What were some advantages of the South? What about North
Voters voted based on the regions which they lived rather than based on values.
Prior to the outbreak of the American Civil War, the election of 1860 increased sectional tensions in the United States by lifting a pro-union, anti-slavery statesman, Abraham Lincoln, into the presidency. In reaction, Southern states protested in many ways, but in no more dramatic way than, one by one, seceding from the Union.
YES
the country before his election, was divided into two. the north and the south. that conflict that divided them was slavery. all the states in the north voted for Lincoln. this won him the election
In the 1860 US Presidential Election, Abraham Lincoln won 180 of a possible 303 electoral votes. He needed a simple majority, or 152 votes, to win the election. The candidate with the 2nd most electoral votes was John C. Breckinridge, who captured 72 electoral votes. In the 1860 election, Lincoln's primary support base was the Northeast and the Midwest, which accounted for nearly all of his electoral votes. His competitor Breckinridge collected most of the Southern votes.
No, you cannot play the lottery on election day. Lottery drawings and ticket sales occur on scheduled days throughout the week, but they do not coincide with election days.
make a title and make the main idea and you have a play injoy
1860
come out and play
Ms. Kennedy
The Kansas Nebraska Act did help keep the balance involving sectionalism and the North and South, but only by helping the North. Many Southerners were actually quite agrivated at the though of Congress standing up for the North, and this was when the first whispers of Sectionalism came into play.
Ms. Kennedy