Slavery was still an issue, despite the Emancipation Proclamation. Slavery still existed in some form or another, mainly in the states that did not secede or weren't directly involved with the war.
It depend which civil war you are referring to.
Office of Civil Defense ended in 1964.
The US Civil War ended on April 9, 1865.
The whites did not win the civil war. The reds did. the end
to end the civil war
The world had just gone through WWI with major issues left unsettled. WWII was seen as a war to end all wars.
The war in Somalia did not end. the civil war starte in 1990 and is still continuing present day, 2012.
The death of Abraham Lincoln, the end of the Civil War, Reconstruction and personally, alcoholism.
Civil rights did not end.
No. The Civil Rights movement was still going strong thought the 1960s. One could say that the movement is still going on today, since there is still plenty of inequality to fight.
Slavery is illegal in most countries around the world today, but there are still instances of forced labor and human trafficking that can be considered modern forms of slavery. Efforts continue to combat these practices and protect vulnerable populations from exploitation.
No. Actually some of the same issues are still with us. The primary issue is state's rights and we still haven't solved that. The issue of slavery wasn't solved until 1867 with the 13, 14th, and 15th amendments getting passed. The sense that the war would continue was also still around at the end of the war and the division between the northern and southern sections of the country still existed ( they still do, in fact, look at the political maps today of red/blue states).
African Issues ended in 2004.
End of Civil War.
No. The Civil Rights Movement was still going strong thought the 1960s. One could say that the movement is still going on today, since there is still plenty of inequality to fight.
Actually there were two major issues that were decided by the US Civil War. The end of the Confederate rebellion made it clear that secession from the United States was eventually as being illegal. The Union's victory in the US Civil War also meant that slavery would be abolished in the US by the 13th amendment.
No, it did not. The Emancipation Declaration in 1863, before the end of the Civil War had some effect. The 14th Amendment in 1868 was the final word and all slaves were freed at that time. Still, legal and civil rights were limited well into the 1960's when the 1964 Civil Rights Act affected wages and voting rights.