none. they were wanting to keep their slaves for work on their farms, but eventually escaped slaves joined the union and ended the war I don't think this is correct. In another answer on here, it said that some slaves fought for the Confederate Army, but not many because their owners didn't approve it. So, there were someslaves fighting, but not a lot.
maybe No,because they thought the slaves would beat them,not the Union.
1400 people were killed in the confederate army and 1600 in the union army
10
None, the Confederate Army lost the war, though they won many battles in the early part of the war.
i think it was 3
maybe No,because they thought the slaves would beat them,not the Union.
the union defeated the confederate army
No - there were many regiments of colored troops long before the Proclamation in the Union Army. As hard to believe as it sounds, the Confederate Army also had units of colored troops. And the Proclamation only addressed slaves in the southern states then at awar with the Union.
There were too many Captains in the Confederate Army to list individually.
1400 people were killed in the confederate army and 1600 in the union army
no the Union army defeats the confederate army
The confederate army had better generals
10
None, the Confederate Army lost the war, though they won many battles in the early part of the war.
No, the confederate had no slaves, but the union did have African American solders.
During the Civil War, the Union army focused on conquiring Southern land and freeing Confederate slaves.
It was the Continental army that won the American revolutionary war. The Confederate army did not appear until the Civil War, many years later.