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            Reminder: Watch Night/First Day celebrates 150th anniversary of the 
			Emancipation Proclamation  Send a link to a friend
 
			
            
            [December 29, 2012] 
            SPRINGFIELD -- The Abraham 
			Lincoln Association is hosting two events to celebrate the 150th 
			anniversary of the Emancipation Proclamation. On Monday at 8 p.m. 
			there will be a watch night service at Westminster Presbyterian 
			Church in Springfield to celebrate the coming of emancipation. On 
			Tuesday at 1 p.m. at the Old State Capitol State Historic Site, a 
			portrayer of President Abraham Lincoln will sign the Emancipation 
			Proclamation and have a public news conference to answer questions. 
			A Frederick Douglass portrayer and others will join the president 
			for comments. | 
		
            |  Westminster Presbyterian Church and the Old State Capitol State 
			Historic Site are co-sponsoring these events with the Abraham 
			Lincoln Association. On Dec. 31, 1862, 150 years ago, American 
			slaves, freemen, abolitionists and common folk sat in churches, 
			meeting houses and fields all over the nation, watching and waiting 
			for the first day of freedom to roll in. Freedom was to occur the 
			next day, on Jan. 1, 1863, when President Lincoln was to issue a 
			proclamation emancipating, or freeing, the slaves in states or parts 
			of states that were in rebellion against the Union. It was a very 
			emotional time.  As they watched and waited, people sang songs and testified to 
			the glory and the goodness of the Lord. They gave thanks to 
			President Lincoln, whom many called Father Abraham, and famous 
			abolitionists like Horace Greeley, Frederick Douglass, William Lloyd 
			Garrison and others who strongly and relentlessly urged Lincoln to 
			emancipate the slaves. They also gave thanks for the sacrifices of 
			slaves themselves who had boldly risked all in a desperate push to 
			crack open the door to freedom and to the death of slavery.  
			[to top of second column] | 
 
			 The Watch Night/First Day events will recreate the excitement and 
			joy of 150 years ago. The words and songs of the participants will 
			come to life. In addition to the primary sponsors, the following groups also 
			have contributed to the program: Abraham Lincoln Presidential 
			Library and Museum, Looking for Lincoln Heritage Coalition, Lincoln 
			Home National Historic Site, and Springfield and Central Illinois 
			African American History Museum. 
[Text from file received from the
Looking for Lincoln Heritage 
Coalition] 
            
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