# 902 - 1940 3c Emancipation Memorial, 13th Amendment
3¢ Lincoln Emancipation Statue
City: World’s Fair, NY
Quantity: 44,389,550
Printed by: Bureau of Engraving and Printing
Printing Method: Rotary Press
Perforations: 10.5 x 11
Color: Deep violet
Emancipation Memorial
Upon hearing of Abraham Lincoln’s assassination in 1865, freed slave Charlotte Scott said, “Colored people lost their best friend on earth.” She then declared that she wanted to honor the fallen President with a memorial. Scott donated the first five dollars she earned as a free woman to her former master for that purpose.
Scott’s actions were widely publicized and marked the start of a fund-raising drive for the Emancipation Memorial. The Western Sanitary Commission, a volunteer war-relief agency, took over fund-raising activities, collecting $20,000 before announcing their goal of $50,000. The majority (if not all) of the funds came from freed slaves, primarily African American Union veterans.
After the statue was cast in Munich, it arrived in Washington in early 1876. Congress approved the statue and provided $3,000 for a pedestal to place it on. The statue’s dedication ceremony was held on April 14, 1876 – exactly eleven years after John Wilkes Booth shot the President.
Click here to view the statue.
3¢ Lincoln Emancipation Statue
City: World’s Fair, NY
Quantity: 44,389,550
Printed by: Bureau of Engraving and Printing
Printing Method: Rotary Press
Perforations: 10.5 x 11
Color: Deep violet
Emancipation Memorial
Upon hearing of Abraham Lincoln’s assassination in 1865, freed slave Charlotte Scott said, “Colored people lost their best friend on earth.” She then declared that she wanted to honor the fallen President with a memorial. Scott donated the first five dollars she earned as a free woman to her former master for that purpose.
Scott’s actions were widely publicized and marked the start of a fund-raising drive for the Emancipation Memorial. The Western Sanitary Commission, a volunteer war-relief agency, took over fund-raising activities, collecting $20,000 before announcing their goal of $50,000. The majority (if not all) of the funds came from freed slaves, primarily African American Union veterans.
After the statue was cast in Munich, it arrived in Washington in early 1876. Congress approved the statue and provided $3,000 for a pedestal to place it on. The statue’s dedication ceremony was held on April 14, 1876 – exactly eleven years after John Wilkes Booth shot the President.
Click here to view the statue.