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It was not written after the war. Lincoln visited Gettysburg in the autumn of the same year as the battle (1863) and gave his address then. Incidentally, he had written it hastily on the train, and was not satisfied with it.

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12y ago

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In the Gettysburg Address Lincoln said the civil war was a test of what?

Wether the nation conceived in liberty could long endure.


Who made Gettysburg Address?

President Lincoln had written and given the speech in 1863 at Gettysburg pennsilvania. The speech was only 2 minutes long and was rumored to have been written on a napkin on the way there.


How long has it been since Gettysburg address?

250 tears


In the Gettysburg address Lincoln said the civil war was a test of?

That nation or any nation so conceived and so dedicated can long endure. That's all I know............ I hope it help you guys


How long was the Gettysburg address speech?

it was longer than 2 hours.(:


How long did Gettysburg address last?

the speech lasted 2 minutes


How long did Lincoln speak while he was giving the Gettysburg address?

about three minutes.


How long was Abraham Lincoln's gettysburg address?

Lincoln spoke for about three minutes.


How long was the US independent before the civil war?

From the signing of the Declaration in 1776, it was 85 years to the outbreak of the civil war. Two years later, at the Gettysburg Address, Lincoln mentioned this interval in rather Bibilical terms as "fourscore and seven".


Who spoke a 3 hour long speech during the Gettysburg address?

Edward Everett


How long did it take Lincoln to give the speech?

The Gettysburg Address lasted only about 2 minutes.


How long was Lincoln Gettysburg address?

President Lincoln's Gettysburg Address was a mere three hundred words, which took approximately three minutes to recite. Lincoln had written the speech on the train ride from Washington DC to Gettysburg. Although the speech was brief, it was powerful. His ideas were precious and as history has proven, Lincoln's words have stood the test of time. It is perhaps one of the greatest speeches in US history.