
Lincoln, Douglass and Clark
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Since Gettysburg, the Civil war was going well for the Union, with successes throughout the south and west. Abraham Lincoln still feared the inventiveness of Robert E. Lee. Lee, in fact, had developed a plan to get an army past the Union blockade of the Chesapeake Bay and attack Washington and Baltimore, thereby changing the outcome of the Civil War.Lincoln makes use of the connections of his som...
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Since Gettysburg, the Civil war was going well for the Union, with successes throughout the south and west. Abraham Lincoln still feared the inventiveness of Robert E. Lee. Lee, in fact, had developed a plan to get an army past the Union blockade of the Chesapeake Bay and attack Washington and Baltimore, thereby changing the outcome of the Civil War.Lincoln makes use of the connections of his som...
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