OCTOBER 20, 1864:
President Lincoln issues Proclamation Number
118, reserving the last Thursday in November as the second annual Thanksgiving
Day. His Proclamation reads in part:
It has pleased Almighty
God to prolong our national life another year, defending us with His guardian
care against unfriendly designs from abroad and vouchsafing to us in His mercy
many and signal victories over the enemy, who is of our own household. It has
also pleased our Heavenly Father to favor as well our citizens in their homes
as our soldiers in their camps and our sailors on the rivers and seas with
unusual health. He has largely augmented our free population by emancipation
and by immigration, while He has opened to us new sources of wealth and has
crowned the labor of our workingmen in every department of industry with
abundant rewards. Moreover, He has been pleased to animate and inspire our
minds and hearts with fortitude, courage, and resolution sufficient for the
great trial of civil war into which we have been brought by our adherence as a
nation to the cause of freedom and humanity, and to afford to us reasonable
hopes of an ultimate and happy deliverance from all our dangers and
afflictions:
Now, therefore, I,
Abraham Lincoln, President of the United States, do hereby appoint and set
apart the last Thursday in November next as a day which I desire to be observed
by all my fellow-citizens, wherever they may then be, as a day of thanksgiving
and praise to Almighty God, the beneficent Creator and Ruler of the Universe.
And I do further recommend to my fellow-citizens aforesaid that on that
occasion they do reverently humble themselves in the dust and from thence offer
up penitent and fervent prayers and supplications to the Great Disposer of
Events for a return of the inestimable blessings of peace, union, and harmony
throughout the land which it has pleased Him to assign as a dwelling place for
ourselves and for our posterity throughout all generations.
In
Missouri, General Sterling Price C.S.A. has re-entered many-times-fought-over
Lexington. Unfortunately for Price, he is surrounded by Federal and pro-Union
State Militia on three sides, and is being relentlessly bombarded. Price manages to gain a minor victory when he
forces his way out of the trap.
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