Confederacy Essay

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    I have many thoughts and opinions on the Civil War. First of all, the civil war was a fight between North and South. This was also called Union versus The Confederacy. I am personally glad the Union won the war. If this had not happened this would have been a bloodier war the later we got into technology. For instance, the technology would have been bigger and America would have had a bigger population causing way more deaths in the process of the war. The fact that slaves could walk free after the

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    During the Civil War when looking at the major battles one need to realize that the Confederacy could have actually won the war and slavery would have lasted in the United States for much longer than it did. The Battles of the Civil War are important because at first the Confederacy seemed like they were winning the war on the Eastern Campaign with General Robert E. Lee rising to power; but on the other hand they were losing in the Western Campaign when General Ulysses S. Grant came to power there

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    The war can never be brought to a close until that key is in our pocket” (Korn, 1985, p. 17). This quotation from the 16th President of the United States, Abraham Lincoln, demonstrates how vital the city of Vicksburg was to the survival of the Confederacy during the Civil War. The city, which is located on the Mississippi River on the western border of Mississippi, was under Confederate control for over two years of the war, when it was surrendered to Ulysses S. Grant and his Union forces on July

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    stems from a macabre realization that all people, including himself, are bestial and selfish, and from a position of total destitution. Ignatius believed himself to be a beacon of morality in an otherwise dismal society. For instance, throughout A Confederacy of Dunces, he would write about the evils of the hedonistic, “bourgeois” society in which he lived, and about how the world would be in a much better position if based on the medieval principles (such as divine-right and cruel forms of torture)

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    Following the defeat of the Confederacy in 1865, Nathan B. Forrest was held in high regards in the south as a “War Hero”. It was reported that he had twenty-nine horse shot out from under him, killed or wounded thirty soldiers in hand-to-hand combat, and being wounded four separate times himself.1 The Ku Klux Klan was already in existence when they offered him a position of command in the fight against reconstruction and corruption that came with it. Forrest held the title of “Grand Wizard”, but

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    Why the Confederacy Lost the War Many historians have tried to offer their ideology on the outcome of the Civil War. McPherson in his “American Victory, American Defeat” writes about what other historians have decreed their answers to why the Confederacy lost. He tells us the reasons that could not be the explanation for the loss, and explains the internal reasons but leaves the true cause of the loss untold. Freehling explains the defeat by discussing what could have been and then

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    remain flying at the state capital. Supporters say the flag symbolizes the bravery of Confederate soldiers who fought in the Civil War, but Wickham cites the bigoted reason for the conflict: white supremacy. He argues that the flag symbolizes the Confederacy, who tried to break away from the United States of America to keep African Americans slaves. Therefore, the flag symbolizes white supremacy. Wickham mentions that many white supremacists use the Confederate flag to support their views, as was seen

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    On March 21, 1861, Vice President of the Confederacy, Alexander Stephens, delivered the truth as he saw it in his famously controversial “Cornerstone” speech to educate and prepare the people of the Confederacy for the war he once fought hard to avoid. Even though there is no “official” version of the speech, it was reproduced by many newspaper reporters who were present, and published in several newspapers. In his speech, Stephens analyzed what he believed to be the reasons for the revolution and

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    continuous arguments over the North and the South states led to the Confederacy. Many historians would agree that slavery did have a positive impact for the confederate states but it also had its negatives. Slavery isn’t something that was really positive but it did help out the confederate states in many ways especially a demand for agriculture and business purposes. The events that had an impact on slavery and the Confederacy directly were the Civil War. The Civil War was generally a duel to determine

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    beginning of the Civil war, President Lincoln's main goal was to preserve the union. Although many assumed the Civil war’s primary goal was to abolish slavery, that simply wasn't the case. The Union and the Confederacy both wanted to preserve a way of life. The difference between the Union and the confederacy, and what ultimately started the Civil war, was that both sides wanted to preserve life differently. These differences brought many changes throughout the war, and along those changes came many consequences

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