There are 13 states that are considered Deep South. Alabama, Mississippi, Georgia, South Carolina are just 4 states.
South-- the southern states seceded from the Union, while the northern states remained in the Union.
yes they did they werent considered border states
because we no longer wanted to be part of the union, where the southern states were not considered soverign and the union states did not believe in states' rights like the south did
Because they considered slavery and slave trade essential to their economies.
North Dakota and South Dakota
There are 13 states that are considered Deep South. Alabama, Mississippi, Georgia, South Carolina are just 4 states.
The South and the Southwest are the regions that are considered part of the Sunbelt.
South-- the southern states seceded from the Union, while the northern states remained in the Union.
yes they did they werent considered border states
Georgia, Alabama, South Carolina, Mississippi and Louisiana. Arkansas is sometimes considered to be on the edges of the Deep South.
Usually the term "The Deep South" refers to the first 7 states to join the Confederate States of America. They are the 5 bordering the Gulf of Mexico plus Georgia and South Carolina.
because we no longer wanted to be part of the union, where the southern states were not considered soverign and the union states did not believe in states' rights like the south did
because we no longer wanted to be part of the union, where the southern states were not considered soverign and the union states did not believe in states' rights like the south did
Virginia, North Carolina and Maryland would have been considered upper south states in 1861.
Indiana to Minnesota across the north, and everything landlocked south of those states.
Anything south of the mason Dixon line. Pretty much anything under Virginia and Kentucky