

Lincoln @ Gettysburg
Episode 1 | 54m 46sVideo has Closed Captions
Learn about the impact of the telegraph on the Gettysburg Address.
In 1863, Abraham Lincoln proved himself a master of a new frontier — not on the battlefields of the Civil War, but in his high-tech command center: the War Department Telegraph Office. The internet of the 19th century, the telegraph gave Lincoln new powers to reshape leadership and wield personal control across distant battlefields.
Problems playing video? | Closed Captioning Feedback
Problems playing video? | Closed Captioning Feedback

Lincoln @ Gettysburg
Episode 1 | 54m 46sVideo has Closed Captions
In 1863, Abraham Lincoln proved himself a master of a new frontier — not on the battlefields of the Civil War, but in his high-tech command center: the War Department Telegraph Office. The internet of the 19th century, the telegraph gave Lincoln new powers to reshape leadership and wield personal control across distant battlefields.
Problems playing video? | Closed Captioning Feedback
How to Watch Lincoln @ Gettysburg
Lincoln @ Gettysburg is available to stream on pbs.org and the free PBS App, available on iPhone, Apple TV, Android TV, Android smartphones, Amazon Fire TV, Amazon Fire Tablet, Roku, Samsung Smart TV, and Vizio.
Buy Now
Providing Support for PBS.org
Learn Moreabout PBS online sponsorshipNarrator: THE CIVIL WAR RAGES ON, AND THE NORTH IS ON THE VERGE OF DEFEAT.
FOR PRESIDENT ABRAHAM LINCOLN, TIME IS RUNNING OUT.
DESPERATE FOR A VICTORY, HE WILL BRING A NEW WEAPON TO THE BATTLEFIELD.
Wheeler: ABRAHAM LINCOLN HAD THIS TOOL THAT NO OTHER POLITICAL LEADER IN HISTORY HAD EVER POSSESSED.
Narrator: LINCOLN BECOMES THE FIRST COMMANDER IN CHIEF TO DISCOVER THE POWER OF ELECTRONIC MESSAGING.
Powell: THE TELEGRAPH WAS A REVOLUTIONARY CHANGE IN THE MANAGEMENT OF A WAR.
Narrator: AND LINCOLN'S WAR IS ABOUT TO BE DECIDED ON THE HILLS OF GETTYSBURG IN A SHOWDOWN BETWEEN ARMIES AND IDEAS.
IT'S THE MOST CATACLYSMIC BATTLE IN AMERICAN HISTORY.
Foner: WHAT WAS AT STAKE WAS THE FUTURE OF DEMOCRACY.
THAT'S WHY THE STAKES WERE SO HIGH TO LINCOLN.
Harris-Perry: THE NOTION OF AMERICA AS ONE NATION -- HE DOES NOT KNOW THAT HE'S GOING TO WIN.
HE DOESN'T KNOW THAT THE UNION WILL BE PRESERVED.
Narrator: WITH SUPPORT FOR THE WAR PLUNGING, LINCOLN JOURNEYS TO GETTYSBURG TO RALLY A NATION.
STANDING ON THE BATTLEFIELD, LINCOLN DELIVERS THE MOST FAMOUS 272 WORDS EVER SPOKEN BY AN AMERICAN PRESIDENT.
Waldman: HE WAS ONE OF THE EARLIEST AND MOST EFFECTIVE POLITICAL TACTICIANS, USERS OF SPIN, USERS OF WHAT WE WOULD CALL A SOUND BITE.
Narrator: BORN OUT OF BLOOD AND SACRIFICE, THE GETTYSBURG ADDRESS REDEFINES WHAT IT MEANS TO BE AN AMERICAN.
Shaara: "...OF THE PEOPLE, BY THE PEOPLE, FOR THE PEOPLE, SHALL NOT PERISH FROM THE EARTH."
I MEAN, THAT SAYS IT ALL.
THIS COUNTRY IS MEANT TO SURVIVE.
"LINCOLN@GETTYSBURG" WAS MADE POSSIBLE ...OUR FATHERS BROUGHT FORTH ON THIS CONTINENT... ...A NEW NATION, CONCEIVED IN LIBERTY... ...AND DEDICATED TO THE PROPOSITION... ...THAT ALL MEN ARE CREATED EQUAL.
NOW WE ARE ENGAGED...
...IN A GREAT CIVIL WAR...
...TESTING WHETHER THAT NATION, OR ANY NATION SO CONCEIVED... ...AND SO DEDICATED, CAN LONG ENDURE.
[ GUNFIRE, INDISTINCT SHOUTING ] Narrator: THE CIVIL WAR HAS BEEN RAGING FOR MORE THAN A YEAR AND A HALF.
HUNDREDS OF THOUSANDS OF SOLDIERS HAVE BEEN KILLED OR MAIMED.
ABRAHAM LINCOLN TELLS AN AIDE, "IF THERE IS A WORSE PLACE THAN HELL, I AM IN IT."
Shaara: IN 1863, THE UNION HAS BEEN ON THIS RIDICULOUS ROLLER-COASTER RIDE.
THE CASUALTY COUNTS ARE HORRIFIC, AND THE COUNTRY IS IN DEEP DESPAIR IN THE NORTH.
AND OF COURSE IN THE SOUTH, THEY'RE EUPHORIC.
I MEAN, THEY'RE WINNING.
ROBERT E. LEE IS WINNING EVERY BATTLE HE FIGHTS.
Waldman: THIS WAS A WAR THAT WAS INCREASINGLY UNPOPULAR.
SO MANY PEOPLE WERE DYING, AND INCREASINGLY, IT WAS A WAR ABOUT SLAVERY, AND MUCH AS WE MIGHT HOPE OTHERWISE, THAT DIDN'T NECESSARILY MAKE IT MORE POPULAR IN THE NORTH.
Harris-Perry: THE CORE ISSUE WAS, HOW DO WE LIVE AS A NATION WHERE SOME STATES HOLD PEOPLE IN SLAVERY AND OTHERS DON'T?
THAT WAS THE GREAT AMERICAN QUESTION.
Narrator: LINCOLN ANSWERS THAT QUESTION ON NEW YEAR'S DAY BY SIGNING THE EMANCIPATION PROCLAMATION, ABOLISHING SLAVERY.
Harris-Perry: IN THE END, IT IS LINCOLN WHO DECIDES AND TAKES US ON THE PATH THAT SAYS, "THERE IS NO WAY TO CONTINUE TO NEGOTIATE THIS.
WE CAN ONLY BE ONE COUNTRY WHEN ALL PEOPLE ARE FREE."
Narrator: THIS IS THE MAKE-OR-BREAK YEAR FOR THE WAR.
WHAT LINCOLN DESPERATELY NEEDS IS A VICTORY.
IN THE DARKEST HOURS OF HIS PRESIDENCY, LINCOLN PLACES HIS HOPES ON A NEW ELECTRONIC MEDIUM.
EVERY DAY, HE MARCHES ACROSS THE WHITE HOUSE LAWN TO THE WAR DEPARTMENT.
INSIDE SITS THE GOVERNMENT'S CLASSIFIED TELEGRAPH OFFICE.
THIS IS LINCOLN'S COMMAND CENTER.
HERE HE ENGAGES IN VIRTUAL CONVERSATIONS WITH HIS GENERALS OUT ON THE FRONT LINES.
Wheeler: YOU CAN THINK ABOUT THE TELEGRAPH ROOM IN THE WAR DEPARTMENT AS THE FIRST SITUATION ROOM.
IT WAS THE EQUIVALENT TO BARACK OBAMA SITTING IN THE SITUATION ROOM WATCHING THE RAID AGAINST BIN LADEN.
[ TELEGRAPH CLICKING ] AND LINCOLN'S ABILITY TO DO THAT WAS THE FIRST TIME IN HISTORY ANY LEADER HAD EVER HAD THAT.
Narrator: UNDER LINCOLN'S WATCH, THE TELEGRAPH BECOMES A WHITE HOUSE TOOL FOR TAKING INFORMATION IN, BUT ALSO SENDING INFORMATION OUT.
Wheeler: SO, HE WAS THINKING IN TERMS OF HOW THE TELEGRAPH SPREADS HIS MESSAGE.
HE CONTINUED TO PROVIDE WHAT WE WOULD CALL PRESS RELEASES TODAY, OR BLOGGING, WHERE THE ADMINISTRATION WAS FEEDING THE ELECTRONIC NEED FOR CONSTANTLY REFRESHED AND NEW INFORMATION.
