Some southerners from the US call people from the north Northerners while there are some that call them Yankees. Others simply call them by their first name.
they called it pooffy
because they thought they needed a second war and England was ruling Australia
To most people living in the US at the time, the Civil War as we know it today, was called the "war of rebellion.
A number of Southerners insist on calling the Civil War "The War Between The States." In his inaugural address, Lincoln requested the states make their militias available to the United States Army. At that point the states had to choose whether or not to make their militias available to the Union Army or the Confederate Army. Many Southerners refer to that event. The people living in the Southern Mountains and throughout much of the South sided with the Union and fought for the Union. One of the Union's greatest generals, General Thomas, was a southerner. Another of the Union's greatest generals, General Sherman, had lived much of his life in the south. The governor of Texas, Sam Houston, sided with the Union. It was a civil war.
Apex-type question, reworded to preserve answer
Northerners were called the Union. Southerners were called the Confederacy.
Northerners call it the American Civil War - stressing that it was war within one nation. Southerners prefer to call it The War Between the States - making a demarcation between the Union and the Confederate states.
Some southerners from the US call people from the north Northerners while there are some that call them Yankees. Others simply call them by their first name.
The people from/in the North can be referred to as Northerners or more often, Unionists. The Southerners, however, preferred to call them Yankees.
Because those states were in rebellion against the USA
Manassas.
Carpetbaggers. The were unpopular because they were exploiting low wages.
Union? Or Northerners
southerners
carpetbaggers
The union and the south was confederate states