From “The Human Condition: A
User’s Manual,” by Arnold Kunst
26
November
Abraham
Lincoln, Thanksgiver-in-Chief, First Installment
The
Civil War broke out a few weeks after Lincoln’s inauguration in 1861. To fight
that war required volunteers who were prepared to interrupt their lives in a
most profound way. That degree of commitment called forth gratitude from the
Commander-in-Chief, but unlike other Presidents thanking troops for going into
harm’s way [“the enemy is disorganized and has land we want;” “we need to get
our oil from under their ground,” etc] Lincoln’s gratitude was real. That’s
why, in that first year of the war when volunteer regiments arrived in
Washington, D.C. in ever-increasing numbers, the President made it his business
to thank each one personally.
Stay
tuned: second installment tomorrow.
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