Waldman: LINCOLN COMMUNICATED WITH THE PUBLIC THROUGH THE MEDIA OF HIS DAY -- NEWSPAPERS.
THEY WERE PARTISAN, CLAMOROUS.
NEWSPAPERS WERE MORE LIKE BLOGS OR CABLE NETWORKS WITH A LIBERAL OR A CONSERVATIVE BENT.
SO, JUST AS ABRAHAM LINCOLN USED THE PARTISAN NEWSPAPERS OF HIS TIME, TODAY'S PRESIDENTS USE TWITTER AND FACEBOOK AND THE INTERNET AND CABLE NEWS.
LINCOLN WOULD HAVE BEEN BIG-TIME ON TWITTER.
HE WOULD HAVE BEEN GREAT.
PEOPLE WOULD HAVE LOVED HIM.
HE WOULD HAVE BEEN PITHY AND SHORT AND SMART AND INSPIRATIONAL, UM, AND A LITTLE SNARKY.
Waldman: HE WAS ONE OF THE EARLIEST AND MOST EFFECTIVE POLITICAL TACTICIANS, USERS OF SPIN, USERS OF WHAT WE WOULD CALL A SOUND BITE.
Narrator: STILL, LINCOLN HAS EVEN BIGGER PLANS FOR ELECTRONIC MESSAGING.
HE BELIEVES THAT THE NEW TECHNOLOGY CAN BE USED AS A WEAPON OF WAR.
THE NORTHERN STATES ARE WIRED, CRISSCROSSED BY AN ELABORATE WEB OF TELEGRAPH LINES.
THE SOUTH, WITH FEW CONNECTIONS, IS HARDLY PLUGGED IN.
Wheeler: ABRAHAM LINCOLN HAD THIS TOOL THAT NO OTHER POLITICAL LEADER IN HISTORY HAD EVER POSSESSED.
Powell: THE TELEGRAPH GAVE THE PRESIDENT THE OPPORTUNITY TO COMMUNICATE DIRECTLY WITH HIS GENERALS AND TO ISSUE INSTRUCTIONS TO THEM, TO GET VERY FIRSTHAND REPORTS FROM THEM.
AND SO IT WAS A REVOLUTIONARY CHANGE IN THE MANAGEMENT OF A WAR.
Wheeler: STOP AND THINK ABOUT IT.
THROUGHOUT HISTORY, POLITICAL LEADERS ALWAYS HAD TO BE WITH THEIR ARMY.
WE HAD A SEPARATION OF THE POLITICAL STRUCTURE AND THE MILITARY STRUCTURE, AND THAT CREATED AN ENVIRONMENT IN WHICH THE GENERALS WERE GODS.
AND THE GENERALS LIKED THIS.
AND ALL OF A SUDDEN, THERE WAS THIS ELECTRONIC INTRUSION INTO THEIR TENTS, AND THE POLITICAL LEADERSHIP COULD COMMUNICATE WITH THEM THEIR THOUGHTS.
AND THIS WAS A WHOLE NEW WAY OF SUPERVISING MILITARY ACTIVITY.
AND THE GENERALS RESENTED IT.
Narrator: BY SPRING, LINCOLN IS SPENDING MUCH OF HIS TIME IN THE TELEGRAPH OFFICE MANAGING THE WAR.
THE REPORTS FROM THE FIELD ARE GRIM.
THEN IN JUNE COMES THE MOST DIRE NEWS OF ALL -- THE CONFEDERATE ARMY, LED BY GENERAL ROBERT E. LEE, IS POISED TO INVADE THE NORTH.
WARNINGS FLOOD IN OF A POSSIBLE ATTACK ON BALTIMORE OR PHILADELPHIA OR, MOST LIKELY, WASHINGTON, D.C. Foner: LEE HAD DEFEATED GENERAL AFTER GENERAL AFTER GENERAL, AND MANY PEOPLE THOUGHT HE WAS INVINCIBLE.
MANY SOUTHERNERS THOUGHT THAT.
MANY NORTHERNERS THOUGHT THAT.
Narrator: BUT LINCOLN BELIEVES ELECTRONIC MESSAGING WILL ALLOW HIM TO PINPOINT LEE'S POSITION AND CUT HIM OFF AT THE PASS.
THAT WAS KIND OF LINCOLN'S WAKE-UP, "AHA" MOMENT ABOUT THE POWER OF THIS NEW MEDIUM.
Narrator: BY PIECING TOGETHER REPORTS FROM EVERY MILITARY OUTPOST IN THE AREA, LINCOLN ASSEMBLES A BIRD'S-EYE VIEW OF LEE'S PLANS.
Wheeler: THERE'S ALL KINDS OF TELEGRAMS BACK AND FORTH SAYING, "WHAT DO YOU KNOW?
WHAT HAVE YOU HEARD?"
THESE ARE BLIND MEN.
"WHAT'S GOING ON?"
Narrator: AS THE TELEGRAMS STREAM IN, LEE'S STRATEGY COMES INTO FOCUS.
LINCOLN IMMEDIATELY ORDERS THE GENERAL IN CHARGE OF THE EASTERN THEATER, JOSEPH HOOKER, TO CUT THE REBEL LEADER OFF BEFORE HE ENTERS PENNSYLVANIA.
HOOKER RESISTS.
INSTEAD, THE GENERAL RECOMMENDS AN ATTACK ON THE CONFEDERATE CAPITAL OF RICHMOND.
Powell: WELL, THEY'RE THE COMMANDERS ON THE GROUND, AND THEY THINK THEY KNOW THE GROUND BETTER THAN ANYONE ELSE.
BUT AS WE HAVE SEEN OVER THE COURSE OF OUR HISTORY AND THE HISTORY OF MANY OTHER NATIONS, GENERALS ARE FIGHTING THE BATTLE, BUT IT'S THE PRESIDENT WHO REALLY IS FIGHTING THE WAR.
Narrator: LINCOLN IS ADAMANT -- RICHMOND IS A DISTRACTION.
LEE'S ARMY MUST BE STOPPED.
LINCOLN KNOWS THAT IF LEE CAN PULL OFF ONE MAJOR COUP, ONE MORE MAJOR SWEEPING VICTORY, IT MIGHT BE OVER.
Wheeler: AND THEN WORD REACHES THAT LEE HAS CROSSED THE POTOMAC AND IS IN THE NORTH.
Narrator: 80,000 OF THE CONFEDERATES' TOUGHEST SOLDIERS, UNDER THE COMMAND OF THE WAR'S MOST MENACING GENERAL, HAVE ENTERED PENNSYLVANIA.
LINCOLN LOSES ALL CONFIDENCE IN HOOKER.
HUMILIATED, THE GENERAL OFFERS HIS RESIGNATION.
THE PRESIDENT READILY ACCEPTS.
WITH AN ATTACK JUST DAYS AWAY, LINCOLN CANVASSES HIS TOP OFFICERS, SEARCHING FOR A NEW FRONTLINE GENERAL.
EVERY CORPS COMMANDER TURNS HIM DOWN EXCEPT ONE -- A RELATIVE UNKNOWN NAMED GEORGE GORDON MEADE.
LINCOLN'S PRESIDENCY NOW RESTS ON THE SHOULDERS OF AN UNTESTED GENERAL.
THEN, ON JUNE 28th, ON THE EVE OF THE MOST PIVOTAL BATTLE OF THE WAR, THE PRESIDENT'S DIRECT LINES TO GENERAL MEADE'S HEADQUARTERS SUDDENLY GO DEAD.
REBEL RAIDERS HAVE STUMBLED UPON THE LINES AND CUT THEM.
LINCOLN HAS LOST HIS TELEGRAPHIC LIFELINE.
MEADE IS ON HIS OWN.
IN EARLY SUMMER, THE LAND SURROUNDING GETTYSBURG IS CARPETED WITH GROWING CROPS.
THE SUN CASTS A SHIMMERING VEIL OVER THE COUNTRYSIDE.
SWELTERING HEAT SEEMS TO COMPEL MOVEMENT INTO SLOW MOTION.
THE LAST THING THE 2,400 RESIDENTS OF THE SMALL PENNSYLVANIA FARMING COMMUNITY EXPECT IS THAT THIS WILL BE THE SITE OF THE GREATEST BATTLE OF THE CIVIL WAR.
Shaara: YOU HAVE, ON BOTH SIDES AT GETTYSBURG, COMBINED, SOMEWHERE BETWEEN 160,000 AND 200,000 TROOPS.
THAT'S ENORMOUS.
