
SPRINGFIELD, Ill. (WBBM NEWSRADIO) -- What better time than Juneteenth to begin a two-week showing of a copy of the Emancipation Proclamation?
The Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library is the place to see it. The copy was a gift to the state in 1937 and is one of about two dozen surviving copies.
Library and museum director Christina Shutt said Lincoln signed almost 50 copies to raise money for wounded veterans.
“There was the ‘now,’ when Lincoln issues his words, but there was the ‘not yet,’” Shutt said in assessing how far race relations have come.
“Ultimately, the United States armed forces had to bring that freedom. They had to conquer that insurgent territory in order to bring the Emancipation Proclamation and we see that now in 2023,” citing conflicts over voting rights as an example.
Listen to our new podcast Looped In: Chicago
Listen to WBBM Newsradio now on Audacy!