Some people objected to conscription, and the Governor of Georgia said that troops raised in his state should only be used for defense of that state.
They supported states' rights in their platform in 1856, but opposed in 1860, due to republican states not honoring the Fugitive slave act.
They were getting no say in the government because most of the government was made up of delegates from the north.
how did the southerners belief in states rights hamper the confederate government during the war
the states rights
Some people objected to conscription, and the Governor of Georgia said that troops raised in his state should only be used for defense of that state.
They believed that they had the right to do whatever they wanted and the government couldn't tell them what to do.
Black Codes
dang it
how did the southerners belief in states rights hamper the confederate government during the war
They were getting no say in the government because most of the government was made up of delegates from the north.
i think its the lincoln trumblization he did the independe didnt like it
The United States was fighting an enemy who discriminated by race while allowing discrimination by race while allowing discrimination at home.
The government wanted to evoke states' rights before the civil war. States' rights were highly controversial during that time period. States' rights is a plural noun.
The dominance of individual states in the South prevented unified economic actions, such as taxes to support the various Confederate armies. The states could not agree on many policies, which impaired the coordination of military efforts.
Some of the state governors wanted the troops recruited in their state to be used only for the defence of that state, and not sent to join big Confederate armies.
States Rights
the states rights
It was the South that kept claiming States' Rights - in some cases, just a polite term for the right to own slaves. The North believed in the sanctity of the Union, and declared war on the states that broke away.
Some people objected to conscription, and the Governor of Georgia said that troops raised in his state should only be used for defense of that state.