244 Results for war

How the South was portrayed and why the Civil War was a tragedy There are two sides told in every story. In D.L. Griffin's "Birth of a Nation" the story is told through the eyes of two families, the Camerons who are from the south and the Stoneman's who reside in the north. The ...
The article, \"The Negro\'s Civil War in Tennessee, 1861-1865\" by Bobby L. Lovett, was published in \"The Journal of Negro History, Vol. 61, No. 1\" (Jan. 1976). In the article, Lovett writes about the contributions of black Tennesseans during the Civil War in obtaining their freedom - under some o...
#8 Analyze the economic consequences of the Civil War with respect to any two of the following in the United States between 1865 and 1880. Agriculture Labor Industrialization Transportation On April 9th, 1865, General Robert E. Lee, captain of the Confederate army surrendered to the Uni...
Slavery, the single cause of the American Civil war is asked by few people these days, Slavery has been forgotten and many people don't even know what happened in 1861. Slavery was an influence though in the Civil war. The civil war was one of the many ways out slavery in 1861. If America we...
The Civil War began in 1861 with the conflict at Fort Sumter, South Carolina and ended when General Lee surrendered to General Grant in Appomattox Courthouse, Virginia in 1865. However, the sectional conflict between the North and the South began long before the war. Many people believe the main c...
The Civil War began in early 1861 after South Carolina seceded from the Union and lasted until 1865. Reconstruction began as soon as the war ended but was a slow and strenuous process. The North was faced with the dilemma of whether or not to punish the South. They hesitated to punish the South b...
Many historians agree that the Harpers Ferry raid was to the Civil War what the Boston Massacre had been to the American Revolution. They were both incendiary events. Defenders of the union generally condemned Brown and called the raid "the work of a madman." Everywhere the threat of slave...
The Civil War was not inevitable. It was not an unavoidable conflict of two opposing sides; rather, it was the result of extremism and failures of leadership on both sides of the conflict. The conflict was made up of the pro-slavery southerners and the anti-slavery northerners. Both sides felt ver...
Was the Civil War un-avoidable? Was there another solution, or was it inevitable? These questions have one definite answer. The answer is "Inevitable". What were the causes of the Civil War? Most people think of slaver when that war is mentioned. Even centuries later, we still debate the...
"Rethinking the Coming of the Civil War: A Counterfactual Exercise," written by Gary J. Kornblith in the June 2003 issue of The Journal of American History, is an article that prompts the reader to reflect on the different dynamics which eventually lead to the Civil War. There are two diverse ideas...
THE CAUSES OF THE CIVIL WAR "The tragic 'fireball in the night' imagined by Jefferson had finally rung. The Missouri Compromise had failed. Proslavery and antislavery civilians clashed in the streets and took up arms. Thousands of Northerners were willing to die for thei...
THE CAUSES OF THE CIVIL WAR "The tragic 'fireball in the night' imagined by Jefferson had finally rung. The Missouri Compromise had failed. Proslavery and antislavery civilians clashed in the streets and took up arms. Thousands of Northerners were willing to die for the...
Many people's lives were greatly affected after the civil war. Some of the changes were good and some were bad. The civil war era is one of the most serious and interesting war in our nation's history. These two different events that changed many lives of the people in the United State...
The Blacks' Struggle following the Civil WarAfter the Civil War and the Emancipation Proclamation by Lincoln, the slaves of America were free. This was a huge step in making our country truly free to all people. The construction of the South did not however work out smoothly for the freed slaves. ...
The conclusion of the Civil War in favor of the north was supposed to mean an end to slavery and equal rights for the former slaves. Although laws and amendments were passed to uphold this assumption, the United States Government fell short. The thirteenth, fourteenth, and fifteenth amendments wer...
Life for Blacks after the Civil WarLife for African Americans after the Civil War was filled with joy and fear. As being former slaves, some had learned to expect hostility from white people and they did not presume it would instantly disappear. Even though the slaves were free, it was not a just fr...
By 1860, the North and the South had developed into two different regions; the North was an industrial society while the South was an agrarian society dependent on "King Cotton" and slave labor. The Northern industrial economy was comprised of a mutual relationship of wheat and the expans...
The Book That Started a War - Uncle Tom's CabinUncle Tom's Cabin, written by Harriet Beecher Stowe is a realistic, although fictional view of slavery. It focuses on the lives of two slaves, who both start under the ownership of a Mr. Shelby, who is known as a man who treats his slaves well. Mr. Shel...
Reconstruction was successful politically in its attempts to solve the problems of how to deal with the newly freed slaves and how to bring the seceded states back into the Union after the Civil War; however, many of these methods were unsuccessful or had no effect socially or economically. Some so...
There were many conflicts, reasons, and struggles that brought about the American Civil War, but there is no question that one of the hottest, most debated issues at that time was the issue of slavery. Should it be abolished? Should it be tolerated? Was it a state issue, or a federal one? Many quest...
This story, Silent Thunder told of a slave family living on a tobacco plantation, accurately depicted slave life prior to, and during The Civil War. The struggles the characters face throughout the story are not unusual. The desire to read and write was present, though against the law, through the...
The Book That Started a War – Uncle Tom's Cabin Uncle Tom's Cabin, written by Harriet Beecher Stowe is a realistic, although fictional view of slavery. It focuses on the lives of two slaves, who both start under the ownership of a Mr. Shelby, who is known as a man who treats his slaves ...
Roger B. TaneyRoger Taney lived from 1777-1864. He lived a great life and did many things during his lifetime. President Jackson named Taney chief justice of the Supreme Court in 1837. He served as chief justice from (1837- 1864) he remains the second longest in the courts history. Taney was not...
In 1851 at ......... the United States of America engaged in its bloodiest war ever. This Civil War was fought on our own ground, between our own people, between Northerners and Southerners. Economics, Influential writings, and expansion may have fueled the war, but the main underlying cause for w...
Through the veil of time, the Civil War has come to mean many things. For some, it was a war to free the slaves-for others; it was a matter of patriotism under the fist of tyranny. However, to concede to either of these explanations as the sole correct answer is an over simplification of grotesqu...