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South And The North Of The 19th Century Term Paper

South and the North of the 19th Century Dear Trevor,

As I write this, I can hear faint yells and cheers through my window. Somewhere, the city of Charleston still celebrates. You'll have heard why by the time my letter arrives. Secession. It was no secret that it would happen when Lincoln, that great ape, was elected. As many years as we've been on the receiving end of Yankee insults and "compromises," I wonder why we took so long.

You and I have talked about our peculiar institution, and I know you disapprove, but then, you have not been around Negroes. They are not our equals. They need us to care for them and direct them, and we need them to work the fields and keep our farms and plantations running. There is no immorality, no terrible sin. Merely an advantageous arrangement for both sides. But the Yankees don't see it that way. They want to do away with slavery, even though God knows they don't want to live and work next to a Negro man. So, their compromises began.

First was the Missouri compromise. That one came in along in 1820. Basically, Missouri entered as a slave state, Maine a free state. And then it banned slavery in the rest of the Louisiana Purchase north of 36 degrees, 30 minutes. That one was bad news, and the South knew it.

Secession almost happened about ten years later, in the 1830's, when South Carolina declared Andrew Jackson's tariffs of 1828 and 1832 null and void. How often I heard my father complain about the federal government laying taxes on our sovereign state. But President Jackson threatened to send troops into South Carolina, and to our everlasting shame, we eventually backed down.

Secession might also have happened a little more than ten years ago, in 1846, when...

Even though it never passed the Senate, you should have heard the hue and cry down here. Worse, a few years later Taylor -- a Southerner of all people -- betrayed us by allowing California to enter the union as a free state. That should have sparked secession. But it didn't. Instead it sparked talk, and more talk, and compromise. Clay's Compromise of 1850, to be exact, saying that while California would enter as a free state, New Mexico and Utah would be territories, and the citizens themselves could decide about slavery. John Calhoun tried to tell us we should leave the union then, but we didn't listen. (Naden & Blue, 2000).
Then, in 1854, came Kansas and Nebraska. Some wanted to cling to that damn outdated Missouri Compromise and have both states enter the union as free states. Nonsense! Then Stephen Douglas came along -- a pugnacious little man from Illinois -- and suggested the Kansas-Nebraska compromise which would allow the people of Kansas and Nebraska to decide for themselves whether they wanted to be slave states or free states. And didn't that end up a nice mess, with Kansas having two governments, no one sure which to acknowledge.

And now we've got an ape of a president who opposes any further spread of slavery. Even though you and I don't always agree, Trevor, I'm sure you can see how the South has been insulted and belittled again and again. It is time to divorce ourselves from the union that has never been kind to us. If that means war, well, let it be war.

Yours, Beau

March 30, 1861

Dear Trevor,

Hello from your abolitionist friend. You asked me