You are not connected. Please login or register

View previous topic View next topic Go down  Message [Page 1 of 1]

SSC

SSC
Admin
Thousands gather to commemorate 150th anniversary of Gettysburg Address

Published November 19, 2013 /
FoxNews.com

http://www.foxnews.com/us/2013/11/19/ceremony-will-mark-150th-anniversary-gettysburg-address/

Thousands gathered Tuesday to ponder what the Gettysburg Address has meant to the nation on the Civil War battlefield where President Abraham Lincoln gave his famous speech that symbolized his presidency and the sacrifices made by Union and Confederate forces.

Echoing Lincoln, keynote speaker and Civil War historian James McPherson says the president took the dais in November 1863 at a time when it looked like the nation "might indeed perish from the earth."

Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Corbett says the oration sought to heal the nation's wounds by defining what a nation should be.

U.S. Interior Secretary Sally Jewell also spoke to mark the 150th anniversary of the speech.

“Lincoln’s timeless words embodied and galvanized us as a nation," Congressman Scott Perry, R-Pa., said at the event. "Everything we’ve achieved since that time…was born out of the sacrifice of the soldiers that fought here and the patriots that followed through their footsteps throughout history."

The event comes near the end of a momentous year for the park, city and college that share the name Gettysburg, as hundreds of thousands of visitors took part in historical re-enactments and ceremonies.

Lincoln's Gettysburg Address -- first delivered here nearly five months after the major battle that left tens of thousands of men wounded, dead or missing -- was read by a re-enactor to mark the anniversary. The ceremony included a wreath-laying at the Soldiers' National Cemetery. There also will be a graveside salute to U.S. Colored Troops at noon, and a tree planting ceremony in the afternoon.

U.S. Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia swore in 16 new American citizens and will join Corbett a luncheon in honor of a high school girl who won a contest with her essay about the importance the Gettysburg Address, park officials said.

"Welcome my soon-to-be-fellow citizens," Scalia said. "May America bring you all you expect from it and may you give it all the it expects from you."

Some visitors are honoring the speech as well as the men who fought in the battle. Tom Stack, 54, of Wilmington, Del., has an ancestor who fought and died at Gettysburg while serving with the 1st Minnesota Volunteer Regiment.

"It was an incredible time, with incredible individuals, on both sides, really," Stack said Monday.

The short oration, which begins, "Four score and seven years ago," was intended to mark the dedication of the cemetery at the site of the pivotal battle. But it also came as Lincoln's own reasons for fighting the Civil War were evolving. He spoke of how democracy itself rested upon "the proposition that all men are created equal," a profound and politically risky statement for the time. Slavery and the doctrine of states' rights would not hold in the "more perfect union" of Lincoln's vision.

It was not immediately recognized as a towering literary achievement. Just last week, The Patriot-News in nearby Harrisburg retracted a dismissive editorial about the speech published by its Civil War-era predecessor, The Harrisburg Patriot & Union. The newspaper now says it regrets the error of not seeing its "momentous importance, timeless eloquence and lasting significance."

The ideals expressed in the speech also weren't necessarily a reflection of reality. Only a few years after the war, a separate cemetery for black Civil War veterans was created in Gettysburg because they were "denied burial in the National Cemetery because of segregation policies," according to a historical marker placed in 2003.

The free Dedication Day event is held annually at Soldiers' National Cemetery. Last year's commemoration drew some 9,000 people.

President Barack Obama declined an invitation. Park officials say Rutherford B. Hayes is the last sitting president to attend a Nov. 19 event in Gettysburg.

There are several related events at the park this week, including the "Gettysburg Address Gallery" at the park museum and visitor center. The exhibit includes pages with signatures of individuals who attended the 1863 Dedication Ceremony in Gettysburg and a letter and signed pardon from Lincoln.

The annual Remembrance Day Parade in Gettysburg will be held Saturday, featuring Union and Confederate re-enactors who will lay wreaths at the portions of the battlefield their units defended.

An estimated 235,000 people came to Gettysburg this year on or around the battle's anniversary in July.

The National Park Service is streaming Tuesday's ceremony live to 90,000 colleges, schools, libraries and museums nationwide.

View previous topic View next topic Back to top  Message [Page 1 of 1]

Permissions in this forum:
You cannot reply to topics in this forum