On April 12, 1861, America was split up into two parts. The north & the south. The North was the United States of America. The South was the Confederate States of America. The president of the Confederate States of America was Jefferson Davis. The President of the United States of America was Abraham Lincoln. They were considered the Presidents of the Civil War.
The state of Missouri had two governments and actively supported both sides during the Civil War. This caused conflict and battles within the state among it's residents.
During World War Two, the US had two presidents. When the war began Franklin D. Roosevelt was the president. He died in office in April of 1945, and the Vice President, Harry Truman became the second US president during this war.
Rutherford B. Hayes during the Civil War. (I thought it was Washington, but he had only two.)
No one in the South gained influence during the Civil War; the Union victory left the South shattered economically, politically, and socially. However post-war, two groups known as the 'Carpetbaggers' and the 'Scalliwags" became very influential.
The Civil War
during the civil war
they were two generals during the civil war
Arkansas had two capitals during the Civil War. The capital was Little Rock, but during the Civil War, the Confederate government made Hot Springs the capital also.
Reagan and Johnson
Dwight D. Eisenhower -- commander of the European Theatre in WWII Ulysses S Grant -- Union General during U.S. Civil War.
None. A civil war is two states, for example, within a country at war.
They saw it as a war between two sovereign nations.
The two presidents during the Vietnam War were JFK, and LBJ.
The blacks war and the cockisbitches war
the two sides during the US civil war were the union (North) and the confederacy (south)
That depends on which civil war (ie in which country) you are asking about.
Because the two presidents Abraham Lincoln did not agree with the idea of slavery.