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Authentic Emancipation Proclamation Replica - Historic Document Reproduction in Small Tube for Home Decor, Classroom Display & Civil War Memorabilia Collection
Authentic Emancipation Proclamation Replica - Historic Document Reproduction in Small Tube for Home Decor, Classroom Display & Civil War Memorabilia CollectionAuthentic Emancipation Proclamation Replica - Historic Document Reproduction in Small Tube for Home Decor, Classroom Display & Civil War Memorabilia CollectionAuthentic Emancipation Proclamation Replica - Historic Document Reproduction in Small Tube for Home Decor, Classroom Display & Civil War Memorabilia CollectionAuthentic Emancipation Proclamation Replica - Historic Document Reproduction in Small Tube for Home Decor, Classroom Display & Civil War Memorabilia Collection

Authentic Emancipation Proclamation Replica - Historic Document Reproduction in Small Tube for Home Decor, Classroom Display & Civil War Memorabilia Collection

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SKU:15395127

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Product Description

  • Made in the U.S.A.
  • Poster-size document facsimile
  • Approximately 14 X 16 inches
  • Parchment paper, unique in appearance, with crinkles and aging process characteristics. Please note that the parchment may darken over time. We recommend framing behind UV protective coated glass to avoid this discoloration
  • This reproduction of the Emancipation Proclamation combines all five pages of the original document onto two pages for easy display of the replica document.  

    President Abraham Lincoln issued the Emancipation Proclamation on January 1, 1863, during the American Civil War. This edict formally proclaimed the freedom of all slaves held in areas still in revolt and invited black men to join the Union Army and Navy, resulting in the enlistment of approximately 200,000 freed slaves and free black people before the war's end.

  • Although the Emancipation Proclamation did not end slavery in the United States, it placed the issue squarely at the top of the wartime agenda. It added moral force to the Union's cause and was a significant milestone leading to the ratification of the 13th Amendment to the Constitution in 1865, which formally outlawed slavery throughout the nation. The Emancipation Proclamation linked the preservation of American constitutional government to the end of slavery. It has become one of our country's most treasured documents.

    The original handwritten Emancipation Proclamation is preserved, protected, and held in trust by the National Archives.

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