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Civil War



             part of slavery, but as the Republic grew older and stronger, so did the diversity between the.
             Northern and Southern states. As people got lost in worrying about the Civil War, they forgot the.
             material blessings they already had as a united nation, for example, a common market and.
             currency, an army and navy, and foreign policies. Because of the war, there was no use for these.
             advantages.
             Westward expansion and colonization defined sectional differences even more. The.
             Southerners were now a cotton economy with Negro slaves, and this was the biggest difference.
             from the North. The spread of cotton and slavery was more profitable to the Southern states.
             being united with the industrial North. "The South, "said Alexander H. Stephens, vice-president.
             of the Confederacy, "is my home fatherland . . . there are my hopes and prospects; with her my.
             fortunes are cast; her fate is my fate, her destiny is my destiny." (Americana, 782).
             The attack on Fort Sumter opened the Civil War on April 12, 1861. This move started.
             something that wouldn't be "short and decisive" (Norris, 1) as many people thought. Since young.
             men thought it would be over quickly, they rushed to enlist for 90-day regiments, only staying in.
             the army for three months, by the thousands. After many losses in the beginning of the war, their.
             hopes for a quick battle turned to terrors. A few small skirmishes wouldn't end the debate on.
             slavery that had been going on for decades.
             The first "real" battle of the war was the Battle of Big Bethel. It was also known as the.
             Battle of Great Bethel and the Battle of Bethel Church. The Federals, or Union, with their leader.
             as General Winthrop, were told to meet the rest of their company, with General Farnum in charge,.
             at Little Bethel before sunrise. They found no one there, so they decided to move onto Big Bethel.
             without them.
             On June 10, 1861, as the Federals come to Bethel Church, the Rebels, or Confederacy, shot.


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