President Lincolns Attitude Towards Slavery And Emancipation With a Review of

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This meeting memorialized the President in dignified but positive language. The memorial noted that emancipation in the Dis- trict of Columbia, and in the unorganized National territory, had not met the country's crisis. It therefore prayed the President that as "the only means of preserving the Union to proclaim, with- out delay, National emancipation. " x Two of the leading clergymen of the city took the memorial to Washington, and presented it to Mr. Lincoln on the 13th. There was a discus- ...1 National Anti-Slavery Standard, September 20, 1862, p. 1. Page Eighty Page Eighty-one sion at close range between the President and his visitors, touching the merits and practical char- acter of their contention. The arguments at first presented by the Executive, seem strange in con- nection with the purpose he had expressed at the cabinet meeting held the 22nd of July. In the main he cited the manifestly divided public opinion of the country. "The subject is difficult, " he said, "and good men do not agree.

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