A question that has left many Americans puzzled is, was the civil was inevitable? Could the United States of America survived without the famous war? Would America be split in half? To answer this question one must look back and the reason the civil war happened and how it affected America. The United States was built on slavery; it is woven into America’s history. Right after the Revolutionary War, slavery was abolished in most of the northern states. But it was rampant in the South where most of the citizens were farmers working in agriculture. A large amount of workers was needed for the success of the crops. The South was desperate for people to work in the fields. So when ships arrived in 1619 with African Americans the problem was solved, slaves seemed like a simple solution. Even though the Declaration of Independence states, “all men are created equal” a large group of people was ignored in this statement. While white Americans were free African American …show more content…
Yes, but we will never know if slavery could have ever been abolished without the deaths. Even though a generation of men died it was for the human rights of African Americans. President Lincoln was one of the main supporters of the ending of slavery; He saw the hypocrisy of it. He said, “We began by declaring that all men are created equal; but now from that beginning we have run down to the other declaration, that for some men to enslave others is a ‘sacred right of the government’ these principles cannot stand together.” Lincoln understood the abuse of humans could not go unnoticed forever. In the North, many people wanted Lincoln to let the South become a separate nation, but he wanted unity between the North and South. But when the war started in 1861 no one, not even Lincoln, could have foreseen the four years of the horrendous bloodshed that was to come. The corpses of American boys would be shoveled into the earth - hundreds and thousands of them.
The United States had been involved in the Civil War for two years prior to 1863. Many people wonder how this devastating conflict ever got started. It has been said that the differences between the states that was against slavery and the states that still felt it was still necessary was the reasoning behind it. However, that did not last forever. All it took was one man to change everything.
With the reception of the United States Constitution in 1789, new and joined country was conceived. Differences were well-set on by numerous pioneers through bargains. Be that as it may, as years passed, our newborn child country was tested by regularly developing issues between the North and the South. Social, economical, and political contrasts ascended so upper that by 1861, our nation tapped out into one of the darkest circumstances in our country's history: the American Civil War. So what did uncork the Civil War—a war that isolated the country, wrecked harvests, urban communities, and railroad lines, and guaranteed such a significant number of lives?
It’s no joke that the Civil War is America’s bloodiest war. And throughout these tumultuous times, tensions were high among all Americans. On the last legs of the Civil War, there was considerable doubt about the future of America. Would America ever recover from its harsh divide? Abraham Lincoln certainly thought so.
Unfortunately, there have been events proving such statement and it is upsetting to know that after all the decades of fighting for equality this is still an issue for blacks, especially for African-Americans living in our country. African slaves first were brought to America in 1619 to the colony of Jamestown, Virginia. They served as the foundation of a new nation by working on crop production such as tobacco and cotton, and became a solid importance to the South´s economy
The Civil War was what ultimately showed America what kind of nation it would be. The Civil War had a profound affect on America’s history. After the nation had been torn apart, the ending of the Civil War gave hope to people everywhere that the nation would come together once again. The Civil War also showed just how powerful the Federal Government was. Federalism had won as the national government in America.
From the time we first became a country to 1865, slavery was a major issue that was lingering over the United States. The fight for abolition was a long struggle requiring a great deal of endurance and effort from many selfless individuals and groups fighting for the freedom of African Americans. Eventually, the government began making attempts at dealing with the issue of slavery, but not all of these were as successful as the government hoped they would be. These efforts made by various people and federal government shaped the history of our country, and the rights of freedom for all.
This phrase took on a new meeting during the civil war, because as the war turned to one over the morality of slavery in the United States, one has to touch on the unalienable rights that are given to all men, and decide whether such rights apply to the black man as well. As Lincoln said in the Gettysburg Address, “Four score and seven years ago our fathers brought forth on this continent, a new nation, conceived in Liberty, and dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal”. Here, Lincoln argues that slavery violates the American value of equality, as African Americans are subjected to unfair treatment under the rule of the Confederacy. As the war became more about slavery, Lincoln finally acted upon his beliefs and put into act the Emancipation Proclamation. The Emancipation Proclamation stated that freed all the slaves in states that opposed the union, which includes the Confederacy.
In the mid-nineteenth-century, the economic power switched in the South from the “upper South” to the “lower South,” which was expanding agriculturally. This switch resulted in the growth of a cotton-based economy. Economically, the change from cultivating tobacco and rice to cotton helped immensely. The high demand for cotton led to tremendous profits in the South and this drew the population to move to the prospering agricultural lands. The increase in cotton farming made African American slaves a necessity to the white males.
Did the Civil War Bring the United States Together? What was the background or setting of the Civil War? What were the reasons why the Civil War broke out? Here’s some background on the Civil War, in the spring of 1861, the North and South were having problems with each other with the issues of states right vs federal authority, expanding the Country to the west, and slavery in the South.
Upon investigating the reasons behind the war, it seems as though it was expected. The North and South were, in very simple terms, non-slave and slave. The Civil War, however, was not solely due to slavery; the war was the result of a culmination of events that separated the North from the South and further questioned the issue of slavery. Events such as the Compromise of 1850, the Fugitive Slave Act, the Mexican-American War, the Wilmot Proviso, and the Kansas-Nebraska Act all questioned slavery, but carried a deeper more political issue of imbalance of power between the North and South. At the end of the day, the sectionalism and hunger for political power between the North and the South led to extreme tension and the secession of the South hoping to protect itself and, eventually, the American Civil War
The Declaration of Independence (US 1776) showed that all Americans deserve equal opportunities in life when it proclaimed that “all men are created equal”; however, slavery continued to exist for over 80 years. Inequality continues to haunt African Americans in the present day in numerous aspects of life, as is apparent with police brutality and higher poverty rates than their white counterparts.
For hundreds of years historians have debated about the most significant factor for the advancement of civil rights for African-Americans from 1880-1980. Prior to this, African-Americans were largely only slaves, particularly in the South as nearly 4 million black slaves were forced to do extensive labour there allowing them to have no freedom whatsoever. However, during the Civil War, President Lincoln stated all slaves “shall be then, thenceforward, and forever free” as he issued the Emancipation Proclamation in 1863. This abolished slave trade in the US and attempted to bring an end to the Civil War.
Enslavement of Africans and the creation of the concept of racism were two very poor choices made by the early American colonists. Africans were captured by traders and used for American slavery, causing massive consequences for the future of the western world. Shortly after the American continents were discovered, Europeans began colonizing it. For the lack of productive farmers in the New World, colonists began to trade with Africa, which gladly accepted American goods in exchange for African slaves, who had been captured. American traders then loaded the slaves aboard their ship and set off to go back to America.
Slavery came to a complete end, the South lost much of its power, and President Abraham Lincoln died for his belief in the iconic words “All men were created equal.” Understanding the many effects of the end of the American Civil War can lead to a better understanding of the nation as a whole, and some of the current problems it
Throughout the United States History, America has been polluted with racial inequality, discriminations, segregation and hatred. Many people from the past were restrictively limited from doing certain thing, because they had one drop of an African blood in them (not two but one). Consequently, anyone who was not a European descendants were considered to be a property. From the beginning of the British North America in 1619 when a Dutch ship brought 20 enslaved Africans to Jamestown, Virginia, blacks has been mistreated Since then. These human beings were considered to be a property.