I MEAN, THAT GATHERING OF TROOPS HAS NEVER HAPPENED BEFORE ON THE NORTH AMERICAN CONTINENT.
YOU HAVE MORE ARTILLERY IN ONE PLACE THAN HAS EVER BEEN ASSEMBLED BEFORE.
AND FOR THREE DAYS, THESE TWO ARMIES SLUG IT OUT.
[ INDISTINCT SHOUTING ] Narrator: ON JULY 1st, THE CONFEDERATES DRIVE MEADE'S ARMY BACK THROUGH GETTYSBURG, BUT THE UNION HOLDS THE HIGH GROUND.
BACK IN WASHINGTON, LINCOLN STAYS GLUED TO THE TELEGRAPH MACHINE, WAITING FOR NEWS FROM THE BATTLE.
THE SILENCE IS EXCRUCIATING.
Holzer: I MEAN, HE'S HOPING FOR THE BEST AND PROBABLY EXPECTING THE WORST.
WHY SHOULD HE THINK ANYTHING'S GONNA GO WELL WHEN THEY'VE LOST FREDERICKSBURG AND THEY'VE LOST CHANCELLORSVILLE?
Narrator: DAY TWO -- LEE'S ARMY CHARGES UP THE HILLS TO SEIZE THE UNION STRONGHOLDS.
BUT THEY PROVE IMPOSSIBLE TO OVERTAKE.
THE BATTLE TURNS INTO A GRUESOME STALEMATE.
Shaara: THE BLOODLETTING, I MEAN, IT'S -- YOU CAN'T IMAGINE WHAT GETTYSBURG IS LIKE.
THE SHEER VOLUME OF BLOOD THAT HAS BEEN LET ON THIS GROUND IS JUST HORRIFYING BEYOND WHAT ANYONE IN WASHINGTON CAN READILY COMPREHEND.
Narrator: LINCOLN CONTINUES HIS VIGIL.
HISTORY UNFOLDS WITHOUT HIM.
DURING THE DAY, HE IS HANDED A MESSAGE, NOT ABOUT THE BATTLE, BUT ABOUT HIS WIFE.
MARY IS INJURED.
SHE WAS THROWN FROM HER CARRIAGE -- THE SAME CARRIAGE THE PRESIDENT RIDES EVERY DAY.
SABOTAGE IS SUSPECTED.
FEARS GROW FOR THE PRESIDENT'S LIFE.
Holzer: HIS WIFE HAS FALLEN OUT OF A CARRIAGE AND HIT HER HEAD ON A ROCK AND MAY BE IN CRITICAL CONDITION UP AT THE COUNTRY HOUSE.
TOUGH, TOUGH DAY.
BUT HE CAN'T LEAVE THE TELEGRAPH OFFICE.
THAT'S WHERE HE STAYS.
Kushner: YOU CAN'T IMAGINE HOW HE HELD UP, BECAUSE EVERYTHING WAS AT STAKE.
IF LEE HAD BROKEN THROUGH AND MADE HIS WAY TO WASHINGTON, THERE WOULD HAVE BEEN AN OVERWHELMING DEMAND TO MAKE AN IMMEDIATE PEACE WITH THE SOUTH, AND THEY WOULD HAVE CERTAINLY DEMANDED SECESSION AND SLAVERY AS A PART OF THEIR NEGOTIATIONS.
SO I THINK THE PRESSURE MUST HAVE BEEN HORRENDOUS.
Powell: THE CIVIL WAR HAS OFTEN BEEN CALLED THE FIRST MODERN WAR, BUT IT WAS REALLY A TRANSITIONING WAR.
BUT IT STILL HAD SOME TINGES OF THE PAST, TINGES OF THE NAPOLEONIC ERA, BECAUSE IN ORDER TO MASS FIRE, YOU STILL HAD TO BRING TROOPS TOGETHER.
THEY HAD TO STAND SHOULDER-IN-SHOULDER AND MARCH INTO CANNON FIRE, MARCH INTO RIFLE FIRE.
Shaara: BY THE 1860s, YOU'VE GOT THE RIFLED MUSKET ABLE TO KNOCK A MAN DOWN AT 300 YARDS, WHEREAS UP UNTIL THEN, THE MUSKET WAS GOOD AT ABOUT 50 YARDS.
WELL, YOU DO THAT MATH, AND YOU MARCH THOUSANDS OF MEN IN A GROUP ACROSS AN OPEN FIELD INTO THOSE RIFLED MUSKETS, SLAUGHTER HAPPENS.
Narrator: EVEN THOUGH THE UNION HOLDS THE HIGH GROUND, LEE FAILS TO CHANGE HIS TACTICS.
[ INDISTINCT SHOUTING ] ON DAY THREE, HE ORDERS ONE HUMAN WAVE UP THE HILL... ...THEN ANOTHER... THEN ANOTHER, ONLY TO SEE THEM MOWED DOWN BY UNION FIRE.
OUTGUNNED AND OUTMANEUVERED, LEE FINALLY STOPS THE BLOODBATH.
FOR THE FIRST TIME SINCE THE BEGINNING OF THE CIVIL WAR, THE SOUTH'S MILITARY MASTERMIND SUFFERS A CRUSHING DEFEAT.
ON THE MORNING OF JULY 4th, THE THUNDEROUS SOUNDS OF BATTLE GO SILENT.
ONLY THE WAILS OF THE INJURED WAFT THROUGH THE AIR.
THE RESIDENTS OF GETTYSBURG CAUTIOUSLY EMERGE FROM THEIR CELLARS.
THE SIGHTS AND SMELLS BEFORE THEM ARE ALMOST INCOMPREHENSIBLE.
Shaara: THE NEXT DAY, THE TOURISTS START TO COME.
PEOPLE FROM PHILADELPHIA AND WASHINGTON -- THEY WANT TO SEE IT.
I MEAN, IT'S -- THERE'S THAT THING THAT WE DO TODAY -- THE RUBBERNECKING.
I MEAN, PEOPLE SHOW UP HERE LITERALLY ONE DAY LATER TO SEE WHAT HAPPENED.
THEY GET PRESSED INTO SERVICE.
SUDDENLY, THEY'RE GRABBED -- "NO, WE NEED YOU IN HERE.
RIP THESE SHEETS UP INTO BANDAGES."
THERE'S NO EUPHORIA HERE THAT, YOU KNOW, "YEAH, WE WHIPPED OLD BOBBY LEE."
MAYBE NEWSPAPER REPORTERS ARE DOING THAT, BUT THE REALITY IN THE TOWN OF GETTYSBURG IS ANYTHING BUT EUPHORIC.
IT IS HORRIBLE.
Narrator: IN ALL, NEARLY 50,000 MEN HAVE BEEN KILLED OR MAIMED AT GETTYSBURG.
THE ARMY SETS UP MAKESHIFT HOSPITALS AND MORGUES.
VOLUNTEER NURSES FLOCK IN FROM MILES AWAY.
THE CARNAGE LEAVES THEM STUNNED.
Woman: THERE WERE MILES OF TENTS AND ACRES OF MEN LYING ON THE OPEN EARTH, BUT, GOOD GOD, WHAT THOSE QUIET-LOOKING TENTS CONTAINED.
DEAD AND DYING AND WOUNDED IN EVERY CONDITION, TORN TO PIECES IN EVERY WAY.
BUT THE MOST HORRIBLE THING WAS TO SEE LIMBS LYING, PILED UP AT THE FOOT OF A TREE IN FRONT OF THE SURGEON'S TENT.
THE AMPUTATION TABLE IS PLAINLY IN VIEW.
I NEVER TRUST MYSELF TO LOOK TOWARD IT.
THE UNION SOLDIERS AND THE REBELS LIE SIDE BY SIDE, FRIENDLY AS BROTHERS.
A PERPETUAL PROCESSION OF COFFINS IS CONSTANTLY PASSING TO AND FRO.
IT WILL BE A PLACE OF PILGRIMAGE FOR THE NATION.
[ FIREWORKS POPPING ] [ PEOPLE CHEERING ] Narrator: FAR FROM THE SLAUGHTER, JULY 4th IN WASHINGTON, D.C., IS A DAY OF JUBILATION.
FOR NORTHERNERS, THE SCALE OF THE VICTORY HOLDS THE PROMISE OF A QUICK END TO THE WAR.
LINCOLN, THOUGH, KNOWS BETTER.
LEE'S ARMY HAS BEEN DEFEATED BUT NOT DESTROYED.
HE WILL BE BACK TO FIGHT ANOTHER DAY.
