At the time of the Civil War, the Union and Confederacy were split in half. But, although they were two totally different sides of the war, they had both similarities and differences with each other. A great example is their reasons for fighting the war. Both sides, North and South, were fighting for liberty, although they were totally different reasons. During the war, the South believed that the tensions between the Confederate and Union were because of the North. The South said the North took their property, murdered people, broke laws of the Congress, and so much more. The South believed that by electing Abraham Lincoln, the Union betrayed the Confederacy. “And finally, they have capped the mighty pyramid of unfraternal enormities by electing Abraham Lincoln on a platform and by a system which indicates nothing but the subjugation of the South and the complete ruin of her social, political and industrial institutions,” said the New Orleans Daily Crescent. The Union thought that while America was strong, the Confederacy was weak. According to the North, Southern states were guilty of secession and treason. But some Northerners believed that Lincoln’s policies were for the greater good of America. Union Sergeant Phineas Hager said “...After this war is over, this whole country will undergo a change for the better...” But …show more content…
The Union and Confederacy both fought for freedom. Each side really just wanted their country to be at liberty. For the South, the war was “a battle for political rights and asserting state sovereignty against an overbearing federal government.” The North considered the war a matter of preserving the South and casting off the limitations of slavery. Believe it or not, there were more similar ideas. For example, many people of the Union did not support Lincoln’s Proclamation. They did not want slaves to be freed. Most Southerners agreed with