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  • Lincoln, Race, and the American Presidency
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Lincoln, Race, and the American Presidency

Object Details

Views
1,218
Video Title
Lincoln, Race, and the American Presidency
Description
Fath Davis Ruffins, the museum's curator of African American History and Culture, moderated a panel discussion on race and presidential politics (in Lincolns time and our own). Lincolns views on race, and indeed the national debates on racial issues and politics in the mid-19th century, were much more complex and complicated that simply a question of whether to end the institution of slavery. Lincoln and his contemporaries also wrestled with issues of colonization, voting and other political and social rights, interracial marriage, gradual versus immediate emancipation, and, as one congressman argued, whether the United States was a nation made by white men, for white men. To discuss these issues, which have an incredibly relevant legacy today, panelists included Dr. Maurice Jackson and Dr. Chandra Manning of Georgetown University; Dr. Edna Greene Medford of Howard University; and Dr. Ronald Walters, author of Black Presidential Politics in America and director of the African American Leadership Institute at the University of Maryland.
Video Duration
1 hr 39 min 15 sec
YouTube Keywords
smithsonian "american history" history museum
Data Source
National Museum of American History
YouTube Channel
SmithsonianAmHistory
Uploaded
2010-03-24T16:48:43.000Z
Creator
National Museum of American History
Type
YouTube Videos
See more by
SmithsonianAmHistory
YouTube Category
Education
Topic
American History
Record ID
yt_NPwUZIxXquc
Usage
Usage conditions apply
There are restrictions for re-using this image. For more information, visit the Smithsonian's Terms of Use page .
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Visit »

Open daily 10 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.

Admission is always free!

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Washington, DC 20002

Our entrance is on the corner of First Street and Massachusetts Avenue NE.

street map of Postal museum

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