AS FIREWORKS EXPLODE IN THE NIGHT SKY, SUDDENLY, A QUIET TICKING CAN BE HEARD IN THE COMMAND CENTER.
[ TELEGRAPH CLICKING ] THE TELEGRAPH LINES HUM BACK TO LIFE.
THE NEWS IS ASTONISHING.
TORRENTIAL RAINS HAVE FLOODED THE POTOMAC, PREVENTING THE CONFEDERATES FROM FLEEING BACK INTO SOUTHERN TERRITORY.
LEE'S ARMY IS TRAPPED AT THE RIVER'S EDGE.
LINCOLN TELLS GENERAL MEADE TO FIND THEM AND DESTROY THEM ONCE AND FOR ALL.
LINCOLN'S LISTENING TO HIS OWN ADVISORS THERE AT THE WAR DEPARTMENT SAYING, "WE'VE GOT HIM.
WE'VE GOT LEE ON THE ROPES."
WE NEED TO GO AFTER HIM.
WE NEED TO END THIS.
CRUSH HIM."
Narrator: BUT TO LINCOLN'S DISMAY, MEADE IS HESITATING.
Shaara: MEADE'S ARMY IS PRETTY BADLY BEAT UP.
THEY'RE NOT IN A POSITION TO GO JUST CHARGING OFF AND ENGAGE IN ANOTHER MAJOR CAMPAIGN ANY MORE THAN LEE IS.
HE'S BEEN IN COMMAND LESS THAN A WEEK, SO HE'S NOT THIS DYNAMIC GUY THAT'S GONNA GO CHARGING OFF, YOU KNOW, RIGHT OFF A CLIFF.
Narrator: ON JULY 7th, LINCOLN RECEIVES A TELEGRAM FROM THE WESTERN FRONT.
UNION FORCES COMMANDED BY GENERAL ULYSSES S. GRANT HAVE WON A DECISIVE VICTORY AT VICKSBURG.
AT LAST, THE TIDE SEEMS TO BE SHIFTING.
YET EVEN THIS EXTRAORDINARY TURN OF EVENTS DOES LITTLE TO CALM LINCOLN'S FEARS.
Shaara: EVEN THOUGH GETTYSBURG AND VICKSBURG, WHICH HAPPEN AT THE SAME TIME IN JULY OF 1863 -- THEY'RE BOTH ENORMOUS VICTORIES FOR THE UNION -- THERE IS NO EUPHORIA.
THE WAR'S GONE ON FOR TOO LONG.
"CAN WE GET THIS OVER WITH NOW?
WE'VE KILLED ENOUGH PEOPLE."
Narrator: LINCOLN IS CONVINCED THAT THE END OF THE WAR IS WITHIN REACH IF HE CAN INFLICT A FINAL BLOW TO LEE'S TATTERED ARMY.
THEN THE TELEGRAM COMES IN.
LEE'S ARMY HAS ESCAPED ACROSS THE POTOMAC AND IS SAFELY BACK IN SOUTHERN TERRITORY.
Holzer: ONCE ROBERT E. LEE'S ARMY RETREATED BACK ACROSS THE POTOMAC, ONCE HE HEARD THAT GENERAL MEADE HAD DECIDED HE COULDN'T FORCE HIS ARMY OF 100,000 BATTLE-WEARY SOLDIERS TO NOW JUST PICK UP AND HEAD SOUTH, NOT WITH ALL THE DEBRIS, NOT WITH ALL THE DEATH, NOT WITH ALL THE CARNAGE AND THE BURIAL PARTIES, AND IN EFFECT, HE LET LEE ESCAPE -- THAT'S WHEN LINCOLN REALLY UNDERSTOOD, ALMOST, THE WHAT-MIGHT-HAVE-BEEN.
Narrator: UNABLE TO CONTAIN HIS BITTER DISAPPOINTMENT, LINCOLN DRAFTS A LETTER TO GENERAL MEADE.
Holzer: HE SAID, "YOU HAD THEM IN THE HOLLOW OF YOUR HAND.
"THE WAR COULD HAVE BEEN OVER.
"YOU HAVE MISSED AN ENORMOUS OPPORTUNITY, AND YOU CANNOT IMAGINE HOW UPSET I AM."
BUT WHAT LINCOLN DID NEXT IS AMAZING.
THIS IS A MAN WHO USED WORDS WITH SUCH POWER AND SUCH PRECISION BUT WAS EQUALLY BRILLIANT ABOUT WHEN NOT TO USE WORDS.
SO HE WRITES ON THE BOTTOM OF THIS LETTER, "NEVER SIGNED, NEVER SENT."
Narrator: FOR LINCOLN, LEE'S ESCAPE WOULD BE THE SINGLE GREATEST MISSED OPPORTUNITY OF HIS PRESIDENCY.
LINCOLN'S ELDEST SON, ROBERT, WOULD LATER WRITE THAT HE FOUND HIS FATHER STOOPED OVER HIS DESK IN TEARS WITH HIS HEAD BOWED UPON HIS ARMS.
NOT ONLY IS HE A WARTIME PRESIDENT, HE'S THE PRESIDENT WHO STARTS THE WAR.
AND SO FOR HIM TO, YOU KNOW, JUST ABSORB THAT ON A DAILY BASIS, IT HAS TO JUST CRUSH HIM.
AND LINCOLN IS THE ONE WHO RECEIVES THE PERSONAL LETTERS FROM THE MOTHERS, THE GRIEVING PARENTS OF YOUNG MEN WHO ARE KILLED IN THE WAR.
HE'S GETTING THIS ON HIS DESK EVERY DAY.
HOW CAN YOU ABSORB THAT AND NOT BE AFFECTED BY IT?
THAT'S WHAT MAKES HIM THE HUMAN BEING TO ME, THE HUMAN PRESIDENT, IS THAT HE FEELS THAT.
Harris-Perry: LINCOLN, PERHAPS BECAUSE OF THE LOSS OF HIS OWN CHILD, SEEMED TO HAVE SUCH EXTRAORDINARY EMPATHY, NOT JUST FOR THE COUNTRY IN THE CONTEXT OF WAR, BUT FOR EACH AND EVERY FAMILY.
Powell: HE WAS DEEPLY TOUCHED BY THIS HUMAN ASPECT OF WAR.
IT IS NOT SOME GAME YOU'RE PLAYING.
I'VE BEEN IN WAR, I'VE BEEN IN A POSITION OF LEADERSHIP IN WAR, AND I KNOW WHAT IT'S LIKE.
IT IS NOT JUST MOVING PEOPLE AROUND ON THE GROUND.
IT'S LIFE AND DEATH.
AND NOTHING LIKE THAT HAD EVER HAPPENED ON OUR CONTINENT BEFORE.
AND HE REALIZED THAT EVERY TIME HE HEARD ABOUT A SOLDIER DYING OR BEING MUTILATED IN ONE WAY OR ANOTHER, HE KNEW THAT THERE WAS A MOTHER WEEPING SOMEWHERE.
AND SO HE TOOK THE TIME TO WRITE TO THESE PEOPLE.
Kushner: THE MOST BEAUTIFUL LETTER, I THINK, THAT HE WROTE ABOUT MOURNING AND GRIEF IS TO A YOUNG GIRL NAMED FANNY McCULLOUGH, WHOSE FATHER WAS KILLED.
AND HE WRITES HER THIS LETTER.
IT'S JUST HEARTBREAKING.
AND HE SAYS, "I KNOW YOU FEEL NOW "THAT YOU'RE NEVER GOING TO BE HAPPY AGAIN, "BUT IF YOU TRY TO IMAGINE YOURSELF HAPPY "AT SOME DISTANT POINT, YOU WILL EVENTUALLY GET THERE."
IT'S SO GENTLE, AND IT'S SO FULL OF AN EXPERIENCE OF LOSS.
IT SHOWS SUCH AN INTIMACY WITH THE PROCESSES OF MOURNING.
Narrator: IN GETTYSBURG, ACROSS ONCE-GREEN FIELDS, IT LOOKS AS IF SNOW HAS FALLEN IN JULY AS WORKERS SPREAD A BLANKET OF LIME TO MASK THE STENCH OF DEATH.
THE TOWN FATHERS FACE A DAUNTING TASK -- WHAT TO DO WITH THE DEAD.
Jones: YOU HAVE A LOT OF BODIES ON THE BATTLEFIELD.
AND THIS IS THE SUMMER.
THEY'RE DECOMPOSING QUICKLY, AND YOU MUST DO SOMETHING.
THESE ARE HONORED DEAD, TOO.
THESE ARE SOLDIERS ON THE BATTLEFIELD, SO YOU NEED TO BURY THEM.
