Lincoln is perhaps one of the greatest wartime presidents and his entire presidency effectively took place during the civil war. However, before taking office Lincoln had no prior experience with war as a politician or a general. When he took office Lincoln was aware of his deficiencies in knowledge of military knowledge in comparison to the confederacies leader, Jefferson Davis. Lincoln was fully aware that he had to become a knowledgeable wartime leader with adept decision making quickly to successfully reunite the states. (p. 1-11)…
The Trent Affair is arguably one of the most outstanding events that took place during the American Civil war in 1861. The whole idea of the Trent Affair came into play after the confederate president, Jefferson Davis, in accordance with the authority, mandated to him by the Confederate version of the U.S. Congress appointed John Slidell and James Mason to serve as diplomatic agents with the end objective of entering into treaties with both France and England. Their duty was to ensure that they convinced Europe that the confederate states were able to maintain a national existence despite the origins of the commissioners, which were diverse. The Trent Affair was used to pursue the voyage that was to be under the leadership of Navy officer,…
However, the Union suffered a crushing defeat at the Battle of Bull Run, causing Lincoln to feel a sense of “humility” and “embarrassment” towards European nations (Peraino, 2013). Secretary of State, Henry Seward, knew that something needed to be done to enforce international trade, resulting in the establishment of the Anaconda Plan. Lincoln justified this action by saying it was a ‘”life and limb’” that must be protected. Furthermore, Lincoln signed a bill that “actively pushed for innovations in the navy… develop a fleet on ironclads” (Peraino, 2013). The blockade left three quarters of the British and French workers unemployed and textile mills were in crisis (Jones, 2010). Correspondingly, the infamous Trent Crisis sparked outrage in Britain by claiming violation of international law and demanding the release of the commissioners and ordered troops to Canada to prepare for a potential Anglo-American conflict. In order to avoid conflict, Lincoln told Seward to send an apology to the British officials for the incident and the diplomats were release, bringing the Trent Affair to a close (Burlingame, 2017). However, this sparked interest to the French leader, Napoleon, towards Mexico. Lincoln, realizing the danger, placed his forces at the Rio Grande as a warning to Napoleon. Luckily, he got a break, when Russian ships came to the coast of the Atlantic. This was…
Helped resolve the Trent Affair in which the Confederates sent a mail packet to Great Britain and France asking for support; the Confederates wanted a war between Europe and the Union in order to distract the Union…
In the United States all the president has the responsibility and the control of everything, because they're the president of the country and they have to be honsty with the people who live in the United States.…
Essay Question: “Southerners maintained that secession was the ultimate expression of democracy, while Lincoln claimed it was rejection of democracy. How…
The Trent Affair, also known as the Mason and Slidell Affair, was an international diplomatic incident that occurred during the American Civil War. On November 8th 1861, the USS San Jacinto, intercepted the British mail packet Trent and removed it as contraband of two war Confederate diplomats, who were James Mason and John Slidell. The envoys were bound for Great Britain and France to press the Confederacys' case for diplomatic recognition by Europe. The initial reaction in the United States was to rally against Britain, threatening war; but President Abraham Lincoln and his top advisers did not want to risk war. In the Confederate States, the hope was that the incident would lead to a permanent rupture in Anglo-American relations and even diplomatic recognition by Britain of the Confederacy. The boarding of the "Trent" was an outrage of a national relationship, which could not escape the anger of all the nations that were bordering on the sea. The British mail packet "Trent", was taken by a person who was too stupid to foresee its bad effect, on the relations which the persons' own country was endeavoring to maintain with Europe. It produced a sensation, which for awhile, seemed to threaten the total failure of coercion. It is not surprising that on getting the full news of the event, President Lincoln said to the attorney general, "I am not getting much sleep out of that exploit of Wilkes, and I suppose we must look up the law of the case. I am not much of a prize lawyer, but it seems to me, that it is pretty clear, that if Wilkes saw fit to make that capture on the high seas, he had no right to turn his quarterdeck into a prize court." The shrewd President saw that Wilkes could not let the "Trent" go free. The President also soon realized that the rash act was very inopportune, as well as illegal. Mr. Seward hurried to communicate with Mr. Adams, the United States minister at London, the stupid suggestion that "in the capture of Messrs. Mason and Slidell on…
