Sunday, August 4, 2019
The Civil War And Its Ending Of Slavery :: Slavery Essays
 The Civil War and Its Ending of Slavery      This paper is about the civil war and about how it ended slavery with the  emancipation proclomation. I will also talk abou the physical loses of the war.      The South, overwhelmingly agricultural, produced cash crops such ascotton,  tobacco and sugarcane for export to the North or to Europe, but it depended on  the North for manufactures and for the financial and commercial services  essential to trade. Slaves were the largest single investment in the South, and  the fear of slave unrest ensured the loyalty of nonslaveholders to the economic  and social system.    To maintain peace between the Southern and Northern supporters in the  Democratic and Whig parties, political leaders tried to avoid the slavery  question. But with growing opposition in the North to the extension of slavery  into the new territories, evasion of the issue became increasingly difficult.  The Missouri Compromise of 1820 temporarily settled the issue by establishing  the 36à ° 30' parallel as the line separating free and slave territory in the  Louisiana Purchase. Conflict resumed, however, when the United States boundaries  were extended westward to the Pacific. The Compromise Measures of 1850 provided  for the admission of California as a free state and the organization of two new  territoriesââ¬âUtah and New Mexicoââ¬âfrom the balance of the land acquired in the  Mexican War. The principle of popular sovereignty would be applied there,  permitting the territorial legislatures to decide the status of slavery when  they applied for statehood.    Despite the Compromise of 1850, conflict persisted. The South had become a  minority section, and its leaders viewed the actions of the U.S. Congress, over  which they had lost control, with growing concern. The Northeast demanded for  its industrial growth a protective tariff, federal subsidies for shipping and  internal improvements, and a sound banking and currency system. The Northwest  looked to Congress for free homesteads and federal aid for its roads and  waterways. The South, however, regarded such measures as discriminatory,  favoring Northern commercial interests, and it found the rise of antislavery  agitation in the North intolerable. Many free states, for example, passed  personal liberty laws in an effort to frustrate enforcement of the Fugitive  Slave Act .    The increasing frequency with which "free soilers," politicians who argued  that no more slave states should be admitted to the Union, won elective office  in the North also worried Southerners. The issue of slavery expansion erupted  again in 1854, when Senator Stephen A. Douglas of Illinois pushed through  Congress a bill establishing two new territories -Kansas and Nebraska -and  applying to both the principle of popular sovereignty. The Kansas-Nebraska Act,  by voiding the Missouri Compromise, produced a wave of protest in the North,    					    
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