General Robert E. Lee was opposed to slavery, and his reputation as an effective military strategist would have given him a job with the Union.
General Lee refused the offer because he lived in Virginia, and considered Virginia his home. He felt the need to fight for his homeland, which happened to secede and join the Confederacy.
sam houston
Strongly opposed.
He was forced out of office as the Governor of Texas.
Several attempts were made to band together the Unionist counties, and after adding and removing some undecided counties the State of West Virginia was formed. Throughout the first 3 years of the war, about half of West Virginia was in Confederate hands.
It opposed communism but did not threaten military intervention
Johnson favored conciliatory policies to the South and a rush to reincorporate the former Confederate states back to the union without due regard for freedman's rights. The Radical Republicans opposed.
Robert E. Lee
Just the American Civil War began, the military leader who would end up becoming the most famous Confederate general, Robert E. Lee, was offered a key position in the Union Army. Despite being personally opposed to slavery and secession, Lee hesitated to accept the position because it would require him to make war against his beloved home-state of Virginia. His hesitation cost him the job, and he went on to serve in the Confederate military.
Robert E. Lee
Robert E. Lee - along with many other Virginia-born officers and politicians.
As respective presidents of the United States and the Confederate States of America, Abraham Lincoln and Jefferson Davis were diametrically opposed on the issues of states' rights in respect to secession. What this fundamentally meant was that Lincoln was unalterably opposed to, while Davis was fully in favor of, this right.
That was Robert E. Lee. Like many senior Virginians, he opposed secession. Whether he opposed slavery is more doubtful. He had had to take two years' leave to sort out his father-in-law's estate, which included many slaves. The old man had unwisely told them that they would be freed on his death. But they could not be freed until the disposal of the estate had been completed, and they became very rebellious. Lee decided to make an example of the ringleaders, and his treatment of them was quite brutal, though not abnormal by the standards of the time. His beliefs about slavery seem to be equivocal, and he has been claimed as a figurehead by both sides of the debate.
That was Robert E. Lee. Like many senior Virginians, he opposed secession. Whether he opposed slavery is more doubtful. He had had to take two years' leave to sort out his father-in-law's estate, which included many slaves. The old man had unwisely told them that they would be freed on his death. But they could not be freed until the disposal of the estate had been completed, and they became very rebellious. Lee decided to make an example of the ringleaders, and his treatment of them was quite brutal, though not abnormal by the standards of the time. His beliefs about slavery seem to be equivocal, and he has been claimed as a figurehead by both sides of the debate.
There were people
There were people
Strongly opposed.
A term used for people who opposed secession of the states were called conservatives. The people that supported secession were called secessionists.
Many counties in North Texas opposed secession because most of the residents were originally from states of the Upper South.