Civil War Causes of the Civil War
The primary cause to the civil war was slavery. However, there were also other causes and events that lead up to the civil war. Some of these causes include social as well as economic differences between the South and the North, States that were against federal rights, states that were for or against slavery, and the growth of the individuals who were against slavery and believed that it should not exist.
The economic reasons were mainly pertaining to the invention of the cotton gin and the amount of money that it meant it was able to be make. The industries to the North would purchase this cotton while it was in a raw state and turn it into the items that were able to be made such as clothing and more. This caused many issues within the North because of the amount of people that were needed and the way that many people were unable to work together to be able to make ends meet when they may have had to in order to keep a working economy. The South did not have this problem and out of such was not affected nearly as much on a financial scale. The cotton gin was an issue because it started to replace jobs and the individuals who were needed for them.
Then there was also slavery which the North was against and the South was for. This caused a great rivalry between the two which eventually escalated into the Civil War. Confederates were against federal laws that were not their own. This means that they were against Lincoln’s beliefs that slaves should be freed. The South was primarily confederates and these are only a small part of the reasons that can be accounted the civil war, but also some of the most notable.
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