The Long-Lasting Success of the Civil War The Civil War was a long-lasting victory that achieved President Abraham Lincoln´s exact original goal and more. Lincoln´s original goal was to hold the nation together; exactly what the Civil war did. There are also many long-lasting freedoms and positive impacts from the Civil War that carry on to today. The nation came together when it witnessed that states could not simply choose to leave the union, and the idea of the states as one single country became more prominent. The Civil War allowed the country to unite together once again and strengthen the nation as a whole. The unification of the states and the people might have been the most enduring symbol of the Civil War. While the Civil War is …show more content…
Although the freedom for slaves did not lead to full equality, immense constitutional changes that re-defined the nature of American society and acted as a point of departure in the struggle for equal civil rights and human rights were initiated from the Civil War. Roanoke Island became the site of the Freedman’s Colony for newly freed African Americans. Here, education and a new way of living could be experienced. This Island became most famous for its ¨Lost Colony¨ of the 1580s until after the Civil War when it was the scene of another bold experiment on a new frontier. Lincoln´s Emancipation Proclamation, issued in 1863 after the costly Union victory at Antietam, freed all the enslaved people within the Confederacy. More significantly, it changed the goal of the war to not only preserve the Union but to also end slavery. Although the victory failed to end the sectional bitterness and racial injustice that would continue for generations and even to this day, it did preserve the Union and end slavery in an attempt to cease race-related …show more content…
Throughout the war, the secession of the southern states had created that both houses of Congress were dominated by Republican majorities. However, there were differences between whether people wanted the immediate abolition of slavery, to wait to abolish slavery, or even to not abolish slavery at all. The Emancipation Proclamation in 1863 freed African Americans in rebel states, and after the Civil War, the Thirteenth Amendment emancipated all U.S. slaves wherever they were. During the years after the war, black and white teachers from the North and South, missionary organizations, churches, and schools worked tirelessly to give the emancipated population the opportunity to learn. Former slaves of every age took advantage of the opportunity to become literate. With the protection of the 13th, 14th, and 15th Amendments to the Constitution and the Civil Rights Act of 1866, African Americans enjoyed being allowed to vote, actively participate in the political process, acquire the land of former owners, seek their own employment, and use public
The results of the Civil War helped America become a nation. It gave the government power over the individual states. The Union won the Civil War, this was not surprising to most because they had more advantages than the Confederate did. They had a larger army. The North manufactured more than ninety percent of all good in America, its factories turned against the South during the war.
The civil war was one of the most intense and destructive wars the U.S have ever experienced, the war left over 640,000 soldiers dead, 476,000 wounded and 400,000 missing, this resulting in about 2% of the population dead. Whilst the war brought violence and destruction it also resolved two important questions that were unable to be resolved by the revolution these include; weather the United States was going to be made up of many independent states or a united nation with an independent government, and weather the United States was going to remain as the largest slaveholding country. Before the war the division between the north and south was a rising problem, which reached its peak at the outbreak war, the division was based around the different
Lincoln’s emancipation proclamation in 1863 declared “all persons held as slaves…shall be free,” which granted Black Americans a necessity they had not had before, freedom. This significantly improved Black American’s lives as it meant they were able to marry, own property and move freely between states. This was a definite improvement as Black Americans had not had this opportunity before. Without the President Lincoln having issued the proclamation, this would not have been put into effect.
The War achieved to bring the states together, at the end of the conflict, but it also didn't achieve it at the beginning of the War as it tore the states apart from each other. A task that the American Civil War completed was to abolish slavery from all states. The slavery status in the different states varied at different stages during the War due to the laws that were released at different
The Union also followed through with the goal of ending slavery in June of 1865. Generally speaking, the war resulted in a success for the Union and helped make America what it is
The Emancipation Proclamation of 1863 declared slaves in the United States as free. This newly free status marked an end to chattel slavery in the United States. Despite this remarkable win for humanity the sudden change brought forth a multitude of issues that the United States was not ready to address. African Americans were the main sufferers of the United States unpreparedness. The timing of emancipation combined with the prominent ideological beliefs of that time resulted in negative health outcomes that set the foundation for health inequalities among African Americans that are still prominent today.
The Civil War’s Positive Effects Outweigh The Negative Effects The Civil War’s positive effects greatly outweigh the negative effects. There were numerous negative effects of the war including things like the death toll, how hard it made getting houses and decent jobs for African Americans, etc, but the positives bring light over the negatives. The Civil War greatly affected the political structure of the United States with the abolishment of slavery, with this abolishment it brought many new political advancements for the U.S.
In September of 1861, Lincoln issued, what would later be known as the preliminary Emancipation Proclamation. “. . . The Emancipation Proclamation was the most revolutionary pronouncement ever signed by an American President, striking the legal shackles from four million black slaves and setting the nation’s face toward the total abolition of slavery. . .” (Guelzo
Any slave emancipated was also given the right to have reasonable wages and enlist in the union army if desired. This proclamation fueled what would become the greatest domestic controversy that our nation has ever endured much like the Civil Rights
The American Civil War positively benefited modern society by driving social changes and spawning economic growth that shaped the country into the superpower it is today. First of all, the social changes brought on by the Civil War laid the foundation that made America great. Up until the Civil War, America was still known as 'experimenting ' with freedom for all. In fact, there was not freedom for all men until the Civil War ended. The war validated the social aspects of equality and made them not just words on a page but living breathing actions.
War was waged, lines were drawn, and battles were fought some of the bloodiest battles in American history where during the Civil War. All in all the Union stood tall when the dust cleared. And the states that succeeded had no choice but to join back up with the rest of America. Each side has its advantages
The American civil war was one of the most brutal, bloody, and deadliest wars in all of American history, it is said to have killed more than any of the other wars combined. (Gardner) The end of the civil war marked a new era of America, one where it could thrive as a newly free, unified, and rapidly progressing nation. The war had positive impacts on America and has shown that it was needed. The war unified the nation, as one country, (“Monitor 150th Anniversary - Civil War History”),it started a new era of bigger government and industrialization, it also put an end to the long standing institution of slavery.
The civil war lasted for four years or more, and an outstanding 600,000 casualties. Lincoln swore that he would maintain the union, end the secession and reunite the United States of America. The Gettysburg address is the speech that gave the union and many Americans hope to reestablish the country. The civil war got Abraham Lincoln to pass the emancipation proclamation. Not only did the proclamation free slaves in the confederate, it also changed the view of the war from reserving the union into fighting for freedom.
Many African Americans remained enslaved in American up until the Civil war and the ratification of the 13 th , 14 th , and 15 th amendments. While this freed all the African Americans and even led to a short period of increased prosperity for them, the Jim Crow laws would quickly relegate them back to second class status (Healey, 2012). While the 13 th amendment freeing the slaves was ratified in 1865, it would take until February 7 th of 2013 for the final state
Oftentimes it's hard to see the good effects of war and death. But this war was needed at the time and did have some positive lasting effects. This war led to a unity among our state and federal governments, it led to the freeing of millions of slaves, and it is often credited with strengthening the overall economy through income taxes and banking. In conclusion, the American Civil War helped bring the states together as a nation. It helped to form our current United States economy and government.