The central cause of The American Civil War was rooted in slavery and tensions had been building up between the Industrial North …show more content…
Jefferson Davis, the first president of the Confederation was difficult to work with and he quickly segregated himself from other members of government. Without support from within, Davis found himself digging a deeper and deeper hole as the war effort moved on. Davis was complacent in his ideologies and governing methods leading a country that resembled more of a dictatorship with little power than a sovereign Confederacy. Instead of bringing together the best minds he could find in the Confederacy, Davis turned them away and almost entirely sabotaged the possibility of a win for the …show more content…
After research on the two forms of government, it is no surprise that the Union was victorious. It was one the worst battles in American history and was by no means an easy war for the Union to wage, but it was proof that a strong and well-organized government can make all the difference in winning or losing a war. Much of the literature covered looked at several details that make up a successful or unsuccessful revolution such as mobilization techniques (Figes 1990), state repressions & coups (Patane 2017), and even how the duration of war could affect the outcome. (Cunningham