The main reason the South wanted to secede was to become independent. Southerners did not want to get rid of slavery because it was critical to the southern economy. The Election of 1860 was another reason the South wanted to secede because Southerners were afraid that President Lincoln would abolish or get rid of slavery in the South. Sectionalism was another problem because the South had made their needs or desires more important than the Union itself.…
11. South Carolina threatened to secede because of the aftermath of the Tariff of Abominations; it shrunk English demand for southern raw cotton and increased the final cost of finished goods to American buyers.…
South Carolina's Secession was one way that the civil war had been started. On December 20, 1860, South Carolina voted to secede from the Union because they did not trust the republican party to keep slavery alive. In other states, leaders debated the question of secession. Meanwhile, members of Congress tried to find ways to prevent it.…
Because of this the seceding states increased their militia and confiscated federal arsenals. Most secessionists believed their reaction was legal and constitutional. 4 The South took these measures because they were afraid of the extinction of slavery.5 The South began to think of situations of what Republicans might do. Some thoughts were the Republicans would exclude slavery from the territories, Lincoln would pick Republican Justices for the Supreme Court, which would devastate the South, Congress would take back the Fugitive Slave Law so slaves would escape to free territories, and they thought slavery might be demolished in D.C.6 During this time Lincoln told his southern friends that his presidency would not hinder slavery in the states or D.C.…
Southern states felt that the Northern States had violated the constitution viewing the constitution as a contract agreement. Southern States seceding from the union with a republic similar to the ideas of the founding father while implementing slavery and Christianity. Southern States creating the Confederate States of America. The Confederacy fight the war over the idea of restoring the original vision when the United States was first founded. Also, fighting for state rights to govern themselves and their right to own slaves.…
There were several other occasions the South cried for secession but none took the charges seriously. The Kansas-Nebraska Act of 1854 gave the North a cause that would join the different anti-slavery groups under one umbrella. This act allowed the people in the territories to decide for themselves whether slavery would be allowed within their borders. The South felt they should be able to share in the newly acquired territories. “The day may come”, charged Governor Thomas Brag of North Carolina, “when our Northern brethren will discover that the Southern States intend to be equals in the Union, or independent out of it!” CITATION Dor05 \l 1033 (Goodwin, 2005)…
The Confederates believed that they were fighting a Third American Revolution by attempting to secede from the United States during the American Civil War. Although the confederate sought to secede from the union and exercise their States’ right, which they claimed was being denied by the union. The South argued that they were being their right to owning property, in this case, the enslaved Africans. The South claimed Independence from the North, just like the colonists did with Great Britain. As a result, the Revolutionary war broke out between Great Britain and the Colonists for the independence and freedom of the colonies, in other words, the colonies wanted to secede from Great Britain. The South attempting to secede from the North is very similar because the South feels…
When considering the reasons for the Southern States seceding from the union in 1861, it is important to consider that while the issue of slavery was the occasion of the Civil War, it was not the sole cause, the rights of individual states is also to be considered as a factor, as the Southern States felt it was their constitutional right to own slaves (Dew, 2001). The decision to secede without force of arms is also significant according to Benedict, as it would have disrupted the federal system greatly and there is no indication of what the consequences of this would have been (Benedict, 1988). Eleven states in total seceded from the union; South Carolina being the first, followed by Mississippi, Florida, Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana and Texas, with the final four leaving the union after the battle at Fort Sumter, Virginia, Arkansas, North Carolina and Tennessee (Kelly, 2017). Each of the Southern States that seceded in 1861 were very open about their commitment to slavery and the importance of slavery both in their economy and their decision to secede (Dew, 2001). In Georgia’s declaration of causes,…
They argued that the debate was a violation of that understanding. The southern states also argued that they relied on the slaves for their livelihood, without them they would have no one to work on their farms and they would not be able to sell and distribute the things that they had depended on for their entire…
From this document, it is clear to see the sacrifices that the South was being told to make by their own government, but a closer analysis also exploits two more key points. The first being that members within the South were questioning the actions of the Confederate government, but the second point to be noted is that the motivation of the South, in the war, was lost. North Carolina clearly states that the war was being fought to protect the rights and ways of life of the South, yet here they were being told by their own government to give up the rights they were fighting to protect. It is clear to see that the South was losing track of what they were fighting…
In the last month of 1860 many articles were written previous to, and following, the secession of South Carolina. South Carolina separated from the Union that constitutes the United States December 20, 1860. The articles: Confederate States of America - Declaration of the Immediate Causes Which Induce and Justify the Secession of South Carolina from the Federal Union, New-York Daily Tribune – The Right of Secession and, New-York Times – Peaceable Secession, are all writings specific to South Carolina’s secession from the US. All three sources were written within a week of each other and roughly a month before the first hostile act of the Civil war, and demonstrate the tension and division that the idea of secession put on both the Union and the Confederation. Since written from different perspectives and different people, the three articles have strong, but very different opinions on the secession of states such as and including South Carolina.…
They passed a state bill that more or less refused to pay any previous tariffs set by the federal government because the affected the south more adversely than the north. The government saw things quite differently. In 1832 South Carolina officially said, more or less, that if the federal government tried to collect any of the taxes from the nullified tariffs, South Carolina would effectively and immediately secede from the U.S.. This was an open act of defiance towards not only federal laws but the federal government as a whole. South Carolina didn’t believe that the federal government had the neither the power nor the right to impose unjust tariffs.…
Secession was such a huge movement, everyone knew what would be next. In this compromise, it said that slavery would be protected in all territories south of 36°30’. When these southern territories applied for statehood, popular sovereignty would be the deciding factor if the territory would become a free or slave state. All territories north of 36°30’ would be free states. However, Lincoln turned down the idea because he did not want slavery to expand west.…
Most Southern states had at least four reasons to secession and they include slavery, Lincolns Election, Economic issues, and States Rights. Many states were nervous about Abraham Lincoln being elected President, knowing he is going to abolish slavery eventually. The state of Texas was frustrated with the taxation and was not satisfied with federal military protection. In the Texas Ordinance, it states "Texas abandoned her separate national existence and consented to become one of the Confederated States to promote her welfare, insure domestic tranquility and secure more substantially the blessings of peace and liberty to her people." The biggest reason Texas left the Union was the right to be a slave State.…
The nullification crisis was a big deal back in the day, everyone had very differentiated opinions on the matter. The south carolina during this time was a very agriculture based society and the north being very industrialized. The north gained from tarrifs because it made their income larger and their goods much more profitable. The south Carolingian however did not benefit at all. Being mostly agriculture the raw materials costed much more to prodice and sell to the americans with tarrifs. South Carolina did not see this as very fair and chose to ignore this. Jackson was very against this and the states ignoring laws. He felt that if they werent following laws and putting themselves apart that they would eventually suceede from them. There…