the nationwas formed by an agreement that new states had not met
Because the USA had originally seceded from Britain.
the south felt they were no longer apart of the country that had elected Lincoln, and thought since they had voluntarily joined the union, they could leave when they wanted. they also wanted to protect their use of slaves. they felt that the union meant they were bein over powered by the north as none of the south actually wanted Lincoln as president.
The South believed there rights would no longer be respected.
In general terms, the North was unwilling to allow the Confederate states for two reasons. The first may be understood in terms of custom or tradition: the North demonstrated much stronger loyalty towards the Union of the United States than the South, and it had consistently done so ever since the nation's founding. The second was based on a principle, namely, the political principle that what had been joined in the Founding Period of the nation was not justifiably broken by the South's secessionist actions.
The northern states mainly thought that the southern states had no right to secede because they were part of a country that gave power to the central government, at this time the northern states (where the government was located) controlled eveything and therefore gave little power to states themselves, much less the right to secede. They also were mad because the U.S. was supposed to be one counrty working through their issues, not two fighting. Based off of American History a couple years ago.....
The southern states seceded because they feared that the Republican Party Platform would take away their right to own slaves. The Southern states depended heavily on their main industry of Agriculture. If the abolitionists took away slavery then the farmers would have to pay their workers and end up making less money.
because in the constitution(that each state signed to become a state) it says that no state can form an alliance treaty, etc. so technically seceding from the Union was unconstitutional, therefore it was void and was never legal. this question whether or not the civil war was legal, and whether it was a civil war or a war fought between two countries
They wanted to protect states' rights.
study island... LOL
The fact that the Southern states in fact did just so undercuts all their claims.
The nation was formed by an agreement that new states had not met.
The nation was formed by an agreement that new states had not met.;) NJR11 @Nelsonrnjr11-insta
The Southern States believed that they had the right to secede because the Union had violated the US Constitution. Because of this the Southern States believed that the Republican dominated Congress and the views of President elect Lincoln would continue to do so, thus the Southern States believed that they had the right to leave the Union.
Officially for the States Right but actually for States Right and to protect their way of life, which included also the slavery.
Secession Dates of the Southern Southern States:South Carolina - December 20, 1860Mississippi - January 9, 1861Florida - January 10, 1861Alabama - January 11, 1861Georgia - January 19, 1861Louisiana - January 26, 1861Texas - February 1, 1861On February 8, 1861, the first six states to secede formed the Confederate States of America, with Texas being admitted to the Confederacy about three weeks later, two days before Abraham Lincoln took office. These are all of the states that seceded during the presidency of James Buchanan, who did not order any response because he believed they had the right to secede if they wanted to.
Technically, the southern states wanted the right it was the right to secede (withdraw) from the Union (United States) since the rest of the nation had started imposing laws that many Southerners felt were states rights and issues. When slavery was abolished, many Southerners did not believe that their plantations could continue to function, so they decided that they did not need to belong to the United States, and declared to be separate. While the issue was slavery, it was actually about more than that. It was about the rights of the states to make their own laws and the right of the Federal Government to enforce laws imposed upon the states. The North states were also selling cotton-goods to Southern states at outrageous costs, this angered the South since all cotton originated from Southern states.
They believed that their rights, society and economy was endangered by Lincoln's election. They saw the only way to preserve themselves was to secede.
The Declaration of Independence.
They believed that their rights, society and economy was endangered by Lincoln's election. They saw the only way to preserve themselves was to secede.
The nation was formed by an agreement that new states had not met.;) NJR11 @Nelsonrnjr11-insta
president lincoln
James Buchanan
The southern states certainly believed they had the right to secede, but most of the northern states disagreed. The question was answered by a sort of trial-by-combat called the American civil War.Because the Confederacy lost the war and the Union was preserved, it turned out that no state had the right to secede without Congressional approval.
They claimed that the USA had started as a voluntary federation of states, and that any of them could leave when they chose.
The North during the Civil War area did not think the South should secede however did nothing to prevent it.
"Copperhead" was a term given to Northern people who sympathized with the south and the southern states' right to secede from the Union.
Some of them are for freedom. Also for the right to keep slaves. Those are only two reasons, but there are more.
Each state in the US is considered to be a sovereign state. This is what gave the southern states the right to secede, and this was known as popular sovereignty.