South Carolina seceded from the USA, and encouraged others to follow.
Begin the process of secession
35 Abraham Lincoln was elected as US President, for the first time on November 6, 1860. On this date, none of the Southern States had seceded from the Union, and there were 35 states, in the US. The following month, South Carolina declared its secession on December 20, 1860. By the time Lincoln took office on March 4, 1861, 7 Southern States had declared secession from the Union.
once Lincoln gave Douglas a dirty sanchez
The presidency of Abraham Lincoln was in crisis almost immediately. Several states in the South seceded from the Union shortly after he was elected and inaugurated.
Lincoln believed that once a state always a state, which meant they had no power to secede. He was very forgiving to the CSA (Confederate States of America/southern states) after the war, and allowed them back into the union & begin reconstruction if 10% of the southern states who seceded's population swore allegiance to the Union. The Radicals believed that the Southern states had committed suicide and destroyed their own states. They thought Lincoln was being too lenient, and called for 50% or more to swear allegiance before reconstruction would begin. Lincoln vetoed the bill.
Because Lincoln would not allow the creation of any new slave-states, so the South would always be outvoted in Congress.
President Lincoln did begin to formulate a fair way to end slavery in the United States in 1862.
because it was cool
They seceded from the Union and set up an independent federation of States: the Confederacy.
It was an issue of state's rights and with the election of Lincoln they thought that he would force the abolition of slavery on them without asking them. Today, there are still issues concerning states rights that echo the 1860's. The question is where does the rights of the states end and the federal government begin ? This was the essential issue in the 1860's.
Some southern states began to talk of secession in response to growing tensions over slavery and states' rights, particularly following the election of Abraham Lincoln in 1860. They feared that his presidency would lead to the abolition of slavery, which was integral to their economies and social order. This sentiment was fueled by a belief that states had the right to govern themselves and decide their own laws, including whether to allow slavery. Ultimately, these factors contributed to the decision of several southern states to secede from the Union, leading to the Civil War.
President Lincoln did not initiate the Civil War; rather, it began when Confederate forces attacked Fort Sumter in April 1861, following the secession of several Southern states from the Union. Lincoln's primary goal was to preserve the Union and maintain federal authority. His administration sought to address the issue of slavery, which was central to the conflict, but the war was fundamentally about the survival of the nation as a unified entity. Lincoln's response to the secession and subsequent hostilities marked the beginning of a conflict that would ultimately reshape the United States.