Essay/Term paper: Civil war
Essay, term paper, research paper: American Civil War
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Writing about recorded
history should be a relatively easy task to accomplish.
Recorded history is based on facts. Regardless of what time
period one may write about, one will find enough information
about that time of period. The key is to put everything in a
logical and understandable manner. This paper will be about
the Civil War. I will try, to the best of my knowledge, to
discuss the North"s and South"s positions and Arguments for
going to war, their initial military strategies and their strength
and weaknesses. The paper will actually be a summary from
chapter 10 of the book Battle Cry of Freedom: The Civil
War Era By: James McPherson, "Amateurs Go To War".
Before discussing the war itself, one must understand the
Union"s and the Confederate"s arguments and reasons for
going to war. Let"s start at the beginning, when the South
was first showing animosity for the North, which eventually
led to sessionist ideas by the South. The Compromise of
1850 was drafted in response to the threat of a Southern
Convention, because of Zachary Taylors decision to carve
out two huge territories in the Far West and to admit them in
the union as free states. Henry Clay drafted the compromise,
which includes eight parts. "The first pair would admit
California as a State and organize the remainder of the
Mexican cession without "any restriction or condition on the
subject of slavery". The second pair of resolutions settled the
boundary dispute between Texas and New Mexico in favor
of the latter and compensated Texas by federal assumption
of debts contracted during its existence as an Independent
Republic. Clay"s third pair of resolutions called for abolition
of the slave trade in the District of Columbia but a guarantee
of slavery itself in the District. As if these six proposals
yielded more to the North then to the South, Clay"s final pair
of resolutions tipped the balance Southward by denying
congressional power over the interstate slave trade and
calling for a stronger law to enable slave holders to recover
their property when they fled to free states" Battle Cry of
freedom: The Civil War Era, McPherson James, (p.70-71).
The Northerners hated the fugitive slave law, because in the
past it was never enforced and it never gave a trial by jury to
any runaway slaves. The only testimony heard was that of
the slaveholder and he usually recovered his slave. Not only
that, but the slaveholder was compensated $10 for winning
the trial because of all the trouble he had to go through in
recovering his property. Because of the passage of the
compromise, the North had to enforce the law which it
hated. As the United States expanded westward, two new
territories were carved out and the issue of slavery arose
again. The U.S. government let the two new territories
decide themselves whether or not to permit slavery. Since it
was up to the people to decide the slavery issue, Northern
abolitionists enticed anti-slavery supporters to move into the
new regions and vote to make Kansas and Nebraska free
states. Southern pro-slavery supporters did exactly as the
North did to make Kansas and Nebraska slave states. The
two sides clashed with one another over this issue and there
was literally a Civil War in Kansas. One particular situation
that occurred in Kansas was the sacking of the city of
Lawrence. Pro slavery advocates of the city of LeCompton,
Kansas set up a group or a posse that went to the
anti-slavery city of Lawrence, Kansas, ransacked, burned
and literally destroyed the city. In response to this attack by
the Southerners the Northerners took revenge. John Brown,
a radical abolitionist, decided to do a similar thing to the
Southerners. He planned an attack on LeCompton, Kansas.
Enroute to LeCompton he encountered about five pro
slavery supporters, and without remorse, hacked them to
death at Potawattamie Creek in Kansas. The entire country
was slowly being divided into two parts and even congress
could not do anything to resolve the problems. Political
parties were splitting along North/South lines and even
violence was a common occurrence in congress. The last
straw, which eventually split the Union, was the election of
1860. On the eve of the election, Southerners had already
agreed that if a republican wins the election, they would
leave the Union. Well, history shows that Lincoln, a
republican, was elected and the south truly did leave the
Union. During the four months, prior to President Lincoln"s
inauguration, President James Buchanan did nothing to
discourage secession. It may be even concluded that he was
sympathetic to the Southern cause. South Carolina was the
first state to secede from the Union, and by February 1861
seven more southern states followed South Carolina"s
example. Finally, when Lincoln took the office, all of the
federal arsenals in the south have been overrun by
Confederate forces. In Fort Sumter, South Carolina, federal
troops were literally surrounded and their supplies eventually
ran out. Lincoln made a decision to send an unarmed supply
ship to the harbor of Fort Sumter. Lincoln"s reasoning was
that if the South fires on an unarmed supply ship, it would be
an act of war. If it doesn"t it would mean that the South is
bluffing and it really does not want to secede. Well, on April
12, 1861 Confederate troops fired on the unarmed supply
ship at Fort Sumter and the Civil War began. The North"s
primary reasons for going to war was to keep the country
together. The South was fighting for "state sovereignty, the
right of secession and interpreting the constitution the way
they wanted to," Battle Cry of Freedom: The Civil War Era,
James McPherson, (p. 310). Slavery was not the reason the
Civil War began. Lincoln had argued that it was
unconstitutional for any state or states to secede from the
Union, which is why keeping the Union together, as one
country, was the North"s most important cause for war. The
South was fighting for the "sacred right of self government",
Battle Cry of Freedom: The Civil War Era, James
McPherson, (p. 310). The South felt that it was fighting for
the same reasons that the founding fathers had fought for in
the war for Independence. According to southerners
seceding from the Union, all they wanted was to be left
alone, and not to be bothered by the North. After Davis"
speech to the Confederate Congress he included the phrase
"All we ask is to be let alone", which inturn specified the
most immediate, tangible Confederate war aim: defense from
invasion." Battle Cry of Freedom: The Civil War Era, James
McPherson, (p. 310). Slavery was not the major issue or
cause for going to war. Slavery handicapped Confederate
foreign policy. "The first Southern commissioners to Britain
reported in May 1861 that "The public mind here is entirely
opposed to the government of the Confederate States of
America on the question of slavery….The sincerity and
universality of this feeling embarrass the government in
dealing with the question of our recognition. The North
initially stated that the war was not about slavery. Lincoln
even mentioned "that he had no purpose, directly or
indirectly, to interfere with slavery in the states where it
exists," Battle Cry of Freedom: The Civil War Era, James
McPherson, (p. 312). The Constitution protected and will
continue to protect slavery where it existed. As was stated
earlier, the North fought the war to keep the Union together,
because of the fact that secession was unconstitutional.
