Chad Lare

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Through six months of war, Abraham Lincoln had held to his long-standing pledge of noninterference with slavery in the South. He was fighting to preserve the Union, not to free slaves. For Lincoln, this wasn’t simply a matter of principle or constitutional duty. The northern public wasn’t ready to fight for emancipation, and he needed the support of slaveholding border states such as Maryland and Kentucky, which hadn’t seceded and were crucial to the war effort.
Midnight Rising: John Brown and the Raid That Sparked the Civil War
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