Wednesday, December 4, 2013

The Civil War: Inevitable

Hey everyone! I'm studying the Civil War right now, so here's a paper on why I think the Civil War was inevitable. Hope you enjoy it. (Please, no arguments in the comments)

The Civil War: Inevitable

Was the Civil War truly inevitable? Some people say it was, some say it was not, but no one knows for sure. There are great amounts of evidence on both sides. Here are three pieces of evidence that the Civil War was inevitable.

The first piece of evidence to look at is that the Northerners and Southerners both refused to change. The Southerners were thoroughly dependent on slavery to preserve their economy by working their large and numerous plantations. These plantations produced all of the crops which formed their exports and livelihood. The Northerners, on the other hand, believed quite strongly that slavery should be abolished. They believed it so strongly, in fact, that they refused to follow the Fugitive Slave Law, which required the return of all runaway slaves. 
 
The next piece of evidence to examine is that both sides refused to compromise. The Northerners and the Southerners both wanted the western territories of California, New Mexico, and Utah. However, neither side was willing to let the other get a good hold on the territory for fear the slave/free state balance would be upset. When Henry Clay, the master of compromise, wrote a compromise in an attempt to smooth things out and prevent war, Congress was unable to get a majority to pass it. Clay then broke the compromise into smaller pieces, which were passed one at a time. This meant that the compromise had no Congressional majority supporting the whole thing. Clay's compromise included the Fugitive Slave Law, which made the Northerners extremely angry about being forced to help support the very thing they were trying to abolish.

When Northerner Abraham Lincoln gained the presidency in 1860, the state of South Carolina left the Union, believing that they could not trust a president who held opposite views. They were rapidly followed by six other slave states. President Lincoln refused to accept their secession announcement, and tried to compromise with the seceded states. However, the Southerners refused all attempts at reconciliation.

The final piece of evidence to consider is that both sides were clearly willing to fight. Northerner John Brown led a raid on the Harper's Ferry military arsenal in Virginia, with the probable intent of arming slaves and leading them to revolt. In Kansas, when the time came to decide whether it would be free or slave, fighting broke out between the two sides. Several other slave states also had internal fights raging over whether or not to secede. 
 
Fort Sumter in North Carolina was held by the Union, and the Confederates (as the seceded Southerners called themselves) summoned the fort to surrender. After Lincoln tried to send fresh supplies to the garrison, the Confederates opened fire and shelled the fort for twenty-six hours, resulting in two Union men killed and the fort's surrender. In response to the fort's capture, President Lincoln called for seventy-five thousand volunteers from state militias to create an army with. He also ordered a blockade of all Confederate ports. 
 
In conclusion, this evidence shows a strong likelihood of the war having been inevitable. When people are quarreling over something and refuse to change, a compromise is the next step. When that fails, and both sides are quite willing to fight, a war is pretty much inevitable. This was almost completely the case in the years leading up to 1860, which leads to the conclusion that the arguing and quarreling would have turned into outright war sooner or later.

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