There was many causes for the Civil War ,that broke out in April 12, 1861, but the main cause was slavery. The burning issue that led to the disruption of the union was the debate over the future of slavery (‘Causes Of The Civil War’). In my opinion I do think that was the cause of the civil war was slavery. The South used slaves to work in the fields and perform other duties. On the eve of the Civil War, some 4 million Africans and their descendants toiled as slave laborers in the South (‘Causes Of The Civil War’). In the North, …show more content…
States’ rights, the abolitionist movement and the election of Abraham Lincoln. States’ rights was the struggle between the federal government and individual states over political power (‘Causes Of The Civil War’). It focused on the institution of slavery and whether or not the federal government could regulate slavery or abolish it. This caused the drift between the North and South. Another reason for the Civil War was the Abolitionist Movement. They claimed obedience to "higher law" over obedience to the Constitution’s guarantee that a fugitive from one state would be considered a fugitive in all states (“Causes Of The Civil War”). And the last cause of the war was the election of Abraham Lincoln. He won the election in 1860 and it caused the South to worry about their slaves. There are many reasons that caused the war but it all comes back to slavery. This is why slavery was the main cause of the Civil …show more content…
history. People have wondered if there were ways we could’ve done to prevent the war from happening. President Lincoln could’ve prevented the war. With Lincoln becoming president and announcing the freedom of slaves, the South felt that they didn’t have a word in it, so they formed the Union. They felt that they didn’t have their freedom to do what they believed was right. Even though they were wrong about thinking that, this lead to war. Another way the war could’ve been prevented was destroying the Union earlier. The famous decision points leading up to the war--purchase of Louisiana, Missouri Compromise, Compromise of 1850, Kansas-Nebraska Act--could have been decided differently, but alternatives to chose likely lead to either a civil war or an earlier breaking of the Union (‘Was the US Civil War avoidable? What were the causes of …’). There could have been many ways to prevent a war, but the decisions that were made could’ve been different. Someone probably had a way to end slavery without it leading to war. But in the end who knows what could’ve happened. Sometimes some things are