There are many primary sources of conflict that led to the Civil War, one main issue was the issue of slavery. The Union was against the institution of slavery, whereas it was one of the South's major sources of income. If this institution was to be completely abolished as the Union wished, the economy in the South would be devastated.
Another source of conflict came from the industries of the North, which competed against those of the South. As tensions grew, the flow of Southern raw materials was threatened, and Southern industrialization posed an economic threat.
The most significant conflict between the North and the South revolved around the issue of slavery. It seems clear that if slavery had been abolished when the US Constitution was ratified, this would not be an issue that separated the North and the South.
The Spanish American war.
a Charleston Mercury editorial published in 1860
a Charleston Mercury editorial published in 1860
irrepressible
A civil war is an internal conflict with in a single country between parties that disagree. It can be therefore safely assumed that the vast majority of the people in the US civil war were from the US
A documentary on medical treatments used during the war
what were the sources of the conflict in texas after the civil war?
If you are reading the actual letter, or an exact quote from that letter, it is a primary source.
After the Civil War, his primary concern became education for blacks.
a journal written by a civil war soldier describing a major battle
If it is an armed conflict, it is called a civil war. If it has not been reduced to organized violence, it could be a riot, or merely politics.
the author of conflict in rwanda asserts that root of the civil war there was a result of?
The Spanish American war.
One of the conflicts that started the civil war was slavery
Virginia was the confederate state that was primarily the battleground in the civil war in the west. IMPROVEMENT. Tennessee was the primary battleground of the Civil War in the West.
a Charleston Mercury editorial published in 1860
a Charleston Mercury editorial published in 1860