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El Salvador was where the central American civil war
Yes; The Civil War and the Revolutionary War are two.
African Americans
The historians had calculated that about 10,000 battles, large and small, were fought in the United States, starting from Apr. 1861 through May 1865.
At the age of six the Alamo fell. When he was a teenager the Mexican American war was going on. During his manhood the Civil War was being fought. As an elder the Spanish American war was being fought. All of his life, the American Indians had been at war.
The Italian Second Independence War fought in 1859 between France and Reign of Piemonte against the Austrian Empire. But, the war that the American Civil War is most often compared to is the Crimean War.
If you mean the American Civil War. It should have never happened. It got a lot of Americans killed. It was the deadliest war that the United States ever fought. Your chances of getting killed were about 1 out of 4. That is higher than any other that the United States ever fought. Your best chances of living would have been the American Revolution.
Because the war had not been fought on American soil.
The American Civil War was fought to prevent the ruination of the nation by slavery. Alcohol abuse has been the ruination of many families throughout history.
Guns have been around since the 1400s. By 1870, several wars hade been fought with guns, including the American Revolution (1776) and the American Civil War (1861-1865). By 1870, repeating catridge firearms were coming into use.
The most important long term result of the Mexican-American War wasn't the expansion of the United States by a third (if including Texas), but the experience gained by the American officers that fought in the war. I believe this because the same officers that fought in the Mexican-American War also fought in the American Civil War, which if it weren't for the Mexican-American War the officers in the Civil War might have had different tactics, which could have lead to a different outcome of the Civil War. This alternative outcome would have been the Southern United States successfully succeeding from the Union and the eventual takeover of the Northern and Southern United States by Britain, Spain, and France.
The most important long term result of the Mexican-American War wasn't the expansion of the United States by a third (if including Texas), but the experience gained by the American officers that fought in the war. I believe this because the same officers that fought in the Mexican-American War also fought in the American Civil War, which if it weren't for the Mexican-American War the officers in the Civil War might have had different tactics, which could have lead to a different outcome of the Civil War. This alternative outcome would have been the Southern United States successfully succeeding from the Union and the eventual takeover of the Northern and Southern United States by Britain, Spain, and France.