Posted By: Abigail
-Note from Lincoln Spares Soldier's Life-- - 08/03/12 07:00 PM
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-Note from Lincoln Spares Soldier’s Life-
-By Claudine Zap
.Copyright National Archives
--Abraham Lincoln declared the end of slavery with his Emancipation Proclamation. But he also reviewed death sentences of soldiers who were court-martialed during the Civil War.
Slate's David Plotz renewed interest in one such hand-written note he saw after he toured the National Archives' vaults recently.
The document immortalizes Lincoln's decision to spare a soldier's life. Michael Delaney had deserted one Colorado regiment in 1862, but was fighting for another when he was arrested. Lincoln overturned the death sentence since the man had re-enlisted, writing with dazzling succinctness,
'Let him fight instead of being shot. A Lincoln'
As Slate's Plotz noted, "I guess it's not surprising that the author of the Gettysburg Address and the Second Inaugural Address could manage to convey humanity, common sense, and a flash of dark wit in just seven words."
A post on the Facebook page (yes, it has one) of the Foundation for the National Archives adds, "This document is a great example of how even the tiniest margin notes can make a record breathtaking."
More than a footnote in history, this little gem is certainly new to us, and worth a look.
-Note from Lincoln Spares Soldier’s Life-
-By Claudine Zap
.Copyright National Archives
--Abraham Lincoln declared the end of slavery with his Emancipation Proclamation. But he also reviewed death sentences of soldiers who were court-martialed during the Civil War.
Slate's David Plotz renewed interest in one such hand-written note he saw after he toured the National Archives' vaults recently.
The document immortalizes Lincoln's decision to spare a soldier's life. Michael Delaney had deserted one Colorado regiment in 1862, but was fighting for another when he was arrested. Lincoln overturned the death sentence since the man had re-enlisted, writing with dazzling succinctness,
'Let him fight instead of being shot. A Lincoln'
As Slate's Plotz noted, "I guess it's not surprising that the author of the Gettysburg Address and the Second Inaugural Address could manage to convey humanity, common sense, and a flash of dark wit in just seven words."
A post on the Facebook page (yes, it has one) of the Foundation for the National Archives adds, "This document is a great example of how even the tiniest margin notes can make a record breathtaking."
More than a footnote in history, this little gem is certainly new to us, and worth a look.