The two sides each had a completely different set of strengths and weaknesses.
At first, they were evenly matched.
After the historic July 4th 1863 (good news from Vicksburg and Gettysburg on the same day), everything swung the Union's way - assuming that the Northern public was not getting too war-weary to vote Lincoln back in.
1. Not to trade with the other side - an injunction that was regularly breached.
2. To exchange prisoners for the sake of civilian morale - until Grant ended the arrangement, knowing that the Confederates could not replace their losses.
they both had abolionists
butt
States in the south that fought with the north during the Civil War. The Confederates wanted slavery, but the Union, or the North, was against it.
This depends on which north and south are under discussion the north and south of Ireland North Korea and South Korea North Vietnam and South Vietnam the North and South in the American civil war North Dakota and South Dakota .... and many more.
South Carolina's early hardships included Indian hostilities. The Native American Indians of this region were more hostile to the first settlers than others to the north. There was also strife later on when North and South both wanted to have outposts there during the Civil War.
South Carolina, Mississippi, Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Virginia, Arkansas, North Carolina, Tennessee, Texas.
The name for the South during the Civil War was the Confederate States of America... Some call it Dixie.
southern states were more accepting of union control during reconstruction
The Confederate South.
North
The Union was North(:
South
there not from the north
The North.
the north
South
yes the south agriculture the north industrial
carpetbegger
THE Union was the North during the Civil War.The south was the Confederate states