Lincoln's Decision to End Slavery

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Over the years, here have been many presidents, each with their own ideas about how America should be formed. Abraham Lincoln was among the greatest of the presidents. Born in Hodgenville, Kentucky, Lincoln was raised into a Baptist family with strict morals opposing alcohol, dancing, and slavery. Despite his later installment of the Emancipation Proclamation, Lincoln did not believe that slaves should have the same rights as white men. Lincoln was content to issue the Emancipation Proclamation because it was an important military strategy, it would not actually free all the slaves, and it was possible that the problem of slavery would be resolved by colonization in Liberia.
Although Lincoln grew up disliking slavery as an institution, he did not think that the Civil War warranted the disbandment of the whole system. Lincoln thought that emancipation must be gradual in order to prevent the provocation of the south. However, as the Civil War entered it’s second summer, more and more slaves began to flee the southern plantations, running away to join the Union army. The North was at ...

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