President Lincoln meeting with African-American civil rights activists
Grand Old Partisan celebrates more than seventeen decades of Republican heroes and heroics. Today, I spotlight a landmark White House event. April 29th 1864, Abraham Lincoln met with five Black civil rights activists from North Carolina. Their leader was Abraham Galloway, a former slave who had been a Union Army scout and recruiter. He noted that "the war would emancipate the poor white man of the south, as well as the blacks." Their discussion centered on extending citizenship and voting rights. They presented a petition thanking the President for his Emancipation Proclamation. It requested that he "finish the noble work you have begun, and grant to your petitioners that greatest of privileges, when the State is reconstructed, to exercise the right of suffrage." Back to Basics for the Republican Party is my civil rights history of the GOP. To quote the book: "The more we Repu...