Militarily, both the North and the South were not prepared
for this war. Although the North was the manufacturing part
of the country, it had to somehow change its peacetime
economy to a wartime economy. Most of the arms that
belonged to the North were very old and outdated. It had
old muskets and cannons that dated back to the war of
1812. Northern leadership was crippled as well. Most of the
pristine military academies were in the South, and most of
the graduates of those military academies served in the
confederate armies. Many of the North"s military leaders
were veterans of the war of 1812. Many of the North"s
leaders were in there 60"s and beyond. "The army had
nothing resembling a general staff, no strategic plans, no
program for mobilization," Battle Cry of Freedom: The Civil
War Era, James McPherson, (p. 312). The Northern navy
was in better shape then the army. "Although 373 of the
Navy"s 1,554 officers and a few of its 7600 seamen left to
go with the south, the large merchant marine from which an
expanded navy would draw experienced officers and sailors
was overwhelmingly northern." Battle Cry of Freedom: The
Civil War Era, James McPherson, (p. 313). The
Northerners military strategy was to basically cut the
Southerners lines of communications, to slowly choke the
Confederate army to surrender. The navy did a good job
following this strategy. The North set up blockades, which
the navy carried out to the best of its ability. The
Confederates had quite possibly the best leadership in the
war. Although to win, it needed more then best leadership.
The South had primarily an agrarian economy. This fact
alone was a major obstacle for the South during the war.
The South had the men, leadership, and even some
ammunition when the war began. The South had to find the
resources, employ those resources, and finally put those
resources together. "The confederacy had only one-ninth the
industrial capacity of the Union. Northern states had
manufactured 97% of the country"s firearms in 1860, 94%
of its cloth, 93% of its pig iron, and more then 90% of its
boots and shoes. Battle Cry of Freedom: The Civil War Era,
James McPherson, (p. 318). When it came to the Navy, the
Confederates had no navy. Although lacking material
resources, "they used tugboats, revenue cutters, and river
steamboats to be converted into gunboats for harbor patrol.
Battle Cry of Freedom: The Civil War Era, James
McPherson, (p. 314). The Confederates also came up with
the idea of the first submarine. "The Confederacy sent into
action the world"s first combat submarine, the C.S.S.
Hunley, which sank three times in trials, drowning the crew
each time, before sinking a blockade ship off Charleston in
1864, while going down itself for the fourth and last time."
Battle Cry of Freedom: The Civil War Era, James
McPherson, (p. 314). The Confederacy was also the first to
introduce "torpedoes"/land mines. Even though these
innovations were developed during the war, they did not
prove substantial enough to win the war. Jefferson Davis"
strategy was to take a defensive position rather then an
offensive one. "The basic war aim of the confederacy, like
that of the United States in the revolution was to defend a
new nation from conquest. ." Battle Cry of Freedom: The
Civil War Era, James McPherson, (p. 314). Davis reasoned
just as Washington did during the revolution, that retreating
against a stronger enemy is not bad all the time. It gave time
to regroup your forces and build a counterattack against the
enemy. Although the south did try this tactic at the beginning
of the war, they didn"t follow this strategy at the end of the
war. The south had the temperament that they could easily
"whip the Yankees" and that they should take the war to
them. "The idea of waiting for blows, instead of inflicting
them, is altogether unsuited to the genius of our people,
declared the Richmond Examiner." Battle Cry of Freedom:
The Civil War Era, James McPherson, (p. 337). In
conclusion, the lack of adequate resources proved to be the
devastating factor for the Confederacy. Although the
Confederacy had the excellent leadership at the beginning of
the war, later, southern public opinion showed that the
people in the South were sick of taking the defensive
position and wanted to attack the North. Because of this
strategy, the Confederacy lost many soldiers in battles while
trying to fight in the North. The South"s last ditch effort at the
end of the war was a promise of freedom for any slave that
fights against the Union. Even though the North had inferior
leadership, its manufacturing capabilities surpassed that of
the South. At first the North did not have many men enlisted
in an army. However, later on the North had voluntary
regiments of men fighting for the Union. The North"s major
lines of communication were never destroyed and the Union
army was always well supplied. In conclusion the North won
because it had superior resources and industry to sustain the
war effort to its conclusion. William L. Yancey and A.
Dudley Mann to Robert Toombs, May 21, 1861, in James
D. Richardson, comp., A Compilation of the Messages and
Papers of the Confederacy, 2 vols. (Nashville, 1906), II, 37.
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