Slavery Dbq Essay

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Slavery Divorce is hell! Often times the pair has been unhappy for years and tried many ways to save the marriage so the family can remain intact, especially when there are children. The Southern States began to divorce the United States when South Carolina seceded after Lincoln was elected President in 1860. Like a family split into by divorce, the United States soon became divided into two separate units (the United States or the Union and the Confederacy) and saw more bloodshed and lives lost than it had before or would ever since the 1860s. Much like the unrest in Ferguson was building up over time but boiled over when the Grand Jury failed to indict, the Civil War had been brewing for decades. Lincoln’s election was the …show more content…

In 1852, famous abolitionist Douglas spoke eloquently about how the slaves felt about the 4th of July: it was quite an irony. The 4th of July celebrates the great ideas of liberty and justice for all yet the slaves had none of those rights (Doc G). In 1857 the Dred Scott case was decided and it was ruled that slaves were not and could not become citizens; slavery was ruled as legal (Doc L and LB). In 1859, the John Brown attempted uprising at Harper’s Ferry showed the rising tensions much like modern day Ferguson riots show racial tensions of today. When John Brown was hanged for treason, the North called Brown “a martyr for the cause of freedom” while in the South “angry mobs assaulted whites accused of holding antislavery views” (Doc J). In 1858, while accepting the Republican nomination for President, Lincoln all but said war is coming when he talked about the US being a house divided that could not stand and clearly stated that the US would cease to be divided and become all free or all slave after a crisis which was sure to be won by the abolitionists (Doc M). When Lincoln was elected President in 1860 with only 39.9% of the popular vote yet over half of the electoral votes, the South was sure its way of life was about to be challenged (Doc N). Of course, it was not long after this—April of 1861—that the Civil War began when Confederate troops fired on Fort

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