Answer:
The economic reason for the civil war was the taxes on imported and exported goods. The tariffs that the national government put on imported and exported goods affected the Southern economy, but benefited the Northern economy. This added tensions between the Union and the Southern states. The southern economy depended on selling cotton overseas, but the North had become very industrialized, and their profits went down when trading with England and other European countries was so easy, so the U.S. put taxes on importing and exporting goods to encourage trade between the sections of the country.
Slavery was the moral issue in the Civil War. Most people in the North
wanted to abolish slavery, while the Southern society and economy heavily depended on it. There were debate over whether new states entering the union should be slave or free, especially as in the years before the civil war, the number of Senators from slave and free states were equal, and each side wanted to prevent the other from having an advantage.
Explanation:
Answer:
Option: They were tired of Britain's interference in trade and the impressment of American sailors.
Explanation:
Farmers and frontier settlers demand war against Britain because of the laws and regulation that implemented on them. The navigation acts controlled the trading rights of the colonies. The acts made settlers annoyed because they reduced the economic opportunities for the colonies. These acts eventually served in bringing the Revolutionary War in America.
Answer:
a. anti slavery
b. Abraham Lincoln
c. making abolition a war goal
Explanation:
The Emancipation Proclamation contributed in no small part to the defeat of the Confederacy in the Civil War because it gave the Union the support of the Abolitionists and the Black Americans in both the North and the South.
At a time where the Union was experiencing losses in the battlefield and Abraham Lincoln was losing support, the Abolitionists rallied behind him and gave him the support needed to push on.
The war also ensured that the European nations who might have supported the Confederacy, steered clear of the conflict as they did not want to be seen as supporting slavery.
Answer:
4. I think it makes sense