AND SO A CONTRACT IS MADE WITH A LEADER WITHIN THE AFRICAN-AMERICAN COMMUNITY TO INTER THESE BODIES.
Narrator: WORKING FROM DAWN TO DUSK, A CREW OF 10 BLACK MEN BEGIN THE GRUELING TASK OF EXHUMING BODIES FROM MAKESHIFT GRAVES AND MOVING THEM TO NEW GROUNDS ON CEMETERY HILL.
ARTICLES OF CLOTHING ARE CAREFULLY EXAMINED FOR CLUES TO THEIR OWNER'S IDENTITY... ...DIARIES, LETTERS, NAMES IN A BIBLE, EMBROIDERED INITIALS.
CONFEDERATES UNIFORMS WERE COTTON... ...UNION, WOOL.
OF COURSE, IT'S THE MOST CATACLYSMIC BATTLE IN AMERICAN HISTORY.
AND YET THE SACRIFICE THAT HAS BEEN MADE BY THE PEOPLE WHO DIED THERE IS VERY MUCH IN PEOPLE'S MINDS, NOT ONLY BECAUSE THE NUMBERS AND THE STATISTICS ARE ENORMOUS, NOT ONLY BECAUSE SO MANY FAMILIES ARE AFFECTED BY BROTHERS, SONS, AND FATHERS DYING IN THAT CARNAGE, BUT BECAUSE OF THE PHYSICAL EVIDENCE OF DEATH THAT'S EVERYWHERE IN GETTYSBURG AND BECOMES KNOWN THROUGH THE NEWSPAPERS THROUGH THE WHOLE COUNTRY.
Waldman: THE WORD OF WHAT HAPPENED AT GETTYSBURG SPREAD AS FAST THEN PRETTY MUCH AS IT WOULD NOW.
Narrator: RESPONDING TO THE OUTPOURING OF SORROW, THE GOVERNOR OF PENNSYLVANIA CALLS FOR THE CREATION OF A NATIONAL CEMETERY.
NO LONGER JUST A BATTLEFIELD, THE NAME "GETTYSBURG" BECOMES A SYMBOL OF ALL THE BLOOD THAT HAS BEEN SPILLED SINCE THE START OF THE WAR.
NO ONE UNDERSTANDS THE SYMBOLISM BETTER THAN LINCOLN, OR THE NEED TO PREPARE THE COUNTRY FOR EVEN MORE SACRIFICE.
AND, AS HE HAS FEARED, 10 WEEKS AFTER GETTYSBURG, THE CONFEDERATE ARMY COMES ROARING BACK.
[ GUNFIRE ] SEPTEMBER OF 1863, YOU HAVE THE BATTLE OF CHICKAMAUGA IN NORTH GEORGIA, WHICH IS A CRUSHING DEFEAT FOR THE UNION ARMY, AND WE'RE RIGHT BACK TO WHERE WE WERE.
AND SO THE DESPAIR, ONCE AGAIN, CREEPS THROUGH WASHINGTON.
YOU KNOW, "CAN WE NOT GET THIS THING OVER WITH?"
Narrator: IN CONGRESS, OPPOSITION TO LINCOLN'S WAR IS STIFFENING.
AND HE IS UP FOR RE-ELECTION THE FOLLOWING YEAR.
LINCOLN HAD SAID, "PUBLIC SENTIMENT IS EVERYTHING."
NOW HE MUST FIND A WAY TO GAIN BACK SUPPORT.
HE DOESN'T KNOW IN 1864 IF HE'S GOING TO BE TURNED OUT OF OFFICE.
IF THAT HAPPENS, WHAT HAPPENS TO DEMOCRACY?
WHAT HAPPENS TO THE CONSTITUTION OF THE UNITED STATES?
DOES IT SIMPLY DISSOLVE?
DOES IT SIMPLY GO AWAY?
Narrator: IN EARLY NOVEMBER, LINCOLN RECEIVES AN UNUSUAL INVITATION TO SPEAK AT THE DEDICATION OF THE GETTYSBURG MEMORIAL.
MOST PRESIDENTS WOULD TURN IT DOWN.
Waldman: PRESIDENTS DID NOT THINK THEY COULD OR SHOULD TALK OFTEN TO THE PUBLIC UNTIL MUCH LATER -- UNTIL NATIONAL NEWSPAPERS AND RADIO AND TELEVISION.
IN THOSE DAYS, IT WAS JUST CONSIDERED WRONG FOR THE PRESIDENT TO DO IT.
EVEN THE MOST ELOQUENT PRESIDENTS DIDN'T GIVE THEIR STATE OF THE UNION ADDRESS IN PERSON.
GEORGE WASHINGTON AND JOHN ADAMS -- THEY WENT UP TO CONGRESS TO GIVE THAT SPEECH, BUT THOMAS JEFFERSON THOUGHT IT WAS KINGLY.
IT WAS INAPPROPRIATE FOR THE PRESIDENT TO GO TO THE SOVEREIGN BRANCH OF GOVERNMENT, CONGRESS, COEQUAL, AND TELL THEM WHAT TO DO.
SO HE SENT HIS MESSAGE IN WRITING, AS DID ABRAHAM LINCOLN.
Narrator: LINCOLN KNOWS THAT EVERY NEWSPAPER IN THE COUNTRY WILL BE REPORTING ON THE SPEECHES AT THE CEREMONY.
HE ACCEPTS THE INVITATION.
Shaara: ONE OF THE THINGS, I THINK, MODERN POLITICS -- AND YOU COULD CREDIT LINCOLN WITH UNDERSTANDING -- THAT IF YOU CAN REACH THE PEOPLE FIRST, IT'S NOT ABOUT REACHING THE SENATORS AND THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES.
GO PAST THAT FOR A MINUTE AND REACH DIRECTLY TO THE PEOPLE.
LINCOLN, I THINK, PROBABLY MORE THAN ANY PRESIDENT UP TO HIS TIME, UNDERSTANDS THAT.
Narrator: IN THE DAYS BEFORE LINCOLN IS TO LEAVE FOR GETTYSBURG, HIS YOUNGEST SON, TAD, FALLS INTO A FEVERED STUPOR -- A SCENE FRIGHTENINGLY SIMILAR TO THE DEATH OF HIS SON WILLIE FROM TYPHOID FEVER THE YEAR BEFORE.
LINCOLN'S WIFE HAS BARELY RECOVERED FROM THE LOSS OF ONE SON AND HER OWN INJURY.
NOW THIS.
MARY BEGS HER HUSBAND NOT TO GO.
[ BELL TOLLING ] LINCOLN IGNORES HIS WIFE'S PLEAS.
HE LEAVES HIS SON'S SICKBED.
HE LEAVES HIS COMMAND CENTER IN THE TELEGRAPH ROOM.
HE WILL GO TO GETTYSBURG TO SPEAK TO THE AMERICAN PEOPLE.
HE HAS BEGUN WRITING THE WORDS THAT WILL GIVE MEANING TO ALL THE SUFFERING THE COUNTRY HAS ENDURED AND ALL IT MUST STILL ENDURE IN THE YEARS TO COME.
ON NOVEMBER 18th, LINCOLN'S TRAIN GETS UNDER WAY PACKED WITH DIGNITARIES, AN HONOR GUARD OF INJURED SOLDIERS, AND A CORPS OF REPORTERS.
Shaara: LINCOLN IS VERY AWARE THAT HE'S BEING WATCHED ALL OVER THE WORLD.
HE'S BEING WATCHED BY, YOU KNOW, THE QUEEN OF ENGLAND.
AND ALL THE VARIOUS MONARCHS AND DICTATORS EVERYWHERE ARE PAYING VERY CLOSE ATTENTION TO WHAT'S HAPPENING WITH THIS CIVIL WAR.
IT'S NOT JUST A UNIQUELY AMERICAN THING.
IT'S AN EVENT THAT CAN CHANGE POLITICS ALL OVER THE WORLD.
Kushner: THE DEFEAT OF THIS COUNTRY WOULD HAVE MEANT NOT ONLY THE END OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA -- AND AS AN AMERICAN CITIZEN, I WOULD THINK THAT A VERY BAD THING -- BUT ALSO IN THE MIDDLE OF THE 19th CENTURY, AND AS LINCOLN SAID MANY TIMES, A DEFEAT OF THE VERY IDEA OF DEMOCRACY.
THERE IS AN IDEA AT STAKE HERE.
