the lines that separated the north and the south were the border states
If you mean the northern and southern states of USA then the Mason-Dixon line.
The Mason-Dixon line is the wrong answer. Maryland was in the north but is below the Mason-Dixon line. Thus proving the answer incorrect. This line was to divide Philly from Maryland. And was done prior to the conflict.
The true division of North and South is the 36 30 parallel plus Virginia. This is the line that started the debate over slavery. Where it could and could not exist. This is the line drawn in the sand which created the conflict. This is the line that shaped states and our country.
This could be two.
The Mason-Dixon line, separating Maryland (slave) from Pennsylvania (free).
Or the Missouri line - the parallel that marked Missouri's Southern border - North of which slavery was illegal, according to the Missouri Compromise of 1819.
It was officially the 36 degree North Latitude, but may people incorrectly refer to the Mason-Dixon line, which separated Maryland from Pennsylvania and Delaware.
The Mason - Dixon Line. It physically existed; a short stone wall running east to west, like a very feeble version of China's Great Wall.
The Mason-Dixon line.
The Mason - Dixon Line
the Mason Dixon line separated North & South in the US Civil war
Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus
Moving men and supplies at unprecedented speed. And the South did not have a rail network to match it. The American Civil War was called the first railroad war.
Union
The Union
Mason Dixon line
states rights
The north
the Mason Dixon line separated North & South in the US Civil war
Because of what history today calls bleeding Kansas. Kansas was separated between a pro north and a pro south government during the civil war.
An American who lives in the North (especially during the American Civil War) or to Pull, or move with a sudden movement
During the American Civil War, the North referred to the South as the Confederacy.
U.S. Grant W.T. Sherman
They rebelled from the North
they got separated in the Civil War.
Massachusetts was one of twenty-three states to side with the Union (North) in the American Civil War.
The North, Georgia started the Great Locomotive Chase during the American Civil War.