Answer:
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1) Jefferson Davis - President of the Confederacy; <span>from 1861 to 1865.
2) </span><span>"Stonewall"</span> Jackson - killed by one of his own men; accidentally shot by pickets.<span>
3) </span>David Farragut - crossed Confederate lines to capture New Orleans; flag officer<span> of the </span><span>United States Navy.
4) </span>John J. Crittenden - proposed a compromise that was rejected.
5) Andrew Johnson - <span>Lincoln's Vice President for his second term.
6) </span>George B. McClellan - <span>trained his troops thoroughly.
7) </span>Robert Anderson - <span>stationed at Fort Sumter at the beginning of war.
8) </span>Alexander Stephens - <span>Confederate Vice President .
9) </span>General George Meade - <span> met and defeated Robert E. Lee at the battle of Gettysburg.
10) </span>P.G.T. Beauregard - Confederate general at first battle of Bull Run.
They were all barriers for the colonial period
This is both true and false the United States is a federal constitutional presidential republic. It is a joining of fifty smaller subject republic's known as states, they and the federal government imitate the Roman res publica style of government which is a further advancement of the Greek style. However the United States elects everyone in a similar manner by direct popular vote. This is the case with Governors, Representatives and Senators for the State legislatures and the United States Congress. The president is elected in a combination of the two. The populous votes for the person who they want to be president. After each state tallies its majority vote that States electoral college votes go to the winner of the majority in that state. It is very rare that a president wins both the electoral college and the popular votes. The electoral college decides the next president not the popular despite both being integrally connected to each other. This system ensures that States with a larger population cannot control the executive branch of the United States.