THERE'S THE GREAT, SORT OF, MYSTICAL IDEA OF UNION, BUT THERE'S ALSO THE IDEA OF A PEOPLE'S SELF-GOVERNMENT.
AND WE'RE ALL TESTING AN ABSTRACT IDEA HERE.
SO THESE PEOPLE SLAUGHTERING EACH OTHER IS ALSO A TESTING OF THAT IDEA.
WILL A PEOPLE'S UNION COHERE IN THE FACE OF TERRIBLE DURESS, OR WILL IT DISINTEGRATE?
Narrator: IN THE MIDDLE OF THE TRIP, LINCOLN WITHDRAWS TO PRIVATE QUARTERS.
AWAY FROM THE CROWD, WORDS SWIRL THROUGH HIS HEAD FOR THE SPEECH HE HAS NOT YET COMPLETED.
AT THE PRESIDENT'S SIDE THAT DAY IS HIS VALET, WILLIAM H. JOHNSON.
JOHNSON IS LIKELY THE ONLY BLACK MAN ON THE TRAIN.
Jones: WE ARE NOT SURE WHETHER JOHNSON WAS BORN FREE OR WHETHER HE HAD RUN AWAY ON THE UNDERGROUND RAILROAD.
WE'RE NOT CERTAIN.
HE'S A RATHER MYSTERIOUS CHARACTER.
Narrator: THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN THE TWO MEN GOES BACK TO LINCOLN'S DAYS IN ILLINOIS.
WHEN THE LINCOLNS MOVED INTO THE WHITE HOUSE, THEY BROUGHT JOHNSON WITH THEM.
BUT THAT WOULD TURN OUT TO BE MORE COMPLICATED THAN EXPECTED.
Jones: AND WHEN HE GETS TO THE WHITE HOUSE, HE ALSO RUNS INTO ONE OF THE REALITIES OF THE WASHINGTON, D.C., COLOR PREJUDICE.
IN WASHINGTON, D.C., THERE'S QUITE A LEGACY OF GRADATIONS OF COLOR DETERMINING WHO SHOULD HAVE ACCESS.
LIGHTER-SKINNED AFRICAN-AMERICANS WOULD OFTEN DISCRIMINATE AGAINST DARKER-SKINNED AFRICAN-AMERICANS.
AND JOHNSON WAS A DARKER-SKINNED AFRICAN-AMERICAN.
AND MANY WHO WORKED IN THE WHITE HOUSE WERE NOT PLEASED WITH THE FACT THAT HE HAD THE RUN OF THE HOUSE WITH THE PRESIDENT.
Narrator: BUT LINCOLN WOULD BREAK WITH CUSTOM AND INSIST THAT JOHNSON ACCOMPANY HIM TO GETTYSBURG.
FEELS THAT HE'S AN AMBASSADOR.
HE'S AN AMBASSADOR FOR FREEDOM.
THIS MEANS SOMETHING TO ALL OF HIS PEOPLE, THE FACT THAT HE'S EVEN THERE WITH THE PRESIDENT.
HE MUST STAND ERECT.
HE MUST LOOK PROUD AND SEND THIS MESSAGE TO ALL THAT IT'S TIME TO AID THE UNION.
Narrator: AS LINCOLN'S TRAIN PULLS INTO THE GETTYSBURG STATION, A BRIGHT MOON CASTS A GHOSTLY LIGHT ON THE ROWS OF COFFINS STACKED ON THE PLATFORM.
FROM THERE, HE IS WHISKED INTO TOWN TO SPEND THE NIGHT IN A CRAMPED BEDROOM IN THE HOME OF A LOCAL RESIDENT.
HE NEEDS QUIET, TIME TO REVIEW HIS SPEECH, BUT IT IS HARD TO COME BY.
OUTSIDE HIS WINDOW, THOUSANDS OF PEOPLE ARE STREAMING IN TO ATTEND THE GETTYSBURG CEREMONY.
THAT EVENING, A TELEGRAM ARRIVES FROM HIS WIFE.
LINCOLN'S HEART GROWS LIGHTER.
DAWN.
A LONE BUGLER MAKES HIS WAY TO THE SUMMIT OF CEMETERY HILL.
ECHOING OVER FIELDS SCARRED BY BATTLE, HE SUMMONS THE PEOPLE OF GETTYSBURG TO THE CEMETERY.
[ BUGLE PLAYS ] LINCOLN BRACES HIMSELF FOR A DIFFICULT DAY.
A YOUNG GIRL ON THE STREET SPOTS THE PRESIDENT AT THE WINDOW WITH PIECES OF PAPER IN HIS HAND.
SHE IS STRUCK BY THE INEXPRESSIBLE SADNESS ON HIS FACE.
Kushner: LINCOLN DIDN'T KNOW THAT HE COULD WIN THE CIVIL WAR.
HE DIDN'T KNOW THAT HE COULD MAKE SURE THE END OF THE WAR MEANT THE END OF SLAVERY.
BUT I THINK HE KNEW THAT HE HAD THE EFFECT OF HAVING AN ENORMOUS IMPACT WITH HIS WORDS.
Waldman: THE CIVIL WAR HAS BEEN GRINDING ON, HUNDREDS OF THOUSANDS KILLED, AND PEOPLE ARE ASKING, "IS IT WORTH IT?
WHY ARE WE FIGHTING?"
PRESIDENT LINCOLN, IN HIS INAUGURAL ADDRESS, SAID, "WE'RE FIGHTING TO PRESERVE THE UNION, TO PRESERVE THE CONSTITUTION AS IT IS."
BUT IN FACT, OF COURSE, THE WAR WAS REALLY ABOUT SLAVERY.
AND BY EMANCIPATING THE SLAVES IN THE EMANCIPATION PROCLAMATION, LINCOLN TURNED IT INTO A PEOPLE'S WAR, TRANSFORMING THE CIVIL WAR FROM A FIGHT OVER THE CONSTITUTION TO A FIGHT ABOUT BASIC VALUES AND THAT THE COUNTRY HAD TO BE REBORN AROUND A MORE EQUAL AND MORE DEMOCRATIC SET OF VALUES.
Narrator: THE PRESIDENT HAS SPENT MUCH OF THE NIGHT HONING HIS SPEECH.
IN THE MORNING, JOHNSON ENTERS HIS ROOM.
Jones: JOHNSON IS HIS SOUNDING BOARD.
ONE IS THAT HE'S PRESENT, AND LINCOLN, I THINK, WOULD REHEARSE.
IT'S A SPEECH THAT -- REHEARSAL WOULD BE EASY.
THE STATEMENT THAT THIS NATION, CONCEIVED IN LIBERTY, THE PROPOSITION THAT ALL MEN ARE CREATED EQUAL -- NOW, THAT'S KEY.
JOHNSON'S HEARING THIS, AND HE'S HEARING THIS FROM THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES.
AND HOW HE MUST FEEL ABOUT THE FUTURE OF HIS CHILDREN, THE FUTURE OF HIS PEOPLE WHEN THE MAN AT THE HELM HAS PUT THIS COUNTRY IN A DIRECTION WHERE ALL MEN SHOULD BE CREATED EQUAL.
AND SO THAT'S WHERE WE'RE HEADED IN THE SHIP CALLED "AMERICA."
Narrator: 10:00 A.M. A SOLEMN PROCESSION STARTS MOVING TOWARD THE CEMETERY.
RIDING ABOVE THE CROWD ON HORSEBACK, LINCOLN SCANS THE HORIZON.
EVERYWHERE HIS EYES REST, GRAVES -- NOTHING BUT GRAVES.
I THINK LINCOLN FELT THE AWESOME RESPONSIBILITY OF HAVING TO LOOK OUT ACROSS THIS CEMETERY WHERE ALL THESE MEN ARE BURIED THAT HE PUT THERE.
I MEAN, THERE'S THAT REALITY THAT THIS IS HIS WAR.
AND HE'S LOOKING AT THE GRAVES, MASS GRAVES IN MANY CASES, OF MEN THAT ARE THERE BECAUSE OF HIM.
OKAY, HOW DO YOU ADDRESS THAT?
HOW DO YOU TALK ABOUT THAT?
THAT'S AN AWESOME RESPONSIBILITY.
Narrator: LINCOLN TAKES HIS PLACE ON THE PLATFORM AMONG THE DIGNITARIES.
A HEAD TALLER THAN MOST MEN, THE CROWD OF NEARLY 20,000 GREETS HIM WITH CURIOSITY AND AWE.
BUT LINCOLN IS NOT THE MOST ANTICIPATED SPEAKER ON THE PLATFORM.
