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Abraham Lincoln's Role In The Civil War

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Abraham Lincoln was one of the most influential presidents who has ever served our country. Abraham Lincoln was very courageous, a very good communicator, humle, and had integrity. Lincoln was also a person who perseveres. During this time, in 1860, there’s wasn’t any slavery in the north but there was in the south. The Civil war happened because Abraham Lincoln supported the north and the south wanted to defend slavery. Abraham Lincoln was born on February 12, 1809 in Kentucky. His parents were Thomas Lincoln and Nancy Hanks. Lincoln didn’t stay at the same school for long. When he was seven years old he moved to Indiana and didn’t stay there long either. He went to school for less than a total of 12 months and never attended college. In 1829, …show more content…

Lincoln was very courageous. The Civil War was a conflict between the north and south which was destroying the nation. It could have been avoided if the second party had work for a solution. Lincoln’s positive effect in the civil war was both before and during the war. The government was trying to prevent the confrontation but when the confrontation happened Lincoln made the right decisions to win the war. When Lincoln was young, he saw a slave auction in New Orleans which was always haunting him and this led to one of the biggest acts of courage Abraham Lincoln did. He signed the Emancipation Proclamation. This gave slaves their liberty. Lincoln wanted to keep the United States together, but still abolish slavery. This was called the thirteenth amendment. Lincoln, in the last speech of his life, said that he recommended extending the vote to African Americans. After the president had signed the emancipation proclamation, slaves in the sound did not know about it for a couple months. The north’s starting mission changed. They were now fighting to end slavery and free the slaves. On April 9th, 1865 General Robert E. Lee surrendered to Ulysses S. …show more content…

When he was just nine years old, his mother died of milk sickness and soon after his sister died during childbirth. Lincoln married Mary Todd when he was thirty-three and she was twenty-three. They had four sons together, but unfortunately two of them died as children and this took a toll on Lincoln. His father died in 1851. He also lost eight elections as a politician, but that never stopped him from giving up. Abraham lost in the running for Illinois legislature in 1852, but ran again in 1834, 1836, 1838, and 1840 and won those four runs. Although he was defeated for U.S. senate in 1854, he was elected Illinois state legislature that same year. He was also defeated for U.S. senate in 1858. In 1856 he lost the battle for vice president. Through all his failures, he became the 16th president on November 6,

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