The North and South were a part of the same country but their economies were very different. The North's economy was based on manufacturing finished goods at a fast pace using lots of factories and workers. The South's economy was based on farming cash crops and raw materials to export to other countries. Document A from the What Caused the Civil War DBQ shows that almost all of the cotton production in the U.S. was in the South. Document B from the What Caused the Civil War DBQ shows that 90% of the yearly value of manufactured goods came from the North.…
A Nation Divided In 1787, the Constitution was written to “form a more perfect union” out of America, although that didn’t last very long. In the early to mid 1800s, the US was divided; the northern area didn’t support slavery while the southern area did. That was just one of many things they disagreed upon. Because of these differences, they divided between the Union(north) and the Confederacy(south).…
The north and southern states had different ideas about slavery, the north didn't want slavery and the south wanted slavery. With that argument, and with Abraham Lincoln won in 1860, the north and south were more tense than ever, whether the north wanted to end slavery in the south or when the south would try to stop them. But not just slavery was the cause of the north and south spliting, it had states rights and sectionalism. The states rights were making the north angry knowing that it was legal for slavery in all states.…
Why did Congress’ Reconstruction efforts to ensure equal rights for the freedmen fail? The evolving differences in the political parties, and tensions growing between both in the 1850’s-1860’s. The issue was with slavery in the south and if they should be allowed in the new territories out west. All republicans wanted them to stay out of the west because they said that all that territory is for the white man to explore and use for their own activities. All of these issues and more led to the civil war, during the civil war Abraham Lincoln issued the Emancipation proclamation which stated that all the slaves in states that they were fighting against were freedmen now.…
The North and South have always followed different paths and by the mid 1800’s the differences were even more pronounced. The North was becoming more industrial, dedicated to immigration, free labor and supported a federal government. Slavery was not common in the North and it was even banned in some states. The South’s agricultural economy was founded on slavery and cotton and they supported a government that allowed states to make their own rules. Southerners viewed the North and their views as them trying to destroy Southern culture with their industrialism and growing abolitionist movement.…
With time though slaves were no longer in the northern states and only in the southern. The economy and politics in the south never really changed. The South embraced their ways and viewed them as the best, while the North advanced and changed greatly. The North was now filled with factories and produced a large percentage of finished goods, but the cotton of the South made up the largest percentage of the countries exported goods. The south had a rather distinct class system planters being the richest and so on and at the bottom are slaves.…
The states of the North had become anti-slavery and the states of the South became slavery supporters. This is a relation to sectionalism in the 1800s because as time went by, the North and the South began to encounter issues, such as losing supporters with the same views of slavery. As the issues became more violent, the separation of the two Cardinal…
Over the course of America’s history, the ideas of of a perfect society filled with stability has been the main focus of our country 's government system. The ideas of power have a significant influence on the way our country has developed. The constitution was a document created in order to spread power and to establish equality between all individuals. Within the preamble of the constitution contains the set goals of what our country was intended to achieve by our Founding Fathers. During the 19th century the United States as a whole had attempted, but ultimately did not achieve its goals of promoting general welfare, establishing Justice and securing the blessing of liberty.…
Comparison of the New England and Southern Colonies The colonies were first developed in the 1600’s, however the New England colonies and Southern Colonies were very different despite them both having similar reasons for coming to the new world. The southern colonies, consisting of Maryland, Virginia, North and South Carolina, and Georgia, were centered on making money and agriculture, whereas the New England colonies, Connecticut, Rhode Island, Massachusetts, and New Hampshire, were centered on religious freedom from the Church of England. What makes them similar is that they both came to America to start a new life with hopes of being prosperous and healthy. Southern Colonies…
The South had a very different culture than the North. The biggest difference between the two was the legalization of slavery. The South was very dependent on slave labor because the large profitable plantations had to be maintained. The South was very rural compared to the North. Almost eighty percent of all Southerners work on farms in 1860.…
Economically the regions were very different, with the North being very industrial and independent, and the South relying heavily on the export of cotton to pay for the goods they needed to import. The federal government had a hard time creating fair taxes to keep both regions happy. Politically, the South fiercely believed in states' rights, while the North felt that a strong federal government could best lead the nation. Socially, the North and South differed on the issue of slavery and led very different lifestyles. Abolitionists fought for African-American freedom while many Southerners fought to keep the workers they needed to run their plantations.…
When drafting the Constitution of the United States, the framers stated that they were establishing the constitution “in order to form a more perfect Union”, but less than hundred years later, the unity of the Union was in jeopardy. Even before the independence of the nation, the northern states and the southern states were deviating from one another and over time, these differences between two parts of the nation became increasingly apparent. Due to their differences in ideas of slavery and state rights, dependences upon different economical institutions, and differences religious and cultural view of slavery and social hierarchy, the Northern and Southern states diverged from one another, and developed their own identity. The disparity between…
Since the thirteen colonies came about, the North and the South developed different cultures, and with in those cultures they developed different economies, which contributed greatly to how they lived their lives. The North financed its own industrial development through taxes on imported goods. While the South had an agricultural economy, in which they had to get supplies imported. The South needed slave labor to help sustain their economy. Hence the difference in economic needs first separated the North and the South.…
The north believed in a free labor system where everyone had a chance to be successful if they worked hard in their industrialized manufacturing economy. The south believed in slave labor, where planters could get rich from free forced labor in their agricultural dominated economy. The north believed that slavery was a flawed system that created an aristocratic planter class, not allowing for self made success. The south believed that their economy and success relied on slavery, and that without it, the whole economy would collapse. The north believed that secession was unconstitutional, while the south believed that it was constitutional.…
For instance, education was a big difference between the North and the South. Everyone valued education, but in the South there was not any public school where children could attend unlike the North. Because there was plenty of land in the South, each landowner lived on their own land causing everyone one to be distant. Distance was the reason preventing public school from being built because there was not enough children from an area to start a school. In contrary, there was more people in the North living together in a small area which mean that there was enough people in an area for a school to start a school.…