It made it hard for foreign nations to recognize and support the confederacy
Lincoln waited to issue the Emancipation Proclamation because he wanted to ensure that it would have a significant impact on the Civil War and not be seen as a desperate measure. He also needed to wait for a Union victory to give the proclamation more credibility.
Because it could not be enforced. Lincoln had no power over the Southern slave-masters. It also was not abolitionist, because it allowed slavery to continue in the states that had not seceded. But it did turn the war into a moral crusade against slavery, so neither Britain nor France could be seen helping the other side.
Lincoln read the first draft of this document to his Cabinet members in Washington D.C. on July 22, 1862. After some changes, he issued the preliminary version on September 22, which specified that the final document would take effect January 1, 1863.An Alternate Answer:The Emancipation Proclamation was Abraham Lincoln wrote and issued the Emancipation Proclamation, which consisted of 2 executive orders. The actual Proclamation was never given as a speech.On January 1, 1863, when the final order of the Proclamation was issued and went into effect, the order was sent via telegraph from the War Department. It was then copied and printed in the Washington Evening Star, the afternoon of January 1, 1863.There were celebrations at the White house, which the President attended, and parades throughout Washington DC, New York, and Boston.Historian Harold Holzer wrote in book, "Lincoln: Seen and Unseen" President Lincoln's handling of the proclamation was curiously understated: "Unaware of the power of image-making, Lincoln made the proclamation official in his private office, before just a few witnesses. He made no speech that day, met no delegation of African Americans, visited no slave family, saw no abolitionists, presided over no ceremony."
The Emancipation Proclamation. It could not carry authority in those states, of course (although it licensed Union troops to free any slaves they found), but it did have the effect of preventing Britain from sending military aid to the Confederates. Britain had abolished slavery thirty years earlier, and could not be seen to fight for the slave-owners.
My version is Lincoln and everyone else in the North wanted to do away with slavery. The South's economy depended on slaves to work the cotton fields. When Lincoln came up with the Emancipation Proclamation, the document that freed the slaves, the south reacted with rage and rebelled. When they seceded from the Union, the Civil War started.
Britain had to stay out - they could not be seen to fight for slavery.
Lincoln waited to issue the Emancipation Proclamation because he wanted to ensure that it would have a significant impact on the Civil War and not be seen as a desperate measure. He also needed to wait for a Union victory to give the proclamation more credibility.
Most of them didn't, and it was not seen as a war on slavery at all, until Lincoln made this official with the Emancipation Proclamation.
Because it could not be enforced. Lincoln had no power over the Southern slave-masters. It also was not abolitionist, because it allowed slavery to continue in the states that had not seceded. But it did turn the war into a moral crusade against slavery, so neither Britain nor France could be seen helping the other side.
Lyndon Johnson, the 36th President of the United States, is not directly related to the Emancipation Proclamation, which was issued by President Abraham Lincoln in 1863. However, Johnson's presidency in the 1960s was significantly influenced by the legacy of the Civil War and Reconstruction, including issues of civil rights for African Americans. He championed landmark legislation like the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Voting Rights Act of 1965, which aimed to fulfill the promise of equality that the Emancipation Proclamation initiated. Thus, while not directly connected, Johnson's efforts in civil rights can be seen as a continuation of the struggle for freedom and equality initiated by Lincoln's proclamation.
Lincoln read the first draft of this document to his Cabinet members in Washington D.C. on July 22, 1862. After some changes, he issued the preliminary version on September 22, which specified that the final document would take effect January 1, 1863.An Alternate Answer:The Emancipation Proclamation was Abraham Lincoln wrote and issued the Emancipation Proclamation, which consisted of 2 executive orders. The actual Proclamation was never given as a speech.On January 1, 1863, when the final order of the Proclamation was issued and went into effect, the order was sent via telegraph from the War Department. It was then copied and printed in the Washington Evening Star, the afternoon of January 1, 1863.There were celebrations at the White house, which the President attended, and parades throughout Washington DC, New York, and Boston.Historian Harold Holzer wrote in book, "Lincoln: Seen and Unseen" President Lincoln's handling of the proclamation was curiously understated: "Unaware of the power of image-making, Lincoln made the proclamation official in his private office, before just a few witnesses. He made no speech that day, met no delegation of African Americans, visited no slave family, saw no abolitionists, presided over no ceremony."
The Emancipation Proclamation. It could not carry authority in those states, of course (although it licensed Union troops to free any slaves they found), but it did have the effect of preventing Britain from sending military aid to the Confederates. Britain had abolished slavery thirty years earlier, and could not be seen to fight for the slave-owners.
No, it was Lincoln's somewhat desperate tactic for keeping Britain and France from sending aid to the Confederates. The Proclamation turned the war into an official crusade against slavery, so any foreign powers that supported the Confederates would then be seen as pro-slavery themselves.
My version is Lincoln and everyone else in the North wanted to do away with slavery. The South's economy depended on slaves to work the cotton fields. When Lincoln came up with the Emancipation Proclamation, the document that freed the slaves, the south reacted with rage and rebelled. When they seceded from the Union, the Civil War started.
Lincoln likely waited until the Union was in a position of strength to issue the Emancipation Proclamation to ensure it would be seen as a powerful and decisive action rather than a desperate measure. By timing it after significant Union victories, such as the Battle of Antietam, he aimed to bolster morale and reinforce the Union's commitment to the war effort. Additionally, a strong military position would lend credibility to the proclamation, making it more effective in both rallying support and undermining the Confederacy.
The Emancipation Proclamation suddenly made the war about slavery. By by the onset of the American Civil War, most other civilized nations had already recognized it for the moral abomination it was and outlawed it. Now, countries like Great Britain (which seriously considered going to war to aid the South) couldn't so without being seen as furthering the cause of slavery.
By keeping the British and the French from sending aid to the Confederacy. Both those countries had abolished slavery years before, and could not be seen to fight against the (newly declared) liberators of the slaves.