Most folks incorrectly assume that the Confederate States were organized around a shared belief in the practice of slavery and that they subsequently seceded from the Union because member states refused to abandon the practice of slavery. This easy-to-swallow version of the situation is what has been taught in most schools ever since the Restoration, as it is always the victor who writes the history books.Let me state this unequivocally: I DO NOT ENDORSE THE PRACTICE OF SLAVERY! I CONSIDER IT INEXCUSABLE!Although I believe that slavery was the "hot-topic issue" of the day, I think that this is an oversimplification of the larger issue at the heart of the matter: the right of States to govern themselves as opposed to having their rights & laws dictated to them by a larger, federal government.
The Confederate States were formed through a serious disagreement with the Federal Government over what was and was not the right of each state. The Southern portion of our country tended to believe that each State was a sovereign entity that had the right to do as it wished and the Federal Government's role was extremely limited to the defense of the group. At the time of the war each state printed their own money as an example.Contrary to popular belief the concept of slavery, while an issue, was not the central issue. There were slave states in the North during the war. The civil war also did not end slavery. After the war ended, slavery was still legal until December of that year.
The civil war was about slavery the united states split and the southern states wanted slavery but the northern states said every one has to follow the laws that forbid slavery
The issue was states rights versus federal rights. The surface issue was slavery.
There were northern states which were slave states prior to the war. To say either was "anti-slavery" kinda dumbs down the issue.
America had to deal with slavery and the confederate states. The Confederate States believed that slavery was good for algriculture. But it was so wrong......
The election of Lincoln as a Republican president, moderate on the slavery issue.
How important was the issue of slavery in the Constitution?
The most important political issue in the United States during the 1840s and 1850s is the issue of slavery. During these years leading up to the Civil War abolitionists begin petitioning the government on slavery issues.
The most important political issue in the United States during the 1840s and 1850s is the issue of slavery. During these years leading up to the Civil War abolitionists begin petitioning the government on slavery issues.
He own a plantation and was from Virginia. He owned slaves. For him, the issue was States rights for the ability to own slaves and Virginia was confederate so he went with his state.
Actually there were two major issues that were decided by the US Civil War. The end of the Confederate rebellion made it clear that secession from the United States was eventually as being illegal. The Union's victory in the US Civil War also meant that slavery would be abolished in the US by the 13th amendment.
how important was the issue of slavery in the first few decades of the American republic
The Union did not believe that the other states had the right to leave the Union. While slavery was a consideration that fueled the flames, the primary issue was the rights of the states to make decisions that conflicted with the Federal government.
The Emancipation Proclamation. It did not, of course, free all the slaves in the Confederate states, since Lincoln had no authority over those states at the time. The princpal effect was to keep Britain and France out of the war, for fear of looking pro-slavery themselves.
The overriding issue was slavery. The compromise included The Fugitive Slave Act and agreement to allow slavery within the borders of Missouri.
Indifferent For A+