Preliminary Emancipation Proclamation 
		is announced 
		By This Day In History - The History Channel 
		
		
		
		The 
		Emancipation Proclamation
		
		Preliminary Emancipation 
		Emancipation  
		Proclamation Background 
		Motivated by his growing concern for the 
		inhumanity of slavery as well as practical political concerns, President 
		Abraham Lincoln changes the course of the war and American history by 
		issuing the preliminary Emancipation Proclamation. Announced a week 
		after the nominal Union victory at the Battle of Antietam, near 
		Sharpsburg, Maryland, this measure did not technically free any slaves, 
		but it expanded the Union’s war aim from reunification to include the 
		abolition of slavery. 
		The proclamation announced that all slaves 
		in territory that was still in rebellion as of January 1, 1863, 
		would be free. 
		Lincoln used 
		vacated congressional seats to determine the areas still in rebellion, 
		as some parts of the South had already been recaptured and 
		representatives returned to Congress under Union supervision. 
		 
		 Since it freed slaves only in Rebel areas 
		that were beyond Union occupation, the Emancipation Proclamation really 
		freed no one. But the measure was still one of the most important acts 
		in American history, as it meant slavery would end when those areas were 
		recaptured.  
		In addition, the proclamation effectively 
		sabotaged Confederate attempts to secure recognition by foreign 
		governments, especially 
		Great Britain. 
		When reunification was the goal of the North, foreigners could view the 
		Confederates as freedom fighters being held against their will by the
		Union. 
		But after the Emancipation Proclamation, the Southern cause was now 
		viewed as the defense of slavery. The proclamation was a shrewd maneuver 
		by Lincoln 
		to brand the Confederate States as a slave nation and render foreign aid 
		impossible. 
		The measure was met by a good deal of 
		opposition, because many Northerners were unwilling to fight for the 
		freedom of blacks. But it spelled the death knell for slavery, and it 
		had the effect on British opinion that 
		Lincoln 
		had desired. Antislavery 
		Britain 
		could no longer recognize the Confederacy, and Union sentiment swelled 
		in 
		Britain. 
		With this measure, 
		Lincoln 
		effectively isolated the Confederacy and killed the institution that was 
		the root of sectional differences 
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