Yes, Arkansas was the ninth state to secede from the United states and join the Confederate States of America. It seceded May 6, 1861. Tennessee also seceded the same day.
After Presidential Election of November 6, 1860, the following Southern States seceded from the Union, on the following dates: South Carolina, December 20, 1860. Mississippi on January 9, 1861 Florida on January 10, 1861 Alabama on January 11, 1861 Georgia on January 19, 1861 Louisiana on January 26, 1861 Texas on February 1, 1861 After President Lincoln was inaugurated on March 4, 1861, the following remaining Southern States seceded from the Union, on the following dates: Virginia on April 17, 1861 Arkansas on May 6,1861 North Carolina on May 20, 1861 Tennessee on June 11, 1861
January 9th
NH was the 9th state to ratify the United States Constitution
They where opposing generals in the American Civil War. On 9th April 1865, Robert E. Lee (confederate) surrendered to Ulysses S grant (Union) so ending the American Civil War.
No. At least as far as the original thirteen states, and probably those later formed from territory which made up the US at the start - basically everything east of the Mississippi. A different answer might apply to states created from the Louisiana purchase, since this was land the entire people had bought and paid for, and also to the states created from territory won from Mexico in the Mexican War, also common property of the nation. The Constitution is silent on the issue. It neither says states can secede or that they cannot. But the idea of the Constitution was that it created a central government of limited powers, having only those powers specifically given to it by the words of the Constitution, and no more. Therefore, since the Constitution does not say states cannot secede, they may, without Constitutional hindrance. It had taken the voluntary consent of each of the original thirteen states to enter the new Union, and everyone believed that a state could get out of it if they wanted out. Secession was talked about early on, even while Washington was president. The "back country" states of Ohio, Kentucky and Tennessee depended on the Mississippi as an outlet for their trade, and the mouth of the Mississippi was in Spanish hands, so they could get nothing to market. There were no roads to the east, over the mountains, and dissatisfaction over this caused talk of secession in the back country. The northeastern states talked secession in the late 1790s. During the War of 1812, the New England States were so opposed to the War that they went so far as to call a Convention at Hartford, Connecticut in 1815 for the purpose of seceding from the Union. By the time the Convention met the War had ended, so the idea went nowhere. But, since the Civil War, no one has seriously proposed secession, and it probably could not happen today. Even though the Constitution has not been amended to outlaw secession, the Civil War pretty much settled the question. It also basically killed the concept of a central government of limited powers, as specifically called for by the 9th and 10 Amendments, which are still right there in the Bill of Rights. But the history of the US since the War is one of ever-increasing Federal power, at the expense of the states and the people.
California became the 31st state in our union on September 9th, 1850.
New Hampshire was the 9th state to join the Union. It joined on June 21, 1788.
21 June 1788.New Hampshire was admitted into the Union on June 21, 1788 becoming the 9th state to join the Union.
New Hampshire was admitted into the Union on June 21, 1788 becoming the 9th state to join the Union.
9th Annual State of the Black Union Breaking New Ground - 2008 TV was released on: USA: 3 August 2008
9th Annual State of the Black Union Building Blocks for America - 2008 TV was released on: USA: 10 August 2008
It was on September 9th, 1850 when California was settled as a state of the union. This made California the 31st state of the United States.
New Hampshire was admitted into the Union on June 21, 1788 becoming the 9th state to join the Union.
Most of its settlers did not use enslaved laborers
New Hampshire was admitted into the Union on June 21, 1788 becoming the 9th state to join the Union.
Answer New Hampishire admitted to the union on June 21, 1788! It was also the 9th state admitted and was part of the 13 colonies
New Hampshire was the 9th state to join the Union. It joined on June 21, 1788.