Slavery was not economical in the north. Due to more extreme winters, the agricultural seasons were shortened, and the north was not so dependent on crops as income. Slavery was not as embedded as a major part of the economy.
The North and the West for the most part were anti-slavery.
The North was the antislavery part of the country; The South was a pro-slavery part of the country.
The white clergy in both the North and the South had a primary difference. For the most part many Southern pastors were in favor of slavery. One idea they had was that slavery was God's way and also they were helping the slaves by even being in the US. For the most part clergy in the North was opposed to slavery. For the most part they believed slavery was immoral and against God's will.
a necessary evil
because slavery had died out for the most part after the civil war when the south agreed to rejoin the north
Northern states had a completely different attitude towards slavery and race equality. Abolition campaign was very strong in the north and had the support of political and religious leaders. North had become an industrialized and urbanized region with little dependence on agriculture, where slaves were largely utilized. Slavery was viewed negatively in north and by 1840 almost the entire African American populace in north was free. In a total contrast, southern states' economy depended on plantation agriculture where slavery was a vital part of society. The attitude of southerners was pro slavery and after the election victory of Abraham Lincoln, slave states decided to secede from the union as they feared a end of slavery under pro-abolition Lincoln.
For the most part, the national debate on slavery was not whether to abolish it. Most Americans, especially in the North, did not want slavery to spread to the western frontiers.
DWI/DUI offenses become a permanent part of your driving record.
Misdemeanor offenses occurring after your 18th birthday will become a part of your permanent criminal history record.
the southern part of the us supported slavery and the north was against it. however some states in the south still supported it so the fact that it was in or near to the south, related to the fact that it supported slavery.
With the Emancipation Proclamation in force starting from Jan. 1, 1863.
Slavery was legally supported in South Carolina prior to the Civil War, as it was in many southern states. However, slavery was abolished in the United States with the ratification of the 13th Amendment in 1865. Today, South Carolina, like the rest of the United States, does not support slavery.