There were several reasons that Northern support had faded:
There were several reasons that Northern support had faded:
There were several reasons that Northern support had faded:
Woodrow Wilson
Farmers' economic situations improved and they lost interest in the party.
It could be the piles of millions of meaningless dead and scorched areas of no-man's land, or just the dead.
Union soldiers got more than Confederate, but on both sides it took a "stand of arms" at least to equip a soldier. The was a rifle, bayonet with scabbard, and a cartridge box. They were supposed to get uniforms too, and the Yankees did but the Confederates didn't always. Confederates often wore captured Union clothing, or uniforms which were dyed gray with homemade dye and faded to a dark yellow, which was the source of one nickname for Confederate soldiers - "butternuts", from this faded yellow. They were supposed to get a knapsack, a haversack, a cap box (for percussion caps for the rifle), a waterproof blanket and a wool blanket, and underclothes.
Men enlisted as volunteers to both sides of the US Civil War for various reasons. Initially, for the North, young men enlisted as patriots who believed that they were saving the US from collapse. They also enlisted to support their home states. It needs to be said that on both sides, the governors of each state were required to furnish troops. The Union had no standing army to speak of and neither did the South. When permitted, free Blacks enlisted to fight slavery.For the South, recruits saw the North as a menacing King George, in a manner of speaking. They knew the people of the South were a minority within the US. Some saw the war for "Southern Independence" as part 2 of the Revolutionary War. Others sought to obey the governors of their states and surely many saw that their slave based society had created a way of life that the North threatened. Now in fairness, once Northern men were in the army, they believed they were also fighting against slavery, although few enlisted for that cause. Others, mostly people of " political leadership" from both sides saw war as a gallantry to perform and wished to be commissioned as generals or other high ranking officers. As the bloody war worn on, however, the gallantry of war faded as the death tolls ran to unreal levels that no one had ever expected.
Northern support for Reconstruction had faded because the cost of military operations in the South worried many people.
As Reconstruction ended, African Americans' dreams for justice faded. Laws passed by the redeemer governments denied Southern African Americans many of their newly won rights.
walmart sells faded glory. i think its their brand
No. An oxymoron is when a noun is described with a most antonymous adjective, like 'peaceful war'. For a noun that will match 'faded' for an oxymoron, 'faded illumination', 'faded lustre', 'faded shine', 'faded dazzle', 'faded light' or 'faded fluoroscence' will do. For an adjective that will match 'glory' for an oxymoron, 'horrible glory', 'hideous glory', 'terrible glory', 'ugly glory', 'distalentful glory' or 'useless glory' will do.
No. An oxymoron is when a noun is described with a most antonymous adjective, like 'peaceful war'. For a noun that will match 'faded' for an oxymoron, 'faded illumination', 'faded lustre', 'faded shine', 'faded dazzle', 'faded light' or 'faded fluoroscence' will do. For an adjective that will match 'glory' for an oxymoron, 'horrible glory', 'hideous glory', 'terrible glory', 'ugly glory', 'distalentful glory' or 'useless glory' will do.
HiPretty Sure 'faded' is an adjectiveSource: faded" class='external' title="fadedThanks Yes. faded is an adjective because it describes things. e.g. she came down the stairs in her faded pink pjs
Faded Seaside Glamour was created in 2003.
Faded - 2012 I was released on: USA: 2012
Fortune Faded was created on 2003-11-03.
No, "faded" is not a preposition. It is a verb that describes something losing its color or brightness over time.
Faded Steel Heat was created in 1999-06.
Faded Steel Heat has 356 pages.