1001 Things Everyone Should Know About the Civil War
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9780767905435
ISBN:0767905431
Publisher: Broadway Books Summary: Introduction No war is simple or uncomplicated, certainly not the American Civil War of 1861 to 1865. There were encounters involving hundreds of thousands of soldiers and irregulars, and the war spread across the American continent from Maine to California, Florida to Wyoming, even into Canada. More than a million men were killed or wounded or died of disease. More than 25 percent of the manpower available in the No [read more]- 30-Day No-Hassle Returns
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9780767905435
ISBN:
0767905431
Publisher: Broadway Books
Introduction No war is simple or uncomplicated, certainly not the American Civil War of 1861 to 1865. There were encounters involving hundreds of thousands of soldiers and irregulars, and the war spread across the American continent from Maine to California, Florida to Wyoming, even into Canada. More than a million men were killed or wounded or died of disease. More than 25 percent of the manpower available in the North and South became casualties. Costs went far beyond battles, treasure beyond belief poured into the war, and a terrible process of change created a different Union from the wreckage of the old. How can such a maelstrom be encompassed in a mere 1001 entries? The best way is to discuss the physical and human geography of the sides that faced each other in 1861, see how the governments were organized, and indicate the people, events, and items that came to the fore during each year of the war. Some extras will still have to be tucked in here and there when the complexities of war defy logical presentation. 1. The election of Abraham Lincoln of Illinois, a "Black" Republican, to the presidency presented the possibility of fundamental changes in Southern rights and causes. Lincoln's party threatened the continuation of slavery, but that alone did not lead to secession. Setting the slaves free was the real threat. What would happen if slaves were loosed across the South, and the time-honored system of social control were to vanish? And if slaves as private property could be confiscated, where would Federal dictatorship stop? Lincoln's election, in November 1860, led not only to the secession from the Union of South Carolina but, within a few weeks, to that of Mississippi, Florida, Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana, and Texas. Some of the border states leaned toward the South but waited on events. 2. In the Institute Hall of Charleston, South Carolina, on Thursday, December 20, 1860, the delegates to the South Carolina Convention, having listened to fiery rhetoric for several days, made their declaration. "The Ordinance adopted by us in Convention on the twenty-third day of May, in the year of our Lord one thousand seven hundred and eight-eight, whereby the Constitution of the United States of America was ratified, and also all Acts, and parts of Acts, of the General Assembly of this State, ratifying amendments of the said Constitution are hereby repealed; and that the union now subsisting between South Carolina and other States, under the name of 'The United States of America' is hereby dissolved.'" Ayes, 169; nays, 0. 3. Did secession mean war? To some, yes. Others hoped for a different and better Union; a few, for quick return to what had been. 4. Secession came despite the harried efforts to save the Union. The Senate Committee of Thirteen, charged with preserving the country, had put forth, on December 18, 1861, the "Crittenden Compromise." John J. Crittenden (1787-1863) of Kentucky, a strong Union man, proposed to the new committee several constitutional amendments. They would prohibit slavery in territories north of 36 30'; Congress would not interfere with the system below that line. States were to be admitted to the Union with or without slavery, according to each state's constitution. Congress could not abolish slavery in places it controlled, including the District of Columbia. Congress would have no power to inhibit interstate slave transportation, and it was to compensate owners for slaves lost to lax law enforcement. No future amendments could change these provisions nor abolish slavery where it existed. Crittenden thought that reviving the old Missouri Compromise line would restrict slavery expansion, just what Southerners could not accept. 5. On December 4, 1860, the House of Representatives created the Committee of Thirty-three (each state had a member) to study the nation's conditio
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