Working-class men played a crucial role in the Civil War by serving as soldiers in both the Union and Confederate armies. Many enlisted out of a sense of duty, economic necessity, or the desire for social advancement. Their participation not only filled the ranks of the military but also influenced the war's outcome, as their labor supported industrial production and logistics. Additionally, their experiences and sacrifices helped shape the social and political landscape of post-war America.
Common among working-class men
2 They fought side by side men in the war.
The Civil war changed public opinion about the capabilities of women. While the men were away at war, women took over the farms and plantations, as well as working in factory jobs that were thought to be inappropriate for women.
middle-class men and women
approximately 67,088 people in the federal army died in the civil war.
common among working-class men
Common among working-class men
Sans-culottes was a radical working class of men and women.
Before the Civil War, men played cards, board games, and engaged in outdoor activities. Hunting, while usually necessary, also was a way to get away from the drudgery of each day.
Working-class men
working-class men
THEY CONTRIBUTED MEN ,ARMS,SUPPLIES,TRANSPORTATION
The middle class expanded as working class men were able to go to college
Gustave Courbet
Gustave Courbet
1867 in the reform act
The Jacobins were a political party of the extreme Left, based on a club which met in a former convent dedicated to St. James.