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The Patriot-News of Harrisburg, about 35 miles northeast of Gettysburg, retracted a dismissive editorial penned by its Civil War-era predecessor, The Harrisburg Patriot & Union.
It took 150 years, but a Pennsylvania newspaper said Thursday it should have recognized the greatness of President Abraham Lincoln's Gettysburg Address at the time it was delivered.
President Abraham Lincoln penned five copies of his famous speech. The drafts have withstood the test of 150 years -- and the Conservation Lab at Cornell University plans for 150 more ...
Like the Pledge of Allegiance or “The Star-Spangled Banner,” the Gettysburg Address is a sacred American text, so fully absorbed into the culture that phrases such as “four score ...
Election Day reading: Abraham Lincoln's Gettysburg Address: ""Four score and seven years ago our fathers brought forth on this continent, a new nation, conceived in Liberty, and dedicated to the ...
A look back at local, national and world events through Deseret News archives. On Nov. 19, 1863, President Abraham Lincoln delivered the Gettysburg Address at the dedication of a national cemetery ...
The New York Times reported of the Gettysburg Address: "It was delivered (or rather read from a sheet of paper which the speaker held in his hand) in a very deliberate manner, with strong emphasis ...
A Pennsylvania newspaper Thursday issued a retraction of a 150-year-old editorial that described the Gettysburg Address as "silly remarks." ...
HARRISBURG, Pa. — It took 150 years, but a Pennsylvania newspaper said Thursday it should have recognized the greatness of President Abraham Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address at the time it was ...
One-hundred and fifty years after Abraham Lincoln passionately enunciated the necessity of the Civil War in the Gettysburg Address, the Patriot-News of central Pennsylvania, known back then as the ...
In 1863, the Harrisburg, Pa. paper then known as the Patriot & Union published an editorial about Abraham Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address. They panned it: We pass over the silly remarks of the ...
The editorial board of a Pennsylvania paper has retracted its predecessor’s panning of President Abraham Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address as “silly remarks.” ...
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