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AP U.S. History Exam 2.25 212 Views
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Description:
AP U.S. History Exam 2.25. In writing the Gettysburg Address, Lincoln was still working to win over Northern voters who believed that...what?
Transcript
- 00:00
[ musical flourish ]
- 00:03
And here's your Shmoop du jour, brought to you by the Gettysburg Address,
- 00:07
1195 Baltimore Pike.
- 00:08
Yeah. That's the address. See in Google Maps? It's right there.
- 00:11
All right, first up, the excerpt.
Full Transcript
- 00:13
[ mumbles ]
- 00:18
Okay, and now the question:
- 00:20
In writing the Gettysburg Address, Lincoln was still working
- 00:22
to win over Northern voters who believed that... what?
- 00:26
Like, who wouldn't vote for Lincoln?
- 00:28
It's like not voting in Tom Brady to the Hall of Fame.
- 00:31
All right, and here are your potential answers.
- 00:32
[ mumbles ]
- 00:36
Okay. Well, Lincoln might have been at Gettysburg
- 00:39
to dedicate a cemetery to soldiers
- 00:42
killed a few months earlier,
- 00:44
but he used the opportunity to win over Northern voters,
- 00:47
particularly Democrats who were still skeptical of his leadership.
- 00:50
[ chuckles ] Talk about an uphill battle.
- 00:52
In the Gettysburg Address, was Lincoln focused on
- 00:54
winning over voters who believed that A -
- 00:56
the war was not economically responsible?
- 00:59
Well, actually, many voters believed the North to be in
- 01:01
a solid economic position to fight the war. So that knocks out A.
- 01:05
Was the Gettysburg Address intended to woo voters
- 01:08
who still thought that B - slavery could be ended without a war?
- 01:12
Well, in fact, these anti-Lincoln voters -
- 01:15
who are mostly Northern Democrats - were fully opposed to
- 01:17
the abolitionist movement. They had no desire to
- 01:20
end slavery whatsoever. Like what were they thinking?
- 01:23
All right, so B is out, as well.
- 01:25
Then was Lincoln using the speech to win over voters
- 01:28
who thought that D - the North was too unprepared for war?
- 01:32
Well, remember how voters thought that
- 01:33
the North had a solid economic advantage over the South?
- 01:36
Well, they also felt pretty confident about the North's military might.
- 01:40
Maybe too confident, though, given how long the war ended up lasting.
- 01:43
Which means that Lincoln used the Gettysburg Address
- 01:45
to win over Northern Democrats who believed that C -
- 01:48
the South had the right to secede.
- 01:50
Regardless of their differences, Lincoln wanted to convince his
- 01:52
political rivals that the government of the people, by the people,
- 01:55
for the people shall not perish from the earth.
- 01:58
All that to say the South had no right to secede
- 02:01
to begin with and political differences should be
- 02:04
worked out with the nation as a whole.
- 02:05
So C is the correct answer.
- 02:07
Despite Lincoln's best efforts, these Northern Democrats,
- 02:10
who referred to themselves as copperheads, like the snake,
- 02:13
slithered in the grass, waiting to poison his plan for peace.
- 02:17
[ sigh ]
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