Theodore Roosevelt was born on October 27th, 1858, in New York City. He had 3 other siblings he was the 2nd one born out of the four. His dad Theodore Sr, was a successful businessman and his Mother Martha Roosevelt, she grew up on a plantation in Georgia. He had a rough time through the Civil War since his mother and aunt and (Maternal Grandmother were from the South and his Dad was from the Union.…
Opposition was felt by both the north and south. In the North, the opposers felt the Southerners possessed the right to be independency and felt the war affected them negatively. In the South, the opposers did not want a war or a Union advance on the newly declared Confederacy. All the opposers didn’t see a positive side to having the war. Both side also had people that just wanted peace between the sides.…
Lincoln's plans were cut short when he was assassinated by John-Wilkes Booth in 1865. If Lincoln had not been assassinated, those plans would have carried through. He was the most influential and powerful president that had ever befallen our nation. He controlled the entirety of the power of the government for a long period, and with that power brought the nation together, ending the civil war. If Lincoln had lived, he would have had the remainder of a four-year term to work constructively with the Republican majorities that controlled both houses of Congress in creating the kinds of policies that would form the basis for consensus within the party. He may have continued his attempts to peacefully reintegrate the South into the Union without…
The United States Civil War was the final turning point in creating the country that is established in today’s era. Starting in the 1830’s, as the Northern and Southern states conflicts grew with aggression and disagreement, the push for the civil war would be inevitable. Slavery being the top disagreement between the two, other conflicts arose; such as, ideals between abolitionist and southern politicians. Historical events, taking place in order to establish the chain reaction that lead to the Civil War; such as, The election of 1860, Raid on Harper’s Ferry, Bleeding Kansas, Dred Scott Decision, and The Kansas-Nebraska Act. Irrepressible conflict quickly appeared over the disagreeing ideals of how these two co-existing economies could not become one.…
As the United States approached the Civil War, political division among the North and South only grew, with the two regions continuing to argue over states rights, specifically the right to permit slavery within their borders. By the end of the 1850s, two politicians named Stephen A. Douglas and Abraham Lincoln had made waves among the American public with their debates over the expansion and abolition of slavery. While the campaigning for political office was already a common practice among politicians at the time, the back and forth debating style as well as the sheer volume of attendees was unprecedented in any previous American campaign. Thus the Lincoln-Douglas debates illustrated a shift in the way political campaigns for office were conducted in the United States that drastically contrasted with older election formats. Prior to the Civil War were a multitude of events that contributed to the change in campaign style.…
Lincoln had a difficult decision to make at the beginning of his presidency, let the nation fall apart or keep it together. He chose to keep it together and "believed that war was necessary to suppress the insurrection and to prevent the Confederacy from achieving its goal of independence." Lincoln and the North went to war against the seceded southern states known as the Confederate, with the sole purpose of reuniting and preserving the Union. He only wanted to stop the growth of slavery and not abolish it completely because to do so would go against the constitution. In order to save the Union, the war must be won and Lincoln was prepared to do whatever it takes to win the war.…
What is the most important event in US history between the Civil War and today? I could say that it is the Great Depression, the downfall of the economy. I could say 9/11 a shock to the US that had started an 8+ year war. But I won’t, I think the most important even is Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s Presidency. When Franklin Roosevelt became President on March 4, 1933, America was a nation in despair. The Great Depression had left millions of Americans out of work. Franklin Delano Roosevelt took immediate action to end the crisis and to inspire Americans to overcome their fears. As the chaos of war spread across the world, FDR prepared the country for the challenge and ultimately led a grand coalition of nations against the Axis Powers. He served as President for over 12 years, longer than any other person, during the two greatest crises of the 20th Century. Those crises were The Great Depression, which he led America out of, and World War II.…
The Civil War was the most bloody war in American history, with the most American deaths of any conflict. It occurred when the southern states of the United States collectively succeeded from the Union, and formed a confederacy. These states seceded because they felt that their state rights, granted to them by the constitution, were being infringed upon. With newly invented weaponry and poor medical knowledge, the death rate of those involved in the war was extremely high. This pattern of advancing technology causing more deaths has been prevalent through all of time. However, with the introduction of nuclear weapons, and thus the total annihilation of the world, this precedent has hit its limit.…