DC Emancipation Day, brought to you by the Republican Party

Print Friendly, PDF & Email

A guest column from historian Michael Zak:

DC Emancipation Day, brought to you by the Republican Party
Yesterday, I attended a 150th anniversary ceremony in honor
of the DC Emancipation Act.  The event
was held at Abraham Lincoln’s summer cottage.
The quartet Just Righteous inspired with A Change Is Gonna
Come and other classic songs.  Frank
Williams discussed President Lincoln’s views on the DC Emancipation Act.  Harold Holzer spoke about media reaction.
Edna Greene Medford recounted the city’s response to the law.
While the speakers were informative, all three
over-emphasized Lincoln’s role and
managed to avoid mentioning an important political context.  So, in the Q&A, I informed the audience
of these crucial facts:
The DC Emancipation Act was written by a Republican Senator,
Henry Wilson.
Republicans voted unanimously for the DC Emancipation Act
Democrats voted unanimously against the DC Emancipation Act
One of the 3,100 slaves liberated by the GOP made the
statute “Freedom” which stands atop the U.S. Capitol dome.
In his closing remarks, Mayor Vincent Gray said that just as
slaves back then were held in bondage, city residents today are also “held
in bondage” because DC is not a state. 
Yes, that’s what he said — trivializing the horrors of slavery in order
to make a political point.
Michael Zak is a popular
speaker to Republican organizations around the country.  Back to Basics for the Republican Party is
his acclaimed history of the GOP, cited by Clarence Thomas in a Supreme Court
decision.  He is also the author of the
2005 Republican Freedom Calendar.  His
Grand Old Partisan website celebrates more than fifteen decades of Republican
heroes and heroics.  See
www.grandoldpartisan.com and @Michael_Zak for more information.