President Lincoln’s Real Intentions

Prior to reading the primary sources about President Lincoln and his actions before the Civil War, I was unaware of his stance on Slavery and emancipation. The main source that demonstrated his position on slavery to me was the letter he wrote to Horace Greeley.

I was always taught growing up that President Lincoln was the President who freed all of the slaves, which painted him as a hero in my eyes, and I’m sure in the eyes of my classmates as well. But, in reality his goal was not to free the slaves, but to save the union. he made this explicitly clear in his letter to Horace Greeley, “My paramount object in this struggle is to save the Union, and is not either to save or to destroy slavery. If I could save the Union without freeing any slave I would do it, and if I could save it by freeing all the slaves I would do it; and if I could save it by freeing some and leaving others alone I would also do that” (President Lincoln). Clearly as the war waged on President Lincoln saw freeing the slaves as an advantageous military strategy, which was his ultimate motivation for the Emancipation Proclamation, not because he was an abolitionist. This was interesting to me because again it demonstrates how history books you read as a child tend to be extremely biased. I think its important for children to be taught history from an unbiased perspective, rather than a white washed one. Had I never read this primary source my viewpoint on President Lincoln most likely would have never changed. Although he did ultimately free the slaves, I think it would have been extremely interesting to be able to read about the types of policies President Lincoln would have established during Reconstruction had he not been assassinated. Those policies most likely would have shed more light on President Lincoln’s true colors.

 

My Opinion of History of Black America

So far this semester I have enjoyed my time revisiting concepts I already knew and learning new information I was unaware of in this History of Black America class. What I’ve learned in class has broadened my knowledge of African history and how it has intertwined with American history. Whether it’s from the Atlantic Slave Trade to Amercian Slavery and the Civil War, this class is rich with information and I’m excited to learn more as we go further into the history of Black America.

The Civil War Fairy Tale

The Civil War Fairy tale 

By Peyton O’Laughlin 

On Monday, February 12, 2018 the Attorney General, Jeff Sessions, delivered remarks at The Abraham Lincoln Foundation Of The Union League Of Philadelphia’s Annual Lincoln Day Celebration. 

During the deliverance, Sessions stated that, “Though many Southerners try to say otherwise—and I love my people—slavery was the cause of the war. It was not states’ rights or tariffs or agrarian versus industrial economies. Those issues were all solvable and would have been solved. The cloud, the stain of human bondage—the buying and selling of human beings—was the unsolvable problem and was omnipresent from the beginning of the country.” Sessions followed up that comment by saying, “And the failure, the refusal of the South to come to grips with it—really to actually change this immoral system of enslavement—led to the explosion,” and, “As to slavery, it had to end. The nation could stand the disgrace no longer. And Lincoln came. And the war came. Lincoln’s moral and legal clarity, like that of Dr. Martin Luther King Junior’s a century later, produced the will, the power, which sustained the war and propelled the nation to union and emancipation. This was a monumental conflict indeed.” 

From the context of the remarks that were given by Sessions we can defer that he means that the disgraceful and immoral actions that were being taken by slaveholders and slaveholding states was the reason that The Civil War began. 

We know, from our class content, that this is not entirely true. In the beginning of the war, The North’s intention was not freeing the slaves and we know that Abraham Lincoln only considered freeing the slaves when it became beneficial to him in winning the war. This is evident because Lincoln tried many strategies to prevent a war. Strategies that involved gradual emancipation, which still incorporated slavery, and even persuading black individuals into moving to Africa. 

This brings us back to the discussion to how slavery in the United States and The Civil War is portrayed in the U.S. and how we, as Americans, have constructed a fairy tale in our nation’s history. 

The fairy tale consists of the valiant and righteous North, led by the awesome Abraham Lincoln, saw the evils of slavery that the immoral South were partaking in and by God’s Grace needed to stop those evils forthwith, but in actuality we had two racist armies fighting over representation, white labor, and white supremacy. Yes, the war did eventually involve freedom to slaves, but this wasn’t moral, this was again strategy. 

Sessions and other just perpetuate the idea of The Civil War Fairy Tale, which is another form of American whitewashing of history. We, as the citizens of this nation, need to be able to look back on our history with honesty and realism. We need to stop living in a fairy tale. 

 

Citations: 

Attorney General Sessions Delivers Remarks At The Abraham Lincoln Foundation Of The Union League Of Philadelphias Annual Lincoln Day Celebration. (2018, February 12). Retrieved February 13, 2018, from https://www.justice.gov/opa/speech/attorney-general-sessions-delivers-remarks-abraham-lincoln-foundation-union-league  

Bedard, P. (2018, February 12). Southerner Sessions: ‘Slavery’ alone caused the Civil War. Retrieved February 13, 2018, from  http://www.washingtonexaminer.com/southerner-sessions-slavery-alone-caused-the-civil-war/article/2648867  

Building Against Slavery and Racism

Over the past few years, there have been countless protest concerning the continued celebration of Confederate statues. Around the country, there are 1,503 monuments that celebrate and glorify the people of the Confederacy and their actions. Of the 1,503, there are 8 in Statuary Hall in Congress. These statues celebrate the ‘lost cause’ that was the Confederacy. In 2015, after a neo-Nazi killed nine African-American people in a Charleston, South Caroline church. After this tragedy, the protests to remove Confederate monuments grew stronger. Ever since Donald Trump has begun president, he has belittled this movement saying, “the history and culture of our great country [is] being ripped apart with the removal of our beautiful statues and monuments”. With the growth of the movement to remove these monuments, there has also been a movement to erect statues that celebrate the fight against racism and prejudice.

If any other president were in office, more monuments celebrating civil rights activists and other social heroes would have already been commissioned; but Donald Trump’s sympathy for white supremacists and racists has delayed this process for years. There are incredible people who deserve to be recognized for their significance in the civil rights movement. Some people who deserve monuments include The United States Colored Troops, Emmett Till, and Nat Turner. Although all the examples were at different times in American history, they all play a massive role in the journey toward equality in the United States.

Article: https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2017/aug/22/confederate-statues-monuments-sidney-blumenthal

The Black Panther Party, Pioneers in Modern Medicine

Most people have heard of the Black Panther Party, especially when it comes to protesting for equality for African Americans. The Black Panther Party is known most for their activity in the late 1960s to protest police brutality against Blacks in the Oakland area by arming citizen patrols. As the party soon died formally in 1980 due to FBI counterintelligence activities. One might think that the effects they had on the community died with the party, but the reality is quite the opposite. A lesser-known activism; healthcare, was a major platform for the Black Panther Party. They campaigned against medical discrimination: setup free clinics, raised awareness for genetic disease, and advocated that poor Blacks were underserved by mainstream medicine. The Black Panther Party created the first nationwide screening program for sickle cell anemia. Unfortunately, they were never put into the spotlight for all the good they did in pioneering community healthcare.  

It is crazy to me that the Black Panther Party was so influential in the implementation of community based health programs we see today yet got almost no no credit. This just shows that history is written by the victors so to speak, the Black Panthers didn’t write their own history, white people wrote it for them. In reality, the Black Panther Party spent more time helping the community than they did protesting.

Article : https://www.vanderbilt.edu/mhs/2011/06/mhs-lecture-series-alondra-nelson-%E2%80%9Cthe-black-panther-party-and-the-fight-against-medical-discrimination%E2%80%9D/