Lincoln’s “The Gettysburg Address” THE CIVIL WAR.

35
Lincoln’s “The Gettysburg Address” THE CIVIL WAR

Transcript of Lincoln’s “The Gettysburg Address” THE CIVIL WAR.

Page 1: Lincoln’s “The Gettysburg Address” THE CIVIL WAR.

Lincoln’s “The Gettysburg Address”

THE CIVIL WAR

Page 2: Lincoln’s “The Gettysburg Address” THE CIVIL WAR.

[Gettysburg, Pa. Confederate dead at the edge of the Rose woods, July 5, 1863].

Page 3: Lincoln’s “The Gettysburg Address” THE CIVIL WAR.

Gettysburg, Pennsylvania. Officers of 50th Regiment Pennsylvania Infantry.

Page 4: Lincoln’s “The Gettysburg Address” THE CIVIL WAR.

Incidents of the War -- Harvest of Death

Page 5: Lincoln’s “The Gettysburg Address” THE CIVIL WAR.

Lincoln's Gettysburg Address, Gettysburg.

Page 6: Lincoln’s “The Gettysburg Address” THE CIVIL WAR.

The Home of a Rebel Sharpshooter.

Page 7: Lincoln’s “The Gettysburg Address” THE CIVIL WAR.

A Sharpshooter's Last Sleep.

Page 8: Lincoln’s “The Gettysburg Address” THE CIVIL WAR.

[Gettysburg, Pa. Three Confederate prisoners].

Page 9: Lincoln’s “The Gettysburg Address” THE CIVIL WAR.

[Gettysburg, Pa. John L. Burns, the "old hero of Gettysburg," with gun and crutches].

Page 10: Lincoln’s “The Gettysburg Address” THE CIVIL WAR.

Roosevelt’s “Four Freedoms” Speech

THE GREAT DEPRESSION

Page 11: Lincoln’s “The Gettysburg Address” THE CIVIL WAR.

Painter Norman Rockwell’s Four Freedoms posters

Page 12: Lincoln’s “The Gettysburg Address” THE CIVIL WAR.

Japanese Internment Camp in US during WWII

Page 13: Lincoln’s “The Gettysburg Address” THE CIVIL WAR.

Manzanar street scene, winter, Manzanar Relocation Center / photograph by Ansel Adams.

Page 14: Lincoln’s “The Gettysburg Address” THE CIVIL WAR.

Toward Los Angeles, California

Page 15: Lincoln’s “The Gettysburg Address” THE CIVIL WAR.

Painter Norman Rockwell’s Four Freedoms posters

Page 16: Lincoln’s “The Gettysburg Address” THE CIVIL WAR.

Pearl Harbor

Page 17: Lincoln’s “The Gettysburg Address” THE CIVIL WAR.

U.S. forces liberate Buchenwald in 1945

Page 18: Lincoln’s “The Gettysburg Address” THE CIVIL WAR.

Destitute pea pickers in California. Mother of seven children. Age thirty-two. Nipomo, California (Migrant Mother)

Page 19: Lincoln’s “The Gettysburg Address” THE CIVIL WAR.

Painter Norman Rockwell’s Four Freedoms posters

Page 20: Lincoln’s “The Gettysburg Address” THE CIVIL WAR.

Hoovervilles and the Great Depression

Page 21: Lincoln’s “The Gettysburg Address” THE CIVIL WAR.

Washington, D.C. Government charwoman

Page 22: Lincoln’s “The Gettysburg Address” THE CIVIL WAR.

One of the Wilkins family making biscuits for dinner on cornshucking day at Mrs. Fred Wilkins' home near Tallyho, Granville County. North Carolina

Page 23: Lincoln’s “The Gettysburg Address” THE CIVIL WAR.

Painter Norman Rockwell’s Four Freedoms posters

Page 24: Lincoln’s “The Gettysburg Address” THE CIVIL WAR.

Billy Sunday revival

Page 25: Lincoln’s “The Gettysburg Address” THE CIVIL WAR.

King’s “I Have a Dream” speech

THE CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT

Page 26: Lincoln’s “The Gettysburg Address” THE CIVIL WAR.

Little Rock, 1959. Rally at state capitol

Page 27: Lincoln’s “The Gettysburg Address” THE CIVIL WAR.
Page 28: Lincoln’s “The Gettysburg Address” THE CIVIL WAR.

[Group of African Americans viewing the bomb-damaged home of Arthur Shores, NAACP attorney, Birmingham, Alabama]

Page 29: Lincoln’s “The Gettysburg Address” THE CIVIL WAR.

“Integration at Ole Miss[issippi] Univ[ersity]”

Page 30: Lincoln’s “The Gettysburg Address” THE CIVIL WAR.

Civil rights march on Wash[ington], D.C.

Page 31: Lincoln’s “The Gettysburg Address” THE CIVIL WAR.

“MLK gives “I Have a Dream” speech in Washington D.C.”

Page 32: Lincoln’s “The Gettysburg Address” THE CIVIL WAR.

Civil rights march on Wash[ington], D.C.

Page 33: Lincoln’s “The Gettysburg Address” THE CIVIL WAR.

“Negro voting in Cardoza [i.e., Cardozo] High School in [Washington,] D.C.”

Page 34: Lincoln’s “The Gettysburg Address” THE CIVIL WAR.

Black Panther Convention, Lincoln Memorial

Page 35: Lincoln’s “The Gettysburg Address” THE CIVIL WAR.

“D.C. riot. April '68. Aftermath”