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Lincoln
in
Gettysburg
"...the
world will little note, nor long remember what we say here..."
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To
His Excellency, A. Lincoln... |
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Little did Gettysburg resident David Wills realize what
would happen when he put his pen to paper one crisp
November day. Wills' hastily written invitation
to President Abraham Lincoln would lead to one of the
most famous moments in American History The Gettysburg
Address.
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Pennsylvania Governor Andrew Curtin had given 32-year-old
Wills the onerous task of overseeing the gruesome cleanup
after the infamous Battle, which had
devastated the small town of Gettysburg. Residents were left
to not only tend the wounded, but bury the thousands of dead.
But rather
than burying the dead where they fell, Wills decided to create
a national cemetery. He acquired 17 acres just south of town
and created the Soldier's
National Cemetery.
Governor
Curtin
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A Few Appropriate Remarks
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Wills
decided the cemetery needed a special dedication.
He invited noted stateman Edward Everett as the featured speaker
and then invited President Lincoln to give
"a few appropriate remarks."
Painting by Wendy
Allen
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Will invited him to stay at his home in the town's square
(right) and Lincoln accepted.
On Nov.
18, 1863, Lincoln arrived at Gettysburg's small train station
(below).
Both
buildings still stand.

The following
morning, Lincoln mounted a horse and rode from the center
of town, down Baltimore Street to the cemetery. After
a two hour oration by noted statesman Edward Everett, Lincoln
rose to speak. His few words became one of the most famous
speeches of all time The
Gettysburg Address.
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"...but
it can never forget what they did here."
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On that November morning in 1863, students of Gettysburg College
(then known as Pennsylvania College) walked to the cemetery
and heard Lincoln's address.
That moment
remains significant to the College. Today, all first year
students relive the experience of their predecessors by walking
together to the cemetery to hear a reading of the Gettysburg
Address as part of their orientation.
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