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The American Civil War

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The American Civil War was not inevitable, but by the time tensions between North and South had reached a certain level in the months before war was declared, it probably could not be avoided. The roots of separation between the North and the South can actually be traced back to the early colonial period. Some of the cleavages after 1850 were embodied in the developing Federalist Party representing the mercantile interests of the North and the Republican Party representing the agrarian interests of the South. The two regions had different philosophies of government. Originally, the coastal region wanted little government interference, while the people of the interior wanted government protection. These philosophies shifted with time until the South was the region opposing government interference and the North was more willing to seek government control and protection. In addition, economic issues were a source of dissension between the two regions, especially in terms of the exercise of constitutional power by the central government in economic matters. The popular view has long been that the war was fought over slavery, but while slavery was an issue, other concerns were more key in bringing about the conflict, as will be seen through an analysis of the literature on the subject offered by various historians.

The roots of separation between the North and the South can be traced back to the early colonial period. Some of the clea

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avid Walker's "Appeal," the appearance of William Lloyd Garrison's Liberator, and the insurrection of slaves under the leadership of Nat Turner. Walker was a free black in North Carolina who moved to Boston and worked selling secondhand clothes, and his bitter hatred for slavery was apparent in his writing. He evoked the image of the Declaration of Independence and the fact that it seemed not to apply to blacks. Garrison's newspaper also evoked the Declaration of Independence and stated that the black man was as entitled to "life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness" as the white man. Blacks also wrote abolitionist fiction, and the first novel written by a black American was an abolitionist work published in London in 1853Clotel, or the President's Daughter by William Wells Brown. The author implies that his black heroine, drowned in the Potomac near the White House, was actually the illegitimate daughter of Thomas Jefferson. The novel was intended to stir abolitionist feelings in England to gain support for the movement. These two books show the intensity of feeling among abolitionists both black and white and how they fictionalized the real battle taking place over the matter. Personal accounts such as th
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Approximate Word count = 3894
Approximate Pages = 16 (250 words per page)

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