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Both the north and the south relied on the military conscription (drafting men).
Both North Dakota and South Dakota were admitted into the Union on November 2, 1889.
No they were not, South Carolina was the first state to join the Confederacy and North Carolina was one of the last. Both states were independent from each other and had their own state governments.
The south was glad he was dead. The north, however, weren't.
Both had slavery, the south just had it for longer.
North Dakota and South Dakota North Carolina and South Carolina
North Carolina and South Carolina
Yes to both.
They both were named after Amerigo Vespucci. And They were both known as the Americas. north is larger in area, north is more populous, south is roman catholic, north is christian, north is north of equator (mostly) south is south of the equator (mostly).
The US states of Montana and Minnesota each share borders with both North Dakota and South Dakota.
South Dakota is bordered by North Dakota to the north, Minnesota to the east, Iowa to the southeast, Nebraska to the south, and Wyoming and Montana to the west.
they both lived in the untied states
Both states share a border with South Carolina.
There were no states that sided with neither the North or South. However, there were some states, the border states, supplied supplies and soldiers to both sides. They were Missouri, Tennessee, Kentucky, Maryland, and Delaware.
Jim Crow laws existed in both the north and the south, in thirty-three states to be exact. These laws varied in their severity and it is important to note that some of the harsher statutes were enacted in the north.
To the north, North Carolina borders both Georgia and South Carolina. To the east, the two states are bordered by the Atlantic Ocean.
The North. Both states were declared free soil.