3.4 millon union soldiers enlisted. 2.6 million confederate= about 6 milllion soldiers 650,000 men dead.=about 5,350,0000 men left
Americans lived
Yes. Many people who lived in Florida enlisted in the Confederate Army. There were 4 or 5 infantry regiments organized from Florida. One of them fought in Virginia and at the Battle of Gettysburg. A good source on this is the series "Confederate Military History" and the Volume 11 that covers the states of Texas and Florida. It was published in 1880's but was reprinted in 1950's. Since it is an old publication, you can access and download the entire book for free.
Most black people in the South were still slaves, until the Emancipation Proclamation led to their freedom. A few mixed-race black people lived in New Orleans as free men and women, but they were in the vast minority in the South, where life for black people was often difficult. African Americans during the Civil War joined the Northern forces in great numbers. Some northern blacks decided to fight for the Union, and the movie "Glory" is about a regiment of black soldiers, led by their white Colonel Robert Gould Shaw. Northern black people also joined the abolitionist cause to fight for an end to slavery. Northern blacks, while still unable to vote and denied entrance into many occupations, still had a better situation than those who lived in the South. Some northern blacks were educated: they became teachers, craftspeople, and small businessmen (and a few women).It should also be noted that the South had several regiments of black soldiers fighting for them, too.
Jane, South, and Civil War are all proper nouns in this context and should be capitalized. South is not always a proper noun, but since we're talking about the South as a specific geographic area and not south, the cardinal direction, it is. Because it is the South, it's a proper noun. The same goes for Civil War. There are other civil wars, but because this refers to, "the Civil War," it means a specific one.
All of the people that were involved and lived through it, -it's impossible to give numbers.
Theodore Roosevelt lived through the US Civil War, the Spanish American War and WWI.
She was born into the age of the US Civil War and lived through World War I.
Fred Flintstone
no! Hundreds of billions of people worldwide have lived since the end of the Civil War in 1865.
Emily Dickinson lived through significant events such as the Civil War, which affected the social and political landscape of the United States. She also experienced the abolitionist movement, the women's rights movement, and the rapid industrialization of America during the 19th century. These events influenced her poetry and themes of her work.
How did the Civil War affect thosse peop;e who lived in the Border States/
Thomas Alva Edison (1847-1931) was born and lived in America. He lived through the American Civil War (1861-65) and World War I (1914-18).
1,000,000,000,000,000
civil lawsuits
Although the US Civil War was over, for all practical purposes, not all Confederate forces had surrendered before President Lincoln was assassinated on April 15, 1865. He never lived to help the nation in reconstruction or see the 13th amendment to abolish slavery.He was shot on April 14, but lived until the next day.
Approximately 135,000 free Blacks lived in the South when the US Civil War began.
was muhmmad ali involved in the civil rights