Georgia
No, South Carolina was part of the Confederacy. It was actually the first state to secede from the Union.
1861
Lincoln didn't want Maryland to secede because Washington would be surrounded by the Confederacy.
There was a chance that it would join the Confederacy, because it was a deeply divided state, and its leaders were Southern sympathisers. Lincoln acted promptly (and illegally) to jail those leaders, and the danger of a Confederate state surrounding Washington was averted.
During the Civil War, the Confederacy tried to secede from the Union.
Georgia
Lincoln arrested state leaders who wanted to secede.
No, South Carolina was part of the Confederacy. It was actually the first state to secede from the Union.
Missouri, Kentucky, West Virginia, Maryland and Delaware
Missouri, Kentucky, West Virginia, Maryland and Delaware
Davis represented Mississippi and that was a Confederate state and the second state to secede from the Union.
Do you mean secede from the Confederacy? There was only one - the new state of West Virginia, which seceded from Virginia in 1863.
For all practical purposes the Confederate Congress believed that a state in the US could hold a vote to remain a member of the US. The results would be either a yes to secede or a no not to secede. The US Constitution is silent about secession. To avoid future political problems, they created a constitution that did not allow for any Confederate state to secede. Thereby, alerting all states joining the Confederacy to understand that this would be a final decision.
1861
The Igbo tried to secede from Nigeria in the 1960s.
Secession. South Carolina was the first state to secede from the Union.