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Note from Lincoln found amid papers at Archives
By ASSOCIATED PRESS
Published June 8, 2007
WASHINGTON - The National Archives on Thursday unveiled a handwritten note by Abraham Lincoln exhorting his generals to pursue Robert E. Lee's army after the battle of Gettysburg, underscoring one of the great missed opportunities for an early end to the Civil War. An archives Civil War specialist discovered the July 7, 1863, note three weeks ago in a batch of military papers stored among the billions of pages of historical documents at the mammoth building on Pennsylvania Avenue. The text of Lincoln's note has been publicly known because the general to whom Lincoln addressed it telegraphed the contents verbatim to the front lines at Gettysburg. There, the Union army's leaders failed for more than a week to aggressively pursue Lee after his defeat. A week after Lincoln's note was written, the Confederate army slipped across the Potomac River into Virginia - and the war continued for two more years. At a news conference, archivist Trevor Plante said he was looking for something else last month when he found Lincoln's note tucked away in a drawer among other papers. His reaction was "Wow!" when he recognized the handwriting and Lincoln's signature. Plante's find reinforces "Lincoln's desperation to turn Gettysburg not just into victory, but decisive victory that stops the bloodshed, " said historian Allen Guelzo, director of Civil War era studies at Gettysburg College.
[Last modified June 8, 2007, 01:50:02]
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