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An Amazing Fact: Abraham Lincoln didn't live long enough to witness the official end of the Civil War, but he was able to give the famous Emancipation Proclamation—freeing every slave in America.
One day, a former slave living in Washington, D.C., who had escaped from the South during the war, approached Lincoln. He took some money from his pocket and offered it to the president. "What is this for?" asked Lincoln. The freed slave said that he only wanted to pay Lincoln for securing his freedom. But the president answered, "I can’t take your money."
The ex-slave protested, explaining, "But I want to give you something. I am so thankful!"
Lincoln paused a moment, thinking, and then said, "Before you try to offer that again, I want to show you something." The president then began walking around the neighborhood, until finally he pointed, saying to the grateful man, "You see that home over there? There's a woman who lives there that lost her son, her only son, in this war fighting for your freedom." And he continued, "See that house over there? That woman lost three sons fighting for your freedom." Then he said, "You see that house over there? That's an unusual house. In that house the woman lost her husband and two sons fighting on opposite sides." Then the president turned to the man and said, "When you consider how much your freedom has already cost, are you going to give me money?"
The ex-slave said later of his encounter, "I realized that it would be an insult to offer money after they had paid so much."