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The American Civil War

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The American Civil War, also known as the State’s War, was a conflict that arose mostly from the issue of slavery, but deep down was due to economic differences between the North and the South. The South seceded from the North and created their own self-government due to their belief in the lack of state’s rights versus the federal government and what they saw as a weakness in the Articles of Confederation. While the Confederacy of the United States depended on slave labor for their economy in regards to plantation farming of cotton, tobacco and rice, the Union, whom represented the United States of America, was a booming manufacturing industry due to railroads and machinery that allowed them to easily surpass the output of the South’s …show more content…

This even expanded to violence on the U.S. Senate when Congressman Preston Brooks attacked Senator Charles Sumner over the head for accusing the South of violence.
Eventually, popular sovereignty would be cited for new territories added that would give the new land the right to approve of slavery or not. While under the new Constitution that cited the Articles of Confederation, many believed that the federal government had too much control over the states. The South particularly, felt that their independence was being taken away and they should have to right to accept federal acts or not. Particularly after congress passed a high protective tariff that would benefit them and hurt the South. The tariff was to increase the cost of British textiles, which the South greatly leaned against because they sold all their cotton to mills in England. The North was producing the same products as the South and wished the pass this “unfair taxation” so that the Southerners would have to buy goods from them. In opposition of this, was John C. Calhoun who felt that the compromise betrayed the South. Because of the booming industry in the North, they held a numerical majority. He called for the right of “nullification”, which would give states the ability to rule a federal

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