Eighty-five years after the United States declared its independence,
the country was at war again. This time, Americans were not fighting
foreigners, they were fighting each other, North versus South. The American
Civil War lasted four years, from 1861 to 1865, and killed more American
soldiers both Union and Confederate than would die in
the two world wars combined. What happened to the United States to make
them fight?
One of the most significant issues was the economic split between
the North and the South. In the early 1800s the Northern states, especially
those in New England, turned from farming to manufacturing. But in
the South, farming remained the most important way of life. Southern
planters found cotton and tobacco to be their most profitable crops,
and they farmed large areas of land in order to meet the demand for
these goods. This system was profitable because of slave labor. Southern
plantations used African-American slaves as a huge and cheap labor
force. In the North, people began to regard slavery as wrong, and
abolitionists, anti-slavery reformers, began to preach against
the evils of slavery. The South felt that their way of life was being
threatened.
As America expanded west, the issue of whether slavery should be
allowed in the new territories grew heated. Many Northerners were
opposed to expansion of slavery. Abolitionists wanted to end slavery
throughout the entire country. They considered the practice evil and
contrary to the ideals of democracy.
In addition to the conflict over slavery, many Southern states believed
that the laws of the individual states should overrule the laws of
the federal, or national, government. These Southerners didnt
want the federal government to interfere in their state affairs. They
believed that the states reserved the right to reject any federal
laws they did not like.
The turning point was the 1860 presidential election. The Republican
Party picked Abraham Lincoln as its candidate for president. Lincoln
was not an abolitionist but he had spoken against the spread of slavery
into the territories, which meant the South considered him an enemy.
Leading Southerners announced that they would demand secession from
the Union if Lincoln won the election. Lincoln did win the election
on November 6, 1860, and a month later, South Carolina seceded from
the United States. Mississippi, Florida, Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana,
and Texas followed South Carolina in leaving the Union. The Civil
War had begun.
Originally, the North began the war to preserve the Union, not to
end slavery. But President Lincoln eventually became convinced that
emancipation, granting freedom to slaves, was necessary to
win the war. He issued the Emancipation Proclamation at the beginning
of 1863, after which the Union considered all slaves in the Confederacy
to be free.
The Civil War lasted until 1865 and was finally won by the North
after a terrible cost in lives on both sides including the
life of President Lincoln. As the North celebrated its victory, Lincoln
was assassinated by John Wilkes Booth, a Southern sympathizer.
Following the Civil War, three amendments to the U.S. Constitution
(13, 14, and 15) were ratified to outlaw slavery and to guarantee
citizenship and voting rights to all Americans, specifically the recently
freed slaves. Many of the problems involving states' rights were also
put to rest, as the federal government emerged as the supreme authority
in the United States. In addition, before the Civil War the development
of industry and transportation had been slow. But during the grim
years of the war, American industry had learned new ways of manufacturing
and had developed more efficient methods of transporting people and
supplies.
Nevertheless, many new problems surfaced. The Southern economy, which
had been almost entirely based on agriculture, had collapsed. The
war had destroyed the plantations and ruined much of the farmland.
Many Southern cities and towns had also been destroyed, and the people
of the South were desperately poor. Second, at the end of the war,
the Southern states found themselves without governments. These states
had to be re-admitted to the Union, but they could not rejoin the
United States until they had established legal state governments.
Finally, 4 million former slaves had to start new lives as free people.
Read the diaries of James Edmond Pease, a Union soldier; Emma Simpson,
a Southern girl; and Patsy, a freed slave, to learn what life was
like for these young people in these chaotic and bloody times.
Timeline:
1850: Compromise of 1850 effected between antislavery and
proslavery factions. It brought California into the union as a free
state while Texas was admitted as a slave state. It also abolished
the slave trade from the District of Columbia, though it was still
legal to own slaves there. The compromise also states that New Mexico
and Utah would decide for themselves on whether they would be slave
or free states when they joined the Union. Finally, a new fugitive
slave law made it a crime for anyone to help an escaped slave.
1854: Republican Party formed.
1856: Civil war in Kansas over slavery issue.
1857: Dred Scott decision by Supreme Court legalizes slavery
in U.S. territories.
1858: Senatorial candidates Abraham Lincoln and Stephen
Douglas debate slavery in Illinois.
1859: Abolitionist John Brown leads raid at Harper's
Ferry, Virginia, and is hanged.
1860: Lincoln elected president. South Carolina secedes from Union.
1861: Civil War begins with firing on Fort Sumter in South
Carolina.
1863: Emancipation Proclamation issued.
Battles of Gettysburg and Vicksburg.
1864 Sherman's army marches to the sea in Georgia.
1865: Confederate General Robert E. Lee surrenders
at Appomattox, Virginia. Lincoln assassinated; Andrew Johnson succeeds him as President. 13th Amendment, prohibiting slavery, ratified