| Thursday, 04-Dec-2008 18:02:47 GMT | Tell a friend |
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On November 19, 1863, some four months after the Battle of Gettysburg, President Abraham Lincoln traveled to the small Pennsylvania town to help dedicate the Soldiers' National Cemetery. Lincoln was invited to give "a few appropriate remarks". The main speaker was to be Edward Everett[?], a distinguished orator who had served as Secretary of State, U.S. Senator, U.S. Representative, Governor of Massachusetts and President of Harvard University. After a well received two hour speech by Everett, now largely forgotten, Lincoln spoke just over two minutes -- so briefly that the attending photographer failed to capture his image during the speech.
Initial public reaction to the speech was divided along partisan lines, but Everett praised the President for his eloquently concise speech saying, "I should flatter myself if I could come to the heart of the occasion in two hours in what you did in two minutes."
Lincoln's words have become enshrined as a historic American utterance, studied by scholars and memorized by school children for generations, and are here given in full:
The Gettysburg Address is inscribed on the south wall of the Lincoln Memorial in Washington DC.
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