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Lincoln Invited to Gettysburg to Consecrate a
Civil War Cemetery, November 19, 1863
On November 2, 1863, several months after the
battle of Gettysburg (July 1-3), David Wills invited President Lincoln
to make a "few appropriate remarks" at the consecration of a cemetery
for the Union war dead. In early July, Pennsylvania governor Andrew
Curtin had charged Wills, a successful local citizen and judge, with
cleaning up the horrible aftermath of the battle: wounded soldiers crammed
into every available building, and thousands of swollen dead strewn
among hundreds of bloated dead horses.
With the approval of the governor and
the eighteen states whose sons were among the dead, Wills quickly acquired
seventeen acres for the national cemetery and had the Germantown landscape
architect, William Saunders, draw up a plan. Burial began not long after.
On September 23, Wills invited the venerable Edward Everett, the nation's
foremost rhetorician, to give an oration at the dedication ceremony
planned for October 23. Everett accepted, but, needing more time to
prepare, persuaded Wills to postpone the ceremony to November 19.
Although Wills wrote his invitation
to Lincoln only three weeks prior to the dedication -- prompting speculation
among historians about his and Governor Curtin's motivations -- there
is evidence that Lincoln was fully apprised of the affair in early October.
Further, Wills's invitation included a warm welcome to the president
to stay at his house, along with Everett and Curtin.
Lincoln accepted the invitation, probably
viewing it as an appropriate time to honor all those who had given their
lives in the Civil War. He may also have seen the dedication as an opportunity
to reveal his evolving thinking about the War, as a fight not only to
save the Union, but also to establish freedom and equality for all under
the law. These ideas are central to the speech Lincoln gave at Gettysburg,
which, despite its brevity, as opposed to Edward Everett's long-forgotten
two-hour oration, has become one of the most memorable of all time.
Here is the note of November 2, 1863,
from David Wills to President Lincoln, inviting him to stay at his home,
along with Governor Curtin and Edward Everett, for the dedication ceremonies,
November 19, 1863. Wills enclosed this note in his letter of the same
date, inviting the president to speak.
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