The Gettysburg Address was a speech by President Abraham Lincoln and was considered one of the best speeches of all time. He recognized those who had given their lives at the battle of Gettysburg, as well as made apparent the importance of human equality.
cause it was poopy
For the most part, the Gettysburg Address was met with indifference. It was only after some years and the end of the war, that the importance of the speech was actually felt.
hello world....abe licoln is a fake a liar
Many places -- the library for one. See some of the links below.
some attractions in Gettysburg include the battlefield (obviously) the recently remodeled visitors center the cyclorama the eisenhower farm. the farnsworth house the house Lincoln stayed in before giving the Gettysburg address (located in downtown Gettysburg) for great food theres the dobbin house there are numerous gift shops
GOOD question. Is mine? I have come across a signed Gettysburg Address in my grams shed. Why she would have this? Family has some ties with President Truman. I'm lost in where i can find answers... <><><><> Is it real? Yes. Is it THE original? No. Sorry.
Abraham Lincoln, the 16th president, freed the slaves in the speech "The Gettysburg Address".
272 words in the Gettysburg Address. Though some will dispute the number!
" that government of the people, by the people, for the people, shall not perish from the earth. "
The Gettysburg Address did not create an amendment. It was meant to dedicate the cemetery at Gettysburg. Some of the ideals in it may have contributed to the thinking of the Congress when they framed the 13th, 14th and 15th amendments, but it did not create these. The Emancipation Proclamation on the other hand can be credited as being the genesis of at least the 13th amendment which formally abolished slavery in the United States.
One of Abraham Lincoln's most famous speeches is his second inaugural address. Another was, of course, the Gettysburg Address. An earlier speech of note is his House Divided against itself cannot stand.
There was no room for dreaming anywhere near the city of Gettysburg. That was a battle that is considered the turning point of the war, in the favor of the union, and there were no room for dreams, only attempts at survival.