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Emancipation Proclamation Inkstand

American History Museum

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    Object Details

    associated person

    Lincoln, Abraham
    US Telegraph Office

    Description

    The brass inkstand was from the desk of Major Thomas Eckert in the War Department Telegraph Office. At the time, the War Department handled all the president’s telegrams and Lincoln frequently stopped by to obtain the latest news of the war. Lincoln often used the major’s desk and according to Eckert worked on an early draft of the Emancipation Proclamation while sitting there in the summer of 1862.
    Years later Eckert would recall, “The President came to my office every day and invariably sat at my desk while there. Upon his arrival early one morning in June, 1862, shortly after McClelan’s "Seven Day’s Fight,” he asked me for some paper as he wanted to write something special. . . . I became much interested . . . with the idea that he was engaged upon something of great importance, but did not know what it was until he had finished the document and then for the first time he told me that he had been writing an order giving freedom to the slaves of the South, for the purpose of hastening the end of the war. . . . I still have in my possession the inkstand which he used at the time.”
    Abraham Lincoln had always opposed slavery but had never sided with abolitionists who called for its immediate end. Lincoln had sought solutions that would make slavery gradually fade from white society—limit its location, sponsor compensation programs for slave owners, and relocate freed blacks outside the country. He came to understand that to achieve a lasting peace, slavery must end. By mid-1862 Lincoln saw that a solution to slavery could not wait and that it had to address integrating freed African Americans into American society.
    Published in September 1862, the Lincoln’s executive order declared that, as of January 1, 1863, all persons held in slavery in areas still in rebellion would be “then, thenceforward, and forever free.” Although the Emancipation Proclamation did not directly free any enslaved people in Union-controlled areas, it was widely understood that a Union victory would mean the end of slavery.

    Credit Line

    Transfer from Library of Congress

    date made

    mid 19th century

    Associated Date

    1863

    ID Number

    PL.244699.02

    catalog number

    244699.02

    accession number

    244699

    Object Name

    inkwell
    inkstand

    Physical Description

    brass (overall material)
    glass; brass lid (inkwell material)

    Measurements

    overall: 5 1/4 in x 13 3/8 in x 8 3/4 in; 13.335 cm x 33.9725 cm x 22.225 cm

    Related Publication

    Rawley, James A.. Lincoln in the Telegraph Office
    Rubenstein, Harry R.. Abraham Lincoln: An Extraordinary Life

    See more items in

    Political History: Political History, General History Collection
    Government, Politics, and Reform
    Selections from the Abraham Lincoln Collection
    American Democracy: A Great Leap of Faith

    Exhibition

    American Democracy

    Exhibition Location

    National Museum of American History

    Data Source

    National Museum of American History

    used

    Presidents

    related event

    Emancipation Proclamation (1)

    Metadata Usage

    CC0

    Link to Original Record

    https://n2t.net/ark:/65665/ng49ca746a3-4886-704b-e053-15f76fa0b4fa

    Record ID

    nmah_524021

    Discover More

    Abraham Lincoln profile painting

    The Many Faces of Abraham Lincoln: Art and Artifacts

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