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l Farewell Address  l  September 19, 1796

 


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Great Essays

MARTIN LUTHER KING - LETTER FROM THE BIRMINGHAM JAIL

EDITORIAL COMMENT:  Written April 16, 1963 from the Birmingham City Jail, this was a response to eight white Alabama clergymen who published an "open letter" in the newspaper earlier that January calling on King to end his policy of non-violent resistance and allow the issue of integration to be handled in the courts. According to King, who was in jail for civil rights demonstrations, "I began writing the letter on the margins of the newspaper in which the statement appeared and continued it on scraps of writing paper supplied by a friendly Negro trusty, and finally concluding it on a pad my attorneys were eventually permitted to leave me". The clergymen were :
 

Bishop C.C. Carpenter
Bishop Joseph A. Durick
Rabbi Milton L. Grafman
Bishop Paul Hardin
Bishop Nolan B. Harmon
The Rev. George M. Murry
The Rev. Edward V. Ramage
The Rev. Earl Stallings

I'm reminded of the old adage of "not judging a man till you've walked a mile in his shoes!" This letter puts you in the shoes of the Black man of that day. It should be in every high school textbook. Is it in your school?

[To read click here]


GEORGE WASHINGTON'S FAREWELL ADDRESS

EDITORIAL COMMENT:  He leaves us with concern about the vigilance required by all citizens to assure The Unity of Government, The Rule of Law and the recognition of Religion and Morality as necessary agents of good government. He speaks of special interest groups as "potent engines, by which cunning, ambitious, and unprincipled men will be enabled to subvert the power of the people, and to usurp for themselves the reins of government..." He speaks of the damage to the foundation of Constitutional government of Executive Orders and unconstitutional Judicial Court rulings. He strongly warns of the destructive force allowed through the centralization of power, and urges that in our dealings with other Nations, to " Observe good faith and justice toward all Nations; cultivate peace and harmony with all ... to give to mankind the magnanimous and too novel example of a people always guided by an exalted justice and benevolence. " Read his full address and you  will find the errors of American Foreign Policy for the last 100 years ! Must reading in every high school. Is it in yours?

[To read click here]


ABRAHAM LINCOLN - SECOND INAUGURAL ADDRESS

EDITORIAL COMMENT:  Abraham Lincoln delivered his second inaugural address, which was his favorite of all his speeches on March 4, 1865.  At the start of his second term as President of the United States.  At a time when victory over the secessionists in the American Civil War was within sight and slavery had been effectively ended.  Lincoln did not speak of triumph, but of loss, guilt, and sin.  Some see his speech as a defense of his pragmatic approach to Reconstruction, in which he sought to avoid harsh treatment of the defeated South by reminding his listeners of how wrong both sides had been in imagining what lay before them when the ware began four years ago.  Lincoln balanced that rejection of triumphalism, however, with a recognition of the unmistakable evil of slavery, which he described in the most concrete terms possible.  It is inscribed, along with the Gettysburg Address, in the Lincoln Memorial in Washington D.C.  The address is the briefest inaugural address by an US President on record.

[To read click here]


ABRAHAM LINCOLN - GETTYSBURG ADDRESS

EDITORIAL COMMENT:  Few documents in the growth of the American Republic are as well known or as beloved as the prose poem Abraham Lincoln delivered at the dedication of the military cemetery in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania.

In June 1863 Confederate forces under Robert E. Lee moved north in an effort to win a dramatic victory that would reverse the South's declining fortunes. On July 1-3, Lee's forces fought the Union army under the command of George C. Meade, and before the fighting ended, the two sides suffered more than 45,000 casualties. Lee, having lost more than a third of his men, retreated, and the Battle of Gettysburg is considered a turning point in the American Civil War.

The dedication of the battlefield and cemetery thus provided Lincoln with an opportunity for a major address, but he disappointed many of his supporters when he gave this short talk. In fact, many of the spectators did not even know the president had started speaking when he finished. But in this talk Lincoln managed, as the great orator Edward Everett (the main speaker at the dedication) understood, to combine all the elements of the battle and the dedication into a unified whole.

These men fought, and died.  Now their work was done; they had made the supreme sacrifice, and it was up to those living to carry on the task. But Lincoln's rhetoric, as subsequent generations discovered, did far more than memorialize the dead; it illuminated the meaning of the Constitution for those still alive. Lincoln highlighted the Constitution's promise of equality, the "proposition that all men are created equal." That, of course, had been a premise of the Declaration of Independence, but everyone understood that the drafters of that document had not intended to include slaves and other "inferior" peoples in their definition. Now the country had fought a great war to test that notion, and the lives of the men who died at Gettysburg could be hallowed only one way -- if the nation, finally, lived up to the proposition that all of its people, regardless of race, were in fact equal. The power of the idea still informs American democratic thought.

For further reading: James M. McPherson, Abraham Lincoln and the Second American Revolution (1991); Philip B. Kunhardt, A New Birth of Freedom: Lincoln at Gettysburg (1983).

[To read click here]


DECLARATION OF INDEPENDENCE

EDITORIAL COMMENT: Without this very brazen act, on the part of a group of very principled leaders there's a good chance our Country would never have come into being as we know it today. Have you ever wondered what happened to those men who committed treason against England by signing this Declaration of Independence?

[To read click here]


CONSTITUTION OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA

EDITORIAL COMMENT:  Without the Constitution binding the 13 States together, based on their commonality of interest in certain areas of civil society, our Country probably would have collapsed into 13 special interest groups. Ruled by " the light and dark sides of human nature of man's capacity for reason and justice that makes free government possible, and of his capacity for passion and injustice that makes it necessary " (1)

It's important to remember that this American idea was "the world's first experiment in popular government over an extended area" (2)  recognizing that the structure of government, and the powers given it, came from the consent of those governed by it. It acknowledged the real power center to be the individual, not the governing administration.

(1)&(2) The Federalist Papers [see Books of Interest page]

[To read click here]


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