Home ground advantage. The North had the task of doing the invading.
It was a turning point for the civil war, because it gave the Union the ability to move further down South.
One thing that gave the south an edge in the beginnings of the Civil War was the fact that the north had to come to them. This gave the south the advantage of being in their own area where they were comfortable and knew the land.
The Battle of Atlanta
they gave it to there family:)
not really since the editorial were being a little biased. but for the most of it, yes i do think it healed the nation after the civil war. this editorial gave faith to the ones that didnt have any. this encouraged them to make the South a better place of a society.
yes
it gave it an edge because i farted on your grandpa....
it gave it an edge because i farted on your grandpa....
it gave it an edge because i farted on your grandpa....
Because the south gave up.
shotguns
1868 was the first election after the Civil War. Many of the white voters in the South were not allowed to vote and the black voters gave Grant and the Republicans Why_did_Grant_win_a_lot_of_southern_states_in_1868for their freedom.
The South had a number of advantages as it entered the US Civil War. The most impotant one was that to be successful, the South did not have to conquer the North. They planned on a mostlt defensive strategy to wear the will of Northerns down to the point that they did not think the cost in lives by the Union was worth the fight to conquer the South. Also, as the battles were 90% of the time on Southern soil, this was territory totally familiar to Southern commanders. The North was unfamiliar with the terrain in which battles were fought.
Because the south was unhappy about the end of the civil war. Abraham Lincoln created amendments which gave rights to the slaves.
2nd Bull Run and Chancellorsville
When the civil war ended when the south surrendered thats how they got the right to vote.
King organized the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC), which gave him a base to pursue further civil-rights activities, first in the South and later nationwide.