Slaves in Georgia generally viewed the Emancipation Proclamation positively as it offered them hope for freedom and represented a turning point in the fight against slavery. However, the impact varied among individuals based on their circumstances and access to information. Many saw it as a significant step toward ending slavery and achieving equality.
Ohio does not have specific emancipation laws because minors in Ohio can become legally emancipated through the courts by demonstrating that they are financially independent and able to make their own legal decisions. This process falls under the broader legal concept of "common law emancipation."
The slaves mad them rich, and they also had made them feel powerful.
Running away was dangerous and frightening for slaves as they risked severe punishment, capture, and even death. They had to navigate unfamiliar terrain, evade slave catchers, and find food and shelter while constantly on the run. Yet, despite the risks, many slaves chose to escape in search of freedom.
In Florida, a minor can petition the court for emancipation from their parents if they feel they are in an unsafe environment. Emancipation grants the minor adult status and the ability to live independently. It's recommended to seek legal advice to understand the process and implications before taking any steps.
Slaves were beaten as a form of punishment or control by their owners to instill fear and discourage disobedience or resistance. It was a way for slave owners to exert power and maintain control over their enslaved labor force.
The emancipation Proclamation doesn't have feeling.....
They did not want to give up there slaves.( I don't know much, but I'm an 8th grader, so..)
Many British critics did not approve of the Emancipation Proclamation. They did not feel it was a good idea.
well they feelt pretty good about it
The abolitinists were angry about the exclusions and everyone knew that emancipation meant nothing until the Confederacy was defeated.
During the Civil War, when President Lincoln made his Emancipation Proclamation, reactions varied greatly. Critics and enemies in the South scorned the move and even ridiculed it, although most of the slaves (quietly) celebrated it. Some Northerners disagreed with it out of fear that it would lengthen the war unnecessarily. Most Northerners, however, rejoiced with the hope that, at last, freedom was going to become reality for all Americans.BTW, the Emancipation Proclamation explicitly freed no slaves at all in the few slave states still loyal to the Union (to prevent having them rebel too). It only proclaimed the slaves free in those states then in rebellion against the Union (where the Union had absolutely no power to enforce it). So the Emancipation Proclamation actually freed no slaves at all anywhere. The primary purpose of the Emancipation Proclamation was not to free slaves at all or even for US consumption, but as an instrument of international propaganda (particularly on the British who had banned slavery throughout the British Empire several years before, to cease support for the Confederacy and support only the Union) and it worked in that purpose.
Men in the military felt worried because their slaves help them.
Men in the military felt worried because their slaves help them.
The southern states ignored the Emancipation Proclamation because they had already succeeded for the Union. It is as simple as that. They did not feel that the President of the United States had any jurisdiction over them.
They were of course unhappy with them, since it would mean their economic ruin.
Lincoln's Emancipation Proclamation was a symbolic gesture. It only freed the slaves in the states which had seceded from the union and were no longer under control of Lincoln's government. Lincoln was not a abolitionist and he had stressed the need to preserve the union as the main rationale for the War. The proclamation surely appealed to abolitionists in the North and assured them that winning the war would end slavery in the old slave states. As such it served to solidify the war effort. There may have been hope that a slave revolt would occur in the South or that the threat of such a revolt would demoralize the South.
To make the North feel they were fighting a crusade against slavery. (It didn't.) To keep Britain from supporting the Confederates, as it would have made them look pro-slavery themselves. (It did.)