1863
Emancipation in Effect
As Lincoln promised, the proclamation took effect with the new year: three and a half million enslaved people in rebel-held territory were declared free. In Boston, Frederick Douglass wept in a church full of singing Black Americans. In Savannah, enslaved families heard the news and began to walk to the Union lines.
London Underground Opens
The Metropolitan Railway began carrying passengers in wooden carriages through brick tunnels beneath London, pulled by steam locomotives that left soot on everyone's clothes. It was the first underground railway in the world. Thirty thousand rode it on the first day. Cities would never look up at their transit the same way again.
Gettysburg
On the third day of the battle, fifteen thousand Confederates walked across an open mile of Pennsylvania farmland into Union rifle and cannon fire. Pickett's Charge lost half its men in under an hour. Lee withdrew in a rainy retreat. The Confederacy would never again seriously threaten the North. It was, everyone felt afterward, the high tide.
Vicksburg Falls
On the day Lee retreated from Gettysburg, John Pemberton surrendered his thirty thousand starving Confederates in Vicksburg to Ulysses S. Grant. The Mississippi, Lincoln said, "again goes unvexed to the sea." The Confederacy was cut in half. Grant, a quiet drunk from Illinois, had just become the Union's best general.
Gettysburg Address
At the dedication of a new military cemetery, Abraham Lincoln spoke for two minutes after the featured speaker had spoken for two hours. In two hundred and seventy-two words he redefined the war as a rebirth of the Declaration of Independence and a test of whether government of, by, and for the people could survive.
Polish January Uprising
Russia's Polish subjects rose once more, trying to restore the lost kingdom. The rising, fought with scythes and stolen rifles, lasted fifteen months before being ground down. Thousands were executed or exiled to Siberia; Russification was tightened. It was the last great nineteenth-century Polish rebellion, and the next one would wait until a world war.