The Gettysburg Gospel: The Lincoln Speech That Nobody Knows [NOOK Book]

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Overview

Acclaimed Lincoln scholar Gabor Boritt re-creates the events surrounding President Lincoln's famous Gettysburg Address and shows how the remarks that were quickly forgotten took on a new life decades later and became the most famous speech in American history.

* Mp3 CD Format *. The literature of the Gettysburg Address tends to fall into one of two extremes. At one end are those books that maintain that Lincoln wrote his speech hastily, even on a scrap of paper on the train en route from Washington to Gettysburg. In this version, Lincoln delivered his remarks to an uncomprehending public, which applauded politely, failing to appreciate his genius. Many of the books ...

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Overview

Acclaimed Lincoln scholar Gabor Boritt re-creates the events surrounding President Lincoln's famous Gettysburg Address and shows how the remarks that were quickly forgotten took on a new life decades later and became the most famous speech in American history.

* Mp3 CD Format *. The literature of the Gettysburg Address tends to fall into one of two extremes. At one end are those books that maintain that Lincoln wrote his speech hastily, even on a scrap of paper on the train en route from Washington to Gettysburg. In this version, Lincoln delivered his remarks to an uncomprehending public, which applauded politely, failing to appreciate his genius. Many of the books that argued this point of view are out of print today, but the myths and legends live on.Boritt's vivid narrative will be filled with colorful, little-known details. It will recreate the events, but it will also assess the significance of Lincoln's remarks and place them in their proper historical context as no book has before, showing how the remarks that were quickly forgotten took on a new life decades later and became the most famous speech in American history.

Editorial Reviews

Publishers Weekly
In this engrossing study, Civil War scholar Boritt (editor of The Lincoln Enigma) offers a revealing history of that most famous piece of American oratory, the Gettysburg Address. Boritt opens with an evocative description of a stench-filled, corpse-strewn Gettysburg on July 4, 1863, after the battle. When Lincoln arrived a few months later to dedicate the national cemetery, he had an important task: "to explain to the people," writes Borritt, in plain, powerful prose, "why the bloodletting must go on." After vividly recreating the delivery of the address, Boritt discusses the speech's mixed reception. Republican newspapers praised it; Democrats, viewing it as the beginning of Lincoln's re-election campaign, belittled or tried to ignore it; one Democratic newspaper called the speech a "mawkish harangue." Just as bad, Lincoln's graceful oratory was garbled in transmission to newspapers. Most interesting is Boritt's recounting of how, after Lincoln's assassination, the speech was mostly forgotten until the 1880s, when Gettysburg increasingly became a symbol of a reunion between North and South, and the Gettysburg Address took on the sheen of America's "sacred scriptures." Lincoln's poetic language, says Boritt, helps the speech live on, and the message of "sacrificial redemption" still speaks to Americans today. This elegant account will delight readers who enjoyed Garry Wills's Lincoln at Gettysburg. (Lengthy appendixes parsing drafts of the speech, however, will interest mainly aficionados.) 16 pages of b&w illus., and b&w illus. throughout. (Nov. 19) Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.
From The Critics
Boritt (Civil War studies, Gettysburg Coll.) manages to offer a fresh perspective on one of America's most famous speeches-which was not the main event at the cemetery dedication at Gettysburg in November 1863, four months after the battle-even though it has already been studied extensively. The author sets the speech in its contemporary context and, most interestingly, demonstrates that it was not only minimally noticed by Lincoln's peers and the press at the time but was virtually forgotten to history until the 20th century. He addresses many of the myths surrounding the address, such as that Lincoln wrote it in haste on the train to Gettysburg. In fact, it went through a number of careful revisions. He includes images of the known copies of the handwritten address, broadsides and programs relating to the dedication ceremony at Gettysburg, selections of photos from the era, and a line-by-line analysis of the various drafts of the address. Boritt's narrative style will appeal to lay readers, perhaps more so than Garry Wills's Lincoln at Gettysburg, while his extensive research and insightful conclusions will appeal to scholars. Recommended especially for libraries with a special interest in Lincoln and Civil War history.-Robert Flatley, Kutztown Univ., PA Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.

Product Details

  • ISBN-13: 9780743298476
  • Publisher: Simon & Schuster
  • Publication date: 11/7/2006
  • Sold by: SIMON & SCHUSTER
  • Format: eBook
  • Pages: 432
  • Sales rank: 537,155
  • File size: 3 MB
  • Items ship to U.S, APO/FPO and U.S. Protectorate addresses.

Meet the Author

Gabor Boritt is the Robert Fluhrer Professor of Civil War Studies and Director of the Civil War Institute at Gettysburg College. Born in World War II Hungary, he participated as a teenager in the 1956 revolution against the Soviet Union. He escaped to the United States, where he received his higher education and became one of the finest Lincoln scholars. His life story is soon to be the subject of a feature-length documentary film. He is the author, coauthor, or editor of sixteen books about Lincoln and the Civil War. Boritt and his wife live on a farm near the Gettysburg battlefield, where they have raised their three sons.

Table of Contents

Preface     1
After Battle     5
Rebirth     31
Lincoln Comes to Gettysburg     49
Carousing Crowds     69
The Gettysburg Gospel     91
Echoes     130
Gloria     163
Coda     204
Appendixes     207
The Program at the Soldiers' National Cemetery, November 19, 1863     207
A Beautiful Hand: Facsimiles of the Five Versions of the Gettysburg Address in Lincoln's Hand     245
Parsing Lincoln     256
Dollar Signs     287
Notes     293
A Bibliographic Note: Dwarfs and Giants     377
Acknowledgments     394
Index     403
Customer Reviews
Average Rating 4.5
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  • Posted September 5, 2009

    Just In Case You Think You've Read It All...

    As a "Gettysburg" fanatic, I thought there could be little left for me to learn about anything connected to the battle. I had even written a book for teachers about how to use The Killer Angels in the classrom. Well, wasn't I knocked off my smug little pedestal when I read this one!? The opening chapters in particular give a fresh, and for some, I imagine, new insight into the days and weeks after the battle. Boritt draws the scenes of wreckage and slaughter so clearly one cannot help but be moved and his research into the realities of Lincoln's Address is rewarding for even the most casual reader. The prose style is never pedantic but rather almost conversational and engaging. I recommend this for anyone interested in the battle, whether new to that interest or an "old hand."

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  • Anonymous

    Posted May 14, 2007

    Fleshes out the 'well-known' story ...

    I particularly liked this book because it fleshed out the real story of how the greatest piece of speech writing in American history actually came to be. Here, you are told not only the traditional tale of how Lincoln composed and delivered his address that day, but the background behind the decision to create the national cemetary Lincoln and thousands of others came to dedicate. You become intimately familiar with the extreme hardships endured by the local populace in the days and weeks following the battle and you gain a solid understanding what impact the address actually had on those who heard it personally and those who only read about it. The narrative puts into perspective the cultural environment of the period ... a time when a 2-hour address by a well-known orator was something to be eagerly anticipated rather than dreaded and an era when 2-3 minutes of 'appropriate remarks' by the President of the United States could be seen as anticlimactic and less than memorable ... and then be subjected to decades of obscurity before finally gaining the credit and recognition it deserved in the latter part of the 19th century.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted July 16, 2011

    No text was provided for this review.

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