The Statue of Liberty was not primarily conceived as an immigration symbol. It was conceived as an emancipation monument. The person who first proposed it — Édouard de Laboulaye, a French legal scholar, politician, and committed abolitionist — proposed it at a dinner party at his estate in Glatigny in the summer of 1865, weeks after the end of the American Civil War and the ratification of the 13th Amendment. His guest was the sculptor Frédéric Auguste Bartholdi.
Laboulaye's motivation was explicit in his correspondence and writings: he was a lifelong admirer of American democracy, a fierce opponent of slavery, and deeply moved by the Union's victory. He had written extensively about American abolitionism — his 1855 book The United States and France praised the American experiment while condemning the contradiction of slavery within it. The end of slavery, to Laboulaye, was the fulfillment of the American promise. He wanted a monument that would celebrate that fulfillment and link it to French republicanism.
His exact words at the 1865 dinner, as later recalled by Bartholdi: "If a monument should rise in the United States, as a memorial to their independence, I should think it only natural if it were built by united effort — a common work of both our nations." The monument he envisioned was tied to the moment: the end of slavery, the survival of the republic, the victory of the democratic ideal over the slave-holding one. The immigration story — "give me your tired, your poor" — did not exist yet. It would not be written for another eighteen years.