By 1860, the bridge between the North and the South was quickly growing apart, mainly because of the issue of slavery. South Carolina, one of the most prominent southern states, strongly supported slavery. Therefore, when anti-slavery Abraham Lincoln was elected to be president on November 6, 1860, South Carolina General Assembly passed the "Resolution to Call the Election of Abraham Lincoln as U.S. President a Hostile Act" three days later. This resolution had stated South Carolina’s intention to secede from the Union. The General Assembly formed a convention, the Convention of the People of South Carolina, to discuss and vote on secession.…
For Lincoln the South had broken covenant and started an insurrection. In essence, Lincoln, like George Washington in the Whiskey Rebellion or Lyndon Johnson in the late 1960s, brought unification to all US citizens; Northerners and Southerners But Lincoln’s goal was not galvanized by equality, though he did detest slavery, Blacks were (at least at first) a secondary issue. Blacks were mobilized as a military need. Emancipation, Lincoln saw, would further undermine the Confederacy while providing the Union with a new source of manpower to crush the rebellion. Lincoln goal was to change the government from states to a union in order to keep the United States from dissolving (Wills 161).…
If Lincoln loved blacks as much as history portrays, why did he have slaves? This is why it was a belief of mine that Lincoln only wanted to prove his power to the Confederacy. At any given moment, if Lincoln was “anti-slavery”, he could have fought to free those slaves. Instead, he was two faced, and had certain slaves freed only to send them away to foreign land.…
This however evolved into a war to end slavery and free the enslaved. For President Abraham Lincoln, a president elected strongly on antislavery terms, the task was to preserve the union by preventing further cessation and at the same time abolish slavery. A few months after elections, Lincoln went to…
The non-extension of slavery into the western territories disrupted the nation in the 1800s. President Lincoln’s indifferent attitude towards slavery interfered with the nation southern states and states where slavery existed. Lincoln cared about the union as it was unraveling. Most people at that in the North supported a war to restore the Union but not as a military crusade to end slavery. The American Civil War was an economic conflict not a race issue between the Union and the Confederacy.…
Abraham Lincoln vowed to end the expansion of slavery. When southerners heard of his vows, they succeed from the Union to prevent them from having to give up their slaves. The downfall of the Union meant that the demise of the economy. The outcome was the civil war. Many antislavery republicans bullied Lincoln into making the sole purpose of the civil war to end slavery. Lincoln claimed that if he could save the union without freeing a slave he would do it. The main reason the view of slavery changed during the war was because more slaves were being forced into the war. This caused freed slaves in the north to fight for their brethren in the south. Lincoln made the main focus of the war to end slavery because the abolitionists forced him to. The future of the union dwelled upon whether slavery would cease or…
The United States of America was filled with tension because of numerous events. In the day that Abraham Lincoln became president, Southern states seceded. To make the situation even worse, the Civil War took place to resolve this conflict between the South and the North. President Lincoln was left with the trust to unite the Confederacy and the Union once again. President Lincoln’s duty of preserving the Union was more important to him than to give the slaves freedom because he just wanted to use the African-Americans for military force, political power, and to end the Civil War.…
Lincoln was a Republican who was directly concerned with Civil Rights. He was not an abolitionist, but was determined to prevent slavery from spreading to states in which it previously didn't exist. He built a strong national party out of the Republicans and brought many northern democrats to the Union. However, South Carolina was particularly against Lincoln as a leader, and because he was elected and because of their stubborn pride, they seceded from the Union. Following their secession was Mississippi, Florida, Georgia, Alabama, Texas, and Louisiana; this all being before his inaugural address. In act against this, Lincoln sent provisions to Fort Sumter, which was conspicuously located in South…
Abraham Lincoln played a big part in slavery because he wanted to put an end to slavery, because of that thought we went to war. Right after the war ended, while Lincoln was in the president’s box at Ford’s theater the actor John Wilkes Booth slipped him in…
With this announcement, President Lincoln made it very clear that he now believed that the war was about slavery and that ending slavery was essential to unity. Lincoln sent the military into Confederate territory to end slavery. Even though, Lincoln was focused on the war being about the Union in the past, and did not focus on slavery, his views changed over time and realized that slavery must be…
During the civil war, Abraham Lincoln’s most important goal was to preserve the nation as a whole. But more and more people including himself realized that slavery system was also one of the major concerns that should be addressed and needed to be abolished right away. As long as the slavery system exist, the country cannot sustain as a whole in the future. Lincoln understood that the Constitution limited the Federal government's power to end slavery. He had tried to give compensated emancipation in return for their prohibition of slavery.…
First, Lincoln prevented free voting to allow for the states to decide their own fate. One could easily argue that Lincoln began an entire war, not over slavery, but over state's rights. Lincoln staunchly felt a strong, centralized government was necessary and he clearly wasn't…
President Lincoln was elected into presidency at a horrible time for the country but he still fought to do the best he could. After the civil war the main focus of Lincoln was to rebuild the North but still keep the South happy. His plans consisted of making the North's reconstruction a main focal point and distributing 10% of the damages done to the south to aid their reconstruction. President Lincoln thought that the states that seceded last should be given less guilt than the ones who seceded first. He gave more money to Arkansas, Louisiana, Tennessee, and Virginia and he treated them better because they were the last to secede. Along with his plans for reconstruction came the Radical Republicans who were a small minority in congress. They were very strict on giving all rights to African Americans and wanted to punish the south. All of…
The South feared that their rights to slavery were in jeopardy with the election of Republican, Abraham Lincoln. However, the election of Lincoln was not a mandate for the abolition of slavery in the United States. Lincoln's primary platform while running for president was to stop the spread of slavery, not to abolish it. His Republican principles were the foundation for his disapproval of slavery. However, Lincoln realized that slavery was protected by the constitution and that he did not hold the power to abolish slavery. The popular votes showed that more than half of the population did not vote for Lincoln. The outcome of the election was not a mandate to end slavery because Lincoln did not receive the majority of the popular votes and he had no intention of abolishing slavery.…
History records Abraham Lincoln as the Great Emancipator, yet ardent abolitionists of his day such as William Lloyd Garrison viewed him with deep suspicion. That the 16th president eventually achieved the abolitionists' most cherished dream, says biographer Allen Guelzo, happened through a curious combination of political maneuvering, personal conviction, and commitment to constitutional principle.…