<span>Francis Marion used guerilla-style tactics to cut British supply lines and slow down the British Army. Because the British troops never knew when or where Marion and his forces would strike, they could form no battle plans and were forced to withdraw from South Carolina.</span>
Answer:
Some of the major issues that Abraham Lincoln faced while he was in office included the secession of many of the Southern states, the outbreak of the Civil War, worry over whether the Emancipation Proclamation could withstand a legal challenge, and a low approval rating from his constituency.
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B) there can be a lot going on so a historian should try to incorporate as much as possible
The Lost Cause of the Confederacy, or simply the Lost Cause, is an American pseudo-historical,[1][2] negationist ideology that advocates the belief that the cause of the Confederate States during the American Civil War was heroic, just, and not centered on slavery.[3] This ideology has furthered the belief that slavery was moral, because the enslaved were happy, even grateful, and it also brought economic prosperity. The notion was used to perpetuate racism and racist power structures during the Jim Crow era in the American South.[4] It emphasizes the supposed chivalric virtues of the antebellum South. It thus views the war as a struggle primarily waged to save the Southern way of life[5] and to protect "states' rights", especially the right to secede from the Union. It casts that attempt as faced with "overwhelming Northern aggression". It simultaneously minimizes or completely denies the central role of slavery and white supremacy in the build-up to, and outbreak of, the war.[4]