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INFLUENCING LINCOLN

The Pursuit of Black Freedom
Level 3
Open Until Oct 2023
Influencing Lincoln
Level 3
Open Until Oct 2023

Discover how the 19th-century Black community — connected through church, business, family, military, education and politics — fought for full citizenship and helped shift President Lincoln’s attitudes (and actions) regarding freedom.

With extraordinary artifacts and a trove of historic documents (like the *Emancipation Proclamation!), you’ll experience another side of the story that led to the 13th, 14th and 15th Amendments.

Person voting in a voting box

The Path to Full Citizenship

Understand why fighting for freedom alone was not enough, following the struggle for rights from emancipation to obtaining the rights of full citizenship to voting rights and political representation.

Ink drawing of United States Colored Troops

Fighting for the Right to Fight

Appreciate the valor of the United States Colored Troops, including the 28th Indiana, and explore why the Black community fought so hard for the right to fight with the Union troops and how their service helped advance the cause of equal rights and citizenship.

Man standing in a room full of citizens with a flag

Extraordinary Artifacts

See artifacts that help tell this story. Some of which include historic documents that resulted from this movement: the Emancipation Proclamation and the Thirteenth Amendment, the inkwell and pen used by Frederick Douglass, on loan from the Frederick Douglass National Historic Site, the pew and pulpit from the historic Bethel African Methodist Episcopal (AME) Church in Indianapolis and many more.

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