Logo

Today's Document

  • Archive
  • RSS
  • Ask
  • Suggest a Document
banner

The District of Columbia Emancipation Act

On April 16, 1862, President Abraham Lincoln signed a bill ending slavery in the District of Columbia. Passage of this act came 9 months before President Lincoln issued his Emancipation Proclamation. The act brought to conclusion decades of agitation aimed at ending what antislavery advocates called “the national shame” of slavery in the nation’s capital.

Source: research.archives.gov

    • #Emancipation
    • #Today's Document
    • #Washington DC
    • #abraham lincoln
    • #history
    • #slavery
    • #today in history
    • #civil war
    • #african american history
  • 1 year ago
  • 89
  • Permalink
  • Share

89 Notes/ Hide

  1. finemeshsieve likes this
  2. technicolorsideshow reblogged this from posttragicmulatto and added:
    Just so you know… via
  3. fuzzylocs reblogged this from posttragicmulatto
  4. cakeandcunnilingus likes this
  5. muninandhugin reblogged this from sisoula
  6. walidhani reblogged this from aragingquiet
  7. aragingquiet reblogged this from posttragicmulatto
  8. the-uncensored-she likes this
  9. posttragicmulatto likes this
  10. shoe3579 reblogged this from todaysdocument
  11. icecoldsnow reblogged this from the15thpear and added:
    The District of Columbia Emancipation Act On April 16, 1862, President Abraham Lincoln signed a bill ending slavery in...
  12. shc902 likes this
  13. ms-lioness reblogged this from abeetlesblog
  14. magnoliasinthetree reblogged this from blu3rsx
  15. learnthinkact reblogged this from abeetlesblog
  16. abeetlesblog reblogged this from congressarchives
  17. abeetlesblog likes this
  18. mobilelene likes this
  19. nofindingaid reblogged this from love-of-history
  20. love-of-history reblogged this from todaysdocument
  21. jmjohnso reblogged this from todaysdocument
  22. scottcasey likes this
  23. toseekanewerworld reblogged this from todaysdocument
  24. colleenkmichaels likes this
  25. soundhasfury reblogged this from todaysdocument
  26. dullscythe likes this
  27. myrrhandah likes this
  28. littlemonstermom reblogged this from todaysdocument
  29. barelytolerable likes this
  30. wintermorning likes this
  31. burn-burn-burn-burn likes this
  32. finnishyourcheese reblogged this from todaysdocument
  33. finnishyourcheese likes this
  34. mitologiasvivas likes this
  35. flawlessenchantments likes this
  36. nycgeek reblogged this from todaysdocument
  37. nycgeek likes this
  38. kaiyves reblogged this from todaysdocument and added:
    Cool.
  39. the15thpear reblogged this from todaysdocument and added:
    A very seldom talked about document but very important
  40. swagician likes this
  41. smithsonianlibraries reblogged this from todaysdocument
  42. kaiyves likes this
  43. angel-m-anderson reblogged this from todaysdocument
  44. angel-m-anderson likes this
  45. todaysdocument likes this
  46. gracefree reblogged this from todaysdocument
  47. congressarchives reblogged this from todaysdocument and added:
    The DC Emancipation Act is currently being featured at the U.S. Capitol Visitor Center. You have until the beginning of...
  48. coneyislanddiscopalace likes this
  49. usnatarchives likes this
  50. clio-jlh likes this
  51. Show more notesLoading...
← Previous • Next →

Portrait/Logo

About

Daily featured documents from the holdings of the U.S. National Archives.

Connect

  • @TodaysDocument on Twitter
  • Facebook Profile
  • USNationalArchives on Youtube
  • usnationalarchives on Flickr
  • USNatArchives on Foursquare

Pages

  • About Today's Document
  • Policies
  • Mobile App
  • DOCUMERICA
  • Civil War
  • World War II
  • Women's History
  • African American History
  • Patents & Inventions
  • Animated History (GIFs!)
  • Steampunk

@TodaysDocument

loading tweets…

Things we like

  • Photo via romkids

    Tyrannosaurus rex tooth. Can also double as a: dagger, railroad spike, killer banana.

    Photo via romkids
  • Photo via gov-info

    via Truman Library — Mobilizing for War : Poster Art of World War II

    Photo via gov-info
  • Photo via gov-info

    NARA Gov Doc: Letter to Congress from Queen Liliuokalani against annexation of Hawaii

    On July 7, 1898, the Hawaiian Islands were annexed...

    Photo via gov-info
  • Photo via smithsonianmag

    When an Army of Artists Fooled Hitler

    Shortly after the D-Day invasion on June 6, 1944, two Frenchmen on bicycles managed to cross the...

    Photo via smithsonianmag
See more →
  • RSS
  • Random
  • Archive
  • Ask
  • Suggest a Document
  • Mobile

Visit www.archives.gov for official U.S. National Archives information. Copyright information. Effector Theme by Carlo Franco.

Powered by Tumblr