On December 18, 1865, the United States reached a pivotal turning point in its long and unfinished struggle toward freedom with the ratification of the Thirteenth Amendment, which formally abolished slavery throughout the nation. Coming in the aftermath of the Civil War, the amendment declared that “neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as a punishment for crime,” would exist in the United States. While the Civil War had ended months earlier, the ratification of the Thirteenth Amendment gave constitutional force to emancipation, transforming a wartime promise into permanent law.
The amendment emerged from years of abolitionist activism and the profound upheaval caused by the war. Although President Abraham Lincoln’s Emancipation Proclamation of 1863 freed enslaved people in Confederate-held territories, it did not abolish slavery nationwide. Enslavement remained legal in border states loyal to the Union, and the proclamation itself was vulnerable to reversal once the war ended. Abolitionists understood that only a constitutional amendment could permanently dismantle the institution of slavery. Their pressure, combined with the bravery and resistance of enslaved people who fled plantations, joined the Union Army, and demanded freedom for themselves, made abolition unavoidable.
Congress passed the Thirteenth Amendment in January 1865 after intense political struggle. Its ratification required approval from three-fourths of the states, a process shaped by the realities of Reconstruction. Former Confederate states were compelled to ratify the amendment as a condition of rejoining the Union, while abolitionists continued to push relentlessly to ensure the amendment’s adoption. On December 18, 1865, Secretary of State William H. Seward officially proclaimed that the amendment had been ratified, marking slavery’s legal end in the United States.
Yet, the Thirteenth Amendment did not bring true freedom or equality. Its exception clause—allowing involuntary servitude “as a punishment for crime”—would later be used to justify convict leasing, chain gangs, and mass incarceration, systems that disproportionately targeted Black Americans and perpetuated forced labor under new names. Moreover, the amendment did not grant citizenship, voting rights, or economic justice to formerly enslaved people. Those struggles would continue through the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments and, later, the long fight for civil rights.
The ratification of the Thirteenth Amendment was both a monumental victory and the beginning of a new chapter in the struggle for justice. It represented the collapse of a brutal system that had shaped the nation since its founding, achieved through the efforts of abolitionists, enslaved people, and ordinary citizens who refused to accept human bondage. At the same time, it reminds us that ending slavery in law did not end racial oppression in practice. The legacy of the Thirteenth Amendment continues to challenge Americans to confront how freedom is defined, protected, and expanded in a society still grappling with its past.
[adrotate banner=”1184″]

While we are taking a trip down history lane, let’s not forget the democrats were and are still pro slavery. Democrats in charge of blue states have the most abominable records for the “education “ of minority children. They have just moved from the plantations of cotton and tobacco to the “ public indoctrination centers “ called schools.
Slavery never ended, it just shifted to everyone being held a slave through taxes. The government owns you. Try not paying taxes either property taxes or to the IRS and see how long you keep your home that you paid for or your freedom by not paying the IRS.
Since schools don’t actually teach or instruct, the Emancipation Proclamation doesn’t mean much to anyone. Blacks who claim racial prejudice at the drop of a pin might do well to actually read the 13th Amendment, celebrate and remember what it took to get it passed during a turbulent time. Slavery was still in a way of life in mostly democrat run territories and they were responsible for the strong resistance to the new law of the land”. Does this sound familiar? This historic shift in America was a difficult choice and because change scares people, not everyone embraces it. The racecard has already been punched and only those living in the past still try to use it.
Thank you for sharing history.
Their current reason to encourage this tremendous “migrant” invite and total acceptance is because we need cheap labor, ie: slavery.
this should be sent to EVERY BLACK PERSON IN AMERICA!
a reminder is in order!