The ALPLM’s handwritten version of the Gettysburg Address
will be on display Nov. 18-28.
Inspired by the sacrifice of thousands of soldiers, Abraham
Lincoln delivered a speech for the ages
The Gettysburg Address is the most well-known political
speech ever written in the English language. This means almost everyone has
heard it at least once, but it also means the speech is like a popular song
that’s so overplayed it becomes background noise.
We can start rescuing the Gettysburg Address from the
consequences of its ubiquity by considering its original context. Lincoln
delivered his two-minute opus on November 19, 1863, at the dedication of the
Gettysburg National Cemetery, and it reads best as an elegy for the soldiers
who fought there.
Lincoln begins by invoking the Declaration of Independence
through his famous “four score” opening. In so doing, he connects the war
against the insurgent confederacy with the founding of America and its ideals,
especially the maxim that “all men are created equal,” which he quotes
directly.
This may seem like a given to us, but it carried some
controversy, as both the United States and the confederacy claimed to represent
the founders’ true vision. For Lincoln’s part, he had argued since at least the
1850s that the Declaration was a fundamental element of American political
culture. By the time he gave the Gettysburg Address, he believed he’d brought
the nation closer to that ideal by issuing the Emancipation Proclamation.
Lincoln then shifts from his broader examination of
America’s ideals to “the brave men, living and dead, who struggled here.” He
first wants us to appreciate the enormity of their sacrifice — conceding it is
impossible for him or anyone else present on November 19 to “consecrate” or
“hallow” the battlefield. “These honored dead” (about 3,100 U. S. soldiers)
already did so by giving “the last full measure of devotion.”
Instead, Lincoln asks his audience to both preserve the
memory of “what they did here” and dedicate themselves “to the great task
remaining before us.” That task, Lincoln concludes, is to preserve the nation
created by the Declaration — one committed to “government of the people, by the
people, for the people.” Yet he goes further, suggesting America will also be
refined through “a new birth of freedom” — perhaps anticipating a future
without slavery.
We now know too that these words were not just political
posturing but products of careful consideration and self-reflection. Contrary
to popular myth, Lincoln did not write the Gettysburg Address on a scrap of
paper during his train ride from Washington, but there is evidence he was still
revising the speech the day he delivered it.
That morning, Lincoln had visited the landscape around the town
where he saw scenes of valor and witnessed signs of carnage still evident four
months after the battle. In his enlightening book “Writing the Gettysburg
Address,” historian Martin P. Johnson speculates this visit inspired Lincoln to
redraft the speech to focus more on the heroism and sacrifice of the soldiers
fighting to preserve and expand American freedom.
The history of Gettysburg is full of such stories, and
Lincoln heard some of them before and during his visit. For me, one of the most
meaningful is that of the 1st Minnesota Infantry Regiment.
On the battle’s second day, Robert E. Lee’s Army of Northern
Virginia attacked George Meade’s Army of the Potomac on both flanks to dislodge
it from the high ground south of town. U. S. soldiers repulsed these assaults
at now-famous places like Culp’s Hill, the Peach Orchard, Devil’s Den, and
Little Round Top.
Nevertheless, by dusk about 1,700 Alabamians were
approaching Cemetery Ridge. General Winfield Scott Hancock had been
coordinating the U. S. defense and rode to see who stood to oppose the coming
confederates. Finding only one battle-depleted regiment of about 260 soldiers —
the veteran 1st Minnesota — he lamented “My God! Are these all the men we have
here?”
The answer was yes, but time was on Hancock’s side. Knowing
he had only to delay the confederates long enough for the sun to go down, but
fearful they would quickly overwhelm the defending Minnesotans, he made an
unconventional decision. Hancock ordered the Minnesotans not to stand their
ground, but to march out toward the Alabamians, hoping this would surprise and
slow the coming onslaught.
Hardened veterans who had been with the Army of the Potomac
since the First Battle of Bull Run, the men of the 1st Minnesota obeyed the
order without hesitation, even though they surely knew it was desperate and
likely fatal.
The tactic worked, leaving the Alabamians too disorganized
to continue the assault in time. The cost, however, was immense. Only about
fifty members of the 1st Minnesota returned to Cemetery Ridge. All its officers
were lost. The regiment suffered 68 percent casualties over three days of
fighting—the largest percentage of any regiment.
The Gettysburg Address is a brief but powerful meditation on
bravery and loss in defense of a higher ideal. It centers on Lincoln’s
invocation of “the last full measure of devotion” from soldiers, like those of
the 1st Minnesota, who helped save and redefine American freedom on that bloody
Pennsylvania landscape.