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A hundred years later, the United States found itself similarly torn over new laws enforcing black civil rights, and it was Robert Kennedy's job to carry them out. "The Kennedy Emancipation Proclamation links the noblest ideals of the 1860s to the 1960s, links Robert Kennedy and Abraham Lincoln and civil rights and Civil War," Sotheby's Vice Chairman David Redden said. Princeton journalism professor Evan Thomas, a historian, said he wasn't surprised that RFK would want to own such an important document. "He enforced and pursued civil rights in a way that no one else in the attorney general's office ever had," he said. "He went down South and saw the injustice there, and he was determined to do something about it. ... He captured some of the spirit of Lincoln." The document that Kennedy bought was framed and hung in one of the main hallways of Hickory Hill, his sprawling 1840s home in McLean, Va., that was sold last year. Ethel Kennedy declined to comment about the auction. The copy was one of 48 signed by Lincoln and printed to raise money for medical care for union soldiers, Kiffer said. The RFK copy was first sold in the summer of 1864 at a Philadelphia fair held by the Sanitary Commission, a forerunner of the Red Cross. It will be exhibited in Boston, Philadelphia and New York prior to the auction.
[Associated
Press;
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