nice because they had rights everyone have rights
they were treated bad
The traitors in the South who lost the war and should have been executed.
Slaves were treated poorly in the South, were it was legal. They were free in the north.
Of course they were slaves. But during the civil War, they were treated very badly in the south because of discrimination. Some slaves were even killed for trying to run away. In the north, they were not slaves but still discriminated.
During Reconstruction, many black slaves stayed in the South after the Civil War. With the exception of being enslaved, they were often treated the same as they had before they were freed. Slaves who migrated to the North were on the whole treated better.
I think President Lincoln thought the South should be treated a little less than equal.
slavery would enmd
they were treated bad
The traitors in the South who lost the war and should have been executed.
A major event was the conflict between the North and South about how African Americans should be treated. The South thought they should be slaves while the North thought opposite. Fights began to go through and it got worse and worse until a war began.
There actions may well be construed as war crimes and should be dealt with by the military.
Slaves were treated poorly in the South, were it was legal. They were free in the north.
great. they loved war. they were unaffected by deaths because they were used to slaves being treated that way!
There were only two ways that the South could have won the Civil War. With British aid - not possible after Lincoln issued the Proclamation. Or if Lincoln had been voted out in November 1864 - he wasn't.
Many Germans felt they had been treated unfairly in the Treaty of Versailles
You should name a period or a war. There is not enough information as is.
He didn't. To simplify history a lot he mainly said that Germany had been badly treated at the end of World War 1, and that they by now had the right to reclaim what should have been theirs, and that they needed more space.