By 1850, it was clear that the debate over slavery could never be resolved in Congress or by a popular vote. The Compromise of 1850 was an optimistic attempt to avoid war, and it succeeded for ten years.
On January 10, 49 BC, Julius Caesar led his army across the Rubicon River in violation of law, hence making civil war inevitable. -- I2H
yes
WAR
Among the top historians of the US Civil War is James M. McPherson. He has studied and written many important books on the US Civil War. He is not alone among his peers in saying that there was nothing inevitable about the Union winning the US Civil War. He stresses that the Union's success depended on maintaining Northern morale and that positive morale was tied in part to Union military campaigns.
By local vote (optimistically termed 'Popular Sovereignty'). This backfired - terrorists from both sides invaded the state of Kansas to intimidate voters and declare all results to be rigged. It was like a miniature version of the forthcoming Civil War. It seemed to demonstrate that civil war was inevitable.
There are several questions about the civil war. The main questions which historians have about the war however, is if it was inevitable.
Extremism and failures of leadership made the Civik War inevitable by feeding sectionalism in the North and South.
At Fort Sumter when the first shots were fired.
It was highly likely and in the years that followed conflict did happen with the War of Independence and then the Irish Civil War.
A series of compromises that eventually failed, and Civil War became inevitable.
Hamish Fraser has written: 'Civil rights Yes!; Civil war No!' 'Ireland 1971; is civil war inevitable?' 'Fatal star' -- subject(s): Catholic Church, Catholic converts, Communism and Christianity
Effectively. The South might claim that they didn't ask for a war. But the launch of the Confederacy - in loud and defiant style - made it inevitable.
the war was inevitable or who started the war or could the south have won or why did the war last so long or what were the motives of the south.....one of those :P
On January 10, 49 BC, Julius Caesar led his army across the Rubicon River in violation of law, hence making civil war inevitable. -- I2H
Effectively. It encouraged other states to join them in the Confederacy. There was a showdown with Lincoln over the US Army garrison at Fort Sumter, and then war was inevitable.
yes
The weapons exist.