douglass agreed to. This meeting forever changed Douglass’ view of Lincoln, “he came away from his second meeting persuaded that Lincoln had issued the Emancipation Proclamation out of deep moral convictions, not ‘merely as a ‘necessity.’”
Lincoln was a cautious politician, where Douglass was a radical reformer at heart. “Lincoln never criticized the slaveholder as sinners or sadists. Born to a world where slavery already existed, the slaveholders could hardly be blamed for clinging to what they knew.” Lincoln recognized that slavery was wrong, an evil and should not be allowed to spread to new states. Although he had no intention of interfering with slavery

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