THAT HONOR FALLS TO EDWARD EVERETT, THE MOST POPULAR ORATOR, THE MOST INSPIRATIONAL SPEAKER OF HIS TIME.
TYPICAL FOR THE DAY, HE SPEAKS FOR TWO HOURS.
Waldman: EVERETT SPOKE FOR A LONG TIME ABOUT THE HISTORY OF THE BATTLE, AND THIS WAS WHAT PEOPLE EXPECTED IN THOSE DAYS.
THERE WAS NO TELEVISION.
THERE WAS NOT A LOT OF BOOKS AROUND.
THERE WAS NO INTERNET.
PEOPLE WANTED TO HEAR THE NARRATION OF THEIR TIMES THROUGH THESE BIG SPEECHES TO A HUGE CROWD.
Narrator: FINALLY, IT IS LINCOLN'S TURN.
EVERETT SPOKE FROM MEMORY.
LINCOLN PUTS ON HIS READING GLASSES.
THE GETTYSBURG ADDRESS WILL BARELY LAST THREE MINUTES -- 10 SENTENCES, A MERE 272 WORDS.
WHEN THE PRESIDENT LOOKS UP FROM HIS PAPER, THE CROWD STANDS SILENT.
IS THE SPEECH OVER?
IS THERE MORE?
THE PHOTOGRAPHER CHARGED WITH DOCUMENTING THE CEREMONY BELIEVES HE HAS PLENTY OF TIME TO GET A PICTURE OF THE HISTORIC MOMENT.
HE IS STILL FUMBLING WITH HIS EQUIPMENT WHEN LINCOLN SPEAKS HIS LAST WORD.
THE ONLY PHOTOGRAPH OF THE PRESIDENT AT THE CEREMONY CAPTURES HIM AMONG THE CROWD.
FINALLY, THE PRESIDENT HEARS A LONG, THUNDEROUS APPLAUSE.
[ APPLAUSE ] NOW HISTORY WILL TAKE THE MEASURE OF THE PRESIDENT'S REMARKS.
THE GETTYSBURG ADDRESS BECOMES WHAT WE WOULD CALL FAMOUS, I THINK, FAIRLY QUICKLY.
THE TELEGRAPH LINE TAKES IT COAST TO COAST, AND BECAUSE IT IS ONLY 272 WORDS, YOU CAN PUBLISH THE ENTIRETY IN THE NEWSPAPER SO PEOPLE CAN READ THE WHOLE THING.
Kushner: IT WAS BEING PUBLISHED EVERYWHERE.
WITHIN THE NEXT FEW MONTHS, IT BECAME, PROBABLY, THE MOST FAMOUS PRESIDENTIAL SPEECH EVER MADE.
Wheeler: THE GETTYSBURG ADDRESS WAS TELEGRAPHIC IN THE SENSE THAT IT WAS A HANDFUL OF LINES WITH CAREFULLY CHOSEN WORDS WITH INCREDIBLE IMPACT.
Narrator: "FOUR SCORE AND SEVEN YEARS AGO, OUR FATHERS BROUGHT FORTH UPON THIS CONTINENT A NEW NATION..." "HOW LONG AGO IS IT?
80-ODD YEARS" BECOMES, UNDER HIS BRILLIANT CRAFTSMANSHIP, EDITING, AND REWORKING, "FOUR SCORE AND SEVEN YEARS AGO."
"WHEN A PEOPLE GOT TOGETHER AND DECIDED" BECOMES "OUR FATHERS BROUGHT FORTH UPON THIS CONTINENT A NEW NATION."
AMAZING.
SO, WHEN HE GOT UP AND SAID, "FOUR SCORE AND SEVEN YEARS AGO," THE PEOPLE WHO WERE PAYING ATTENTION MIGHT HAVE SCRATCHED THEIR HEADS AND SAID, "WAIT A MINUTE.
I'M DOING THE MATH.
THAT'S NOT 1787.
THAT'S 1776."
OBVIOUSLY THE DECLARATION OF INDEPENDENCE.
WHAT'S THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN THE DECLARATION OF INDEPENDENCE AND THE CONSTITUTION?
Narrator: "CONCEIVED IN LIBERTY AND DEDICATED TO THE PROPOSITION THAT ALL MEN ARE CREATED EQUAL."
Waldman: THE CONSTITUTION CONDONES SLAVERY, AND THE DECLARATION OF INDEPENDENCE TALKED ABOUT EVERYBODY BEING CREATED EQUAL AND LIBERTY.
SO, HE WAS PRESSING WHAT WE WOULD CALL A RESET BUTTON, SAYING THE COUNTRY DIDN'T START IN 1787.
IT STARTED IN 1776.
Foner: THIS NATION WAS CREATED ON THIS PRINCIPLE THAT ALL MEN ARE CREATED EQUAL.
THAT IS THE FUNDAMENTAL, UNDERLYING PRINCIPLE OF AMERICAN LIFE, ACCORDING TO LINCOLN, AND THAT IS A POWERFUL, POWERFUL STATEMENT.
HE IS SAYING GOVERNMENTS ARE INSTITUTED AMONG MEN FOR ONLY ONE PURPOSE -- THAT IS TO SECURE THESE RIGHTS, AND THESE RIGHTS ARE INALIENABLE, AND ALL PEOPLE HAVE THEM, AND IT IS SELF-EVIDENT.
Narrator: "NOW WE ARE ENGAGED IN A GREAT CIVIL WAR, "TESTING WHETHER THAT NATION, "OR ANY NATION SO CONCEIVED AND SO DEDICATED, CAN LONG ENDURE."
Harris-Perry: IT IS OUR MODERN NOTION OF DEMOCRACY THAT IS FORGED IN THIS MOMENT.
THE NOTION OF AMERICA AS ONE NATION REALLY ONLY EMERGES IN THE CONTEXT OF WHAT THIS FIGHT IS.
Narrator: "WE ARE MET ON A GREAT BATTLEFIELD OF THAT WAR.
"WE HAVE COME TO DEDICATE A PORTION OF THAT FIELD "AS A FINAL RESTING PLACE FOR THOSE WHO HERE GAVE THEIR LIVES THAT THAT NATION MIGHT LIVE."
THIS IS A SPEECH DELIVERED AT A CEMETERY, IN THE HEAT OF BATTLE, WITH PEOPLE WHO LOST LOVED ONES, IN A VERY BLOODY WAR, AND THERE IS NOT A NOTE OF TRIUMPH, OF GLORY, IN THE WHOLE SPEECH.
IT'S ALMOST CLINICAL.
IT'S SCIENTIFIC.
Narrator: "BUT, IN A LARGER SENSE, "WE CAN NOT DEDICATE, WE CAN NOT CONSECRATE, "WE CAN NOT HALLOW THIS GROUND.
"THE BRAVE MEN, LIVING AND DEAD, WHO STRUGGLED HERE "HAVE CONSECRATED IT FAR ABOVE OUR POOR POWER TO ADD OR DETRACT."
Wheeler: HE USES THE SACRIFICE AND THE HORRIFIC BATTLE TO LIFT EVERYONE, TO SEE THE GREATER CHALLENGE THAT IS REPRESENTED BY THIS CONFLICT AND TO REDEFINE THE CONFLICT OUT OF MILITARY TERMS AND INTO ALMOST EXISTENTIAL TERMS.
Narrator: "THE WORLD WILL LITTLE NOTE "NOR LONG REMEMBER WHAT WE SAY HERE, BUT IT CAN NEVER FORGET WHAT THEY DID HERE."
Kushner: ONE THING I REALLY LOVE ABOUT THE SPEECH -- THE REPETITION OF THE WORD "HERE," H-E-R-E.
HE KEEPS SAYING "HERE."
"WE DEDICATE OURSELVES HERE."
"MEN STRUGGLED HERE."
THERE'S THE SENSE OF A DRAWING UP FROM THE BLOOD-SOAKED EARTH OF THIS PLACE THE KIND OF ENERGY THAT WILL RECONSECRATE THE NATION TO THE TASK OF CONCLUDING THE WAR AND ENDING SLAVERY.
Narrator: "THAT FROM THESE HONORED DEAD "WE TAKE INCREASED DEVOTION TO THAT CAUSE "FOR WHICH THEY GAVE THE LAST FULL MEASURE OF DEVOTION, "THAT WE HERE HIGHLY RESOLVE "THAT THESE DEAD SHALL NOT HAVE DIED IN VAIN, "THAT THIS NATION, UNDER GOD, SHALL HAVE A NEW BIRTH OF FREEDOM."
DEMOCRACY WAS AT STAKE.
THE VERY ESSENCE OF THE SPEECH TALKS ABOUT IT IS TO BE PROVEN THAT DEMOCRACY CAN BE SUSTAINED.
AND IF WE LOSE THIS WAR, THEN DEMOCRACY CANNOT BE SUSTAINED.
THE WORD "SLAVERY" DOES NOT APPEAR IN THE GETTYSBURG ADDRESS, BUT NOBODY COULD MISTAKE WHAT HE'S TALKING ABOUT WHEN HE SAYS, "A NEW BIRTH OF FREEDOM."
AND THEN HE ENDS WITH A SERIES OF PROPOSALS.
Narrator: "AND THAT GOVERNMENT "OF THE PEOPLE, BY THE PEOPLE, FOR THE PEOPLE SHALL NOT PERISH FROM THE EARTH."
Shaara: "OF THE PEOPLE, BY THE PEOPLE, FOR THE PEOPLE SHALL NOT PERISH FROM THE EARTH."
I MEAN, THAT'S -- THAT SAYS IT ALL.
THIS COUNTRY IS MEANT TO SURVIVE.
LINCOLN UNDERSTANDS THAT, AS DID GEORGE WASHINGTON, AS DID F.D.R.
THIS NATION HAS TO SURVIVE.
Kushner: IT'S AN ABSOLUTELY PERFECT PROSE POEM.
YOU CAN'T TAKE ANYTHING OUT OF IT AND HAVE THE SAME EFFECT.
IT RELIES ENTIRELY ON ITS ENTIRETY.
Waldman: LINCOLN, TO THIS DAY, HAS GIVEN US THE MOST CONCISE, TELEGRAPHIC, AND BASIC DEFINITION OF DEMOCRACY -- "A GOVERNMENT OF THE PEOPLE, BY THE PEOPLE, AND FOR THE PEOPLE."
HE REALLY DEEPLY BELIEVED IN DEMOCRACY.
HE UNDERSTOOD THAT THAT INCLUDED FREEING THE SLAVES AND A NOTION OF POLITICAL EQUALITY.
Kushner: AND, YOU KNOW, VERY, VERY IMPORTANT THAT THE FOURTH WORD BEFORE THE END IS "PERISH."
I MEAN, HE DOESN'T END BY SAYING, "WE'RE GOING TO WIN," AND, YOU KNOW, "VICTORY IS OURS."
HE SAYS, YOU KNOW, "THE GOVERNMENT OF THE PEOPLE, "BY THE PEOPLE, FOR THE PEOPLE SHALL NOT PERISH FROM THE EARTH."
IT ENDS WITH THIS KIND OF, LIKE, HEARTBROKEN SOUND.
IT'S, YOU KNOW, A MASTERPIECE OF THE HIGHEST ORDER.
Narrator: LINCOLN'S SPEECH IN GETTYSBURG THAT CHILLY NOVEMBER AFTERNOON WILL TAKE A TOLL ON THE WEARY PRESIDENT.
BY THE TIME HE BOARDS THE TRAIN BACK TO WASHINGTON, A FEVER IS RAGING THROUGH HIS BODY.
SMALLPOX, THE SAME DISEASE THAT STRUCK HIS YOUNG SON, HAS NOW INFECTED LINCOLN.
WILLIAM JOHNSON NEVER LEAVES HIS SIDE.
LINCOLN FIGHTS SMALLPOX FOR THE NEXT FEW WEEKS, BUT HE WILL RECOVER.
JOHNSON, HOWEVER, WILL FALL ILL ON HIS RETURN TO WASHINGTON.
TWO MONTHS LATER, HE IS DEAD.
Jones: HE WOULD BE BURIED AT THE NEWLY ESTABLISHED ARLINGTON CEMETERY ON THE GROUNDS ONCE OWNED BY GENERAL ROBERT E. LEE.
ON HIS TOMBSTONE, LINCOLN WOULD HAVE INSCRIBED "CITIZEN."
CITIZEN WILLIAM HENRY JOHNSON.
I BELIEVE THAT ABRAHAM LINCOLN THOUGHT THAT TOGETHER WE'D MAKE IT, THAT TOGETHER WE WERE ONE NATION, THAT ALL WERE AMERICANS WHEN HE ETCHED "CITIZEN" IN WILLIAM HENRY JOHNSON'S TOMBSTONE.
Powell: THE CIVIL WAR PRESERVED THE UNION, THE CIVIL WAR ENDED LEGAL SLAVERY, BUT FOR THE NEXT ALMOST 100 YEARS, WE FOUND THAT SEGREGATION AND JIM CROW -- THE RECONSTRUCTION PERIOD FAILED.
WE FOUND THAT SLAVERY STILL EXISTED BY ANOTHER NAME -- NOT CALLED SLAVERY, BUT FOR ALL PRACTICAL PURPOSES, IT WAS ALMOST SLAVERY.
AND SO WE NEEDED ANOTHER CIVIL WAR -- A CIVIL WAR OF THE MIND, A CIVIL WAR OF COURAGE, A CIVIL WAR OF CHARACTER.
AND THAT CIVIL WAR WAS NOT LED BY ABRAHAM LINCOLN, OF COURSE.
IT WAS LED BY DR. MARTIN LUTHER KING JR. Waldman: DR. MARTIN LUTHER KING USED THOSE SAME VALUES FROM THE GETTYSBURG ADDRESS TO GIVE HIS GREATEST SPEECH.
HE WAS STANDING IN FRONT OF THE LINCOLN MEMORIAL, AS HE SAID, IN THE SYMBOLIC SHADOW OF LINCOLN.
AND WHEN HE GAVE HIS FAMOUS PERORATION, HE SAID, "I HAVE A DREAM "THAT ONE DAY THIS NATION WILL RISE UP "AND LIVE OUT THE TRUE MEANING OF ITS CREED, THAT ALL MEN ARE CREATED EQUAL," THAT CREED THAT LINCOLN HAD PUT AT THE CENTER OF WHAT IT MEANT TO BE AN AMERICAN 100 YEARS BEFORE.
AND EVERY GREAT MOVEMENT, EVERY GREAT SOCIAL CHANGE IN OUR COUNTRY, ALWAYS HARKENS BACK TO THOSE CORE AMERICAN VALUES.
OVER TIME, OF COURSE, IT BECOMES ADOPTED BY ALMOST EVERYBODY, NOT JUST IN THE UNITED STATES BUT ELSEWHERE, BECAUSE IT IS SO SUCCINCT, BECAUSE IT PUTS OUT THESE PRINCIPLES THAT ALMOST ANYBODY CAN IDENTIFY WITH -- EQUALITY, NATIONALITY, AND DEMOCRACY.
Harris-Perry: I MEAN, MY MOTHER MEMORIZED THE GETTYSBURG ADDRESS, AND I MEMORIZED IT, AND MY DAUGHTER WILL MEMORIZE IT, I MEAN, BECAUSE IT IS BRIEF, IT'S TEACHABLE, AND IT CAN BE PART OF ORAL HISTORY, AND YOU CAN PASS IT ON.
MORE THAN TWO CENTURIES LATER, A GOVERNMENT OF THE PEOPLE, BY THE PEOPLE, AND FOR THE PEOPLE HAS NOT PERISHED FROM THE EARTH.
[ CHEERS AND APPLAUSE ] Shaara: I DON'T THINK ANYONE TODAY -- NO SPEECH WRITER, NO POLITICIAN -- COULD COME UP WITH WHAT -- I MEAN, THAT'S A UNIQUE MOMENT, NOT JUST IN OUR HISTORY -- IT'S A UNIQUE MOMENT IN WORLD HISTORY.
THAT SPEECH, THE GETTYSBURG ADDRESS, IS LEARNED AND RECITED ALL OVER THE WORLD.
IT IS A UNIQUE MOMENT IN HUMAN HISTORY.
PHRASES "OF THE PEOPLE, BY THE PEOPLE, FOR THE PEOPLE SHALL NOT PERISH FROM THE EARTH."
I CAN'T SAY THOSE PHRASES NOW WITHOUT CHOKING UP.
THE POWER OF THOSE FEW WORDS -- I MEAN, IT RESONATES 150 YEARS LATER.
IT WILL STAND FOREVER.
"LINCOLN@GETTYSBURG" IS AVAILABLE ON DVD.
TO ORDER, VISIT shoppbs.org OR CALL US AT 1-800-PLAY-PBS.
"LINCOLN@GETTYSBURG" WAS MADE POSSIBLE
Support for PBS provided by: