What Caused the Civil War? “A house divided against itself cannot stand.” (Abraham Lincoln) It is 1860 and the US is reaching it’s boiling point. Popular sovereignty has torn Kansas apart into pro-slavery and abolitionist factions, John Brown is dead after a failed attempt to lead a slave rebellion at Harper’s Ferry, and crisis is ahead. The South thinks the North is hypocritical because of how they treat their factory workers and greedy because of the pricey tariffs on good made that they produced, while the North is outraged by terrible tales of abuse and assault of southern slaves (Uncle Tom’s Cabin). The Civil War was mainly caused by differences in economics, politics, and morality. The first way the civil war was caused was by differences in economics. In document two, the maps show that there are more slaves in the slaves and cotton in the South, but more manufacturing money in the North. This separation of production and profit was detrimental to the southern economy, as they had to …show more content…
In document eight, Frederick Douglass proclaims “I answer, a day that reveals to him, more than any other days in the year, the gross injustice and cruelty to which he is a constant victim.” This statement revealed the extreme unfairness that a slave endured, that the Constitution promised freedom for the future generations, yet slaves were treated like property. In document one, George Fitzhugh explains how slaves were some of the “freest people in the world”. The southerners believed that slavery was a way of life, and there was nothing wrong with it. Being raised that way, slavery was all they knew. In document two, the map shows how there were no slaves in the North. Contrary to the South, the northerners were taught that slavery was bad, and like the southerners, didn’t know any other way. Being raised in certain beliefs can establish them for your entire life, and that was the case for the people of the North and