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“ War to Free the Slaves” |
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How well does this describe the causes of the
American Civil War
The South, which was known as the Confederation, broke away from the North,
which was also known as the Union, for many different reasons. The reason they
wanted to succeed was because there was four decades of great sectional
conflict between the two. Between the North and South there were deep economic,
social, and political differences. There were many reasons why the South wanted
to succeed but the main reason had to do with the North’s view on slavery. All
of this was basically a different interpretation of the United States
Constitution on both sides. In the end all of these disagreements on both sides
led to the Civil War, in which the North won.
There were a few reasons other then the slavery issue, that the South disagreed
on and that persuaded them to succeed from the Union. Basically the North
favoured a loose interpretation of the United States Constitution. They wanted
to grant the federal government increased powers. The South wanted to reserve
all undefined powers to the individual states. The North also wanted internal
improvements
sponsored by the federal government. This was more roads, railroads, and
canals. The South, on the other hand, did not want these projects to be done at
all. Also the North wanted to develop a tariff. The tariff was good for the
North allowing them to make money on imports, but was bad for the south that
exported a lot of cotton and tobacco to America. With a high tariff, it
protected the Northern manufacturer. The North also wanted a good banking and
currency system and federal subsidies for shipping and internal improvements.
The South felt these were unfair and that they favoured Northern commercial
interests.
Now the main reason for the South’s split from the North was the Slavery issue.
Basically the South wanted and needed it and the North did not want it at all.
The South was going to do anything they could to keep it. This was the issue
that overshadowed all others. At this time the labour force in the South had
about 4 million slaves. These slaves were very valuable to the slaveholding
planter class. They were a huge investment to Southerners and if taken away,
could mean massive losses to everyone. Slaves were used in the South as helpers
in the fields in the cultivation of tobacco, rice, and indigo, as well as many
other jobs. The South especially needed more slaves at this time because they
were now growing more cotton then ever because of the invention of the cotton
gin. Within a time period of 50 years the number of slaves also rose from about
1,190,000 to over 4,000,000. The plantation owners in the South could not
understand why the North wanted slavery abolished that bad. Southerners
compared it with the wage-slave system of the North. They said that the slaves
were better cared for then the free factory workers in the North. Southerners
said that slave owners provided shelter, food, care, and regulation for a race
unable to compete in the modern world without proper training. Many Southern
preachers proclaimed that slavery was sanctioned in the Bible. But after the
American Revolution slavery really died it the North, just as it was becoming
more popular in the South. By the time of 1804 seven of the northern most
states had abolished slavery. During this time a surge of democratic reform
swept the North and West. There were demands for political equality and
economic and social advances. The Northerners goals were free public education,
better salaries and working conditions for workers, rights for women, and
better treatment for criminals. The South felt these views were not important.
All of these views eventually led to an attack on the slavery system in the
South, and showed opposition to its spread into whatever new territories that
were acquired. Northerners said that slavery revoked the human right of being a
free person. Now with all these views the North set out on its quest for the
complete abolition of slavery.
When new territories became available in the West the South wanted to expand
and use slavery in the newly acquired territories. But the North opposed to
this and wanted to stop the extension of slavery into new territories. The
North wanted to limit the number of slave states in the Union. But many
Southerners felt that a government dominated by free states could endanger
existing slaveholdings. The South wanted to protect their states rights. The
first evidence of the North’s actions came in 1819 when Missouri asked to be
admitted to the Union as a slave state. After months of discussion Congress
passed the Missouri Compromise of 1820. This compromise was legislative
measures
that regulated the extension of slavery in the United States for three decades.
Now the balance of 11 free states and 11 slave states was in trouble. Maine
also applied for statehood in 1819, in which it was admitted as a free state.
Southern extremists opposed any limit on the extension of
slavery, but settled for now. Missouri and Maine were to enter statehood
simultaneously to preserve sectional equality in the Senate. For almost a
generation this Compromise seemed to settle the conflict between the North and
South. But in 1848 the Union acquired a huge piece of territory from Mexico.
This opened new opportunities for the spread of slavery for Southerners. But
the distribution of these
lands in small lots speeded the development of this section, but it was
disliked in the South because it aided the free farmer than the slaveholding
plantation owner. But many free states in the Union passed personal liberty
laws in an effort to help the slaves escape. Many Northerners set up
underground railroads where the runaway slaves could hide and get food and be
directed to Canada for freedom. This angered many Southerners. This compromise
also said that the territory east of California given to the United States by
Mexico was divided into the territories of New Mexico and Utah, and they were
opened to settlement by both slaveholders and antislavery settlers. This
measure outdated the Missouri Compromise of 1820. All these compromise measures
resulted in a gradual intensification of the hostility between the slave and
free states. Again another law was passed called the Kansas-Nebraska Act. It
authorized the creation of Kansas and Nebraska, west of Missouri and Iowa, and
stated that the inhabitants of the territories should decide for themselves the
legality of slaveholding. The Democratic senator of Illinois sponsored this act
.The removal of the restriction on the expansion of slavery ensured southern
support for the bill, which was signed into law by President Franklin Pierce on
May 30, 1854. This act split the Democratic Party and destroyed the Whig party
also. The northern Whigs joined antislavery Democrats to form the Republican Party
in July 1854.. There were also many people in the North known as abolitionist s
who made the South look very bad. The abolitionists played a major role in
shaping the views of many Northerners. These people were fully against slavery
and its expansion and most of the time took matters into their own hands to get
their point across. Some of the most famous abolitionist’s was Frederick
Douglass, who was an escaped slave who became a black editor.
The last main conflict that led to succession was during the presidential
election of 1860. The newly formed Republican Party nominated Abraham Lincoln
on principles that opposed the further expansion of slavery. Now with Lincoln
being elected the South really felt that expansionism was being threatened, and
because expansion was vital to the survival of slavery they also felt their way
of life was being threatened. Because slavery was such a important part of
Southern society, the South felt that they could not survive without it. Now
they felt there was nothing more they could do. They were convinced that they
should make a bid for independence by succeeding rather then face political
encirclement. It was all described when a Southern man said \"We have at
last reached that point in our history when it is necessary for the South to
withdraw from the Union. This has not been our seeking...but we are bound to
accept it or self-preservation.\" This was officially the end and now the
South wanted to succeed. Lincoln said that succession was illegal and said that
he intended to maintain federal possessions in the South.
On February 4 delegates from all these states met in Montgomery, Alabama where
they drafted a constitution for the Confederate States of America. This
outraged the North and what was led to the Civil War.
The existence of slavery was the central element of the conflict between the
North and South. Other problems existed that led to succession but none were as
big as the slavery issue. The only way to
avoid the war was to abolish slavery but this could not be done because slavery
is what kept the South running. But when the South seceded it was said by
Abraham Lincoln that \"A house divided against itself cannot stand. I
believe this government cannot endure permanently half slave and half free.\"
Because slavery formed two opposing societies, and slavery could never be
abolished, the Civil
War was inevitable.\" These were all the reasons why the South seceded
from the Union and there was really no other way to avoid succession because
the North and South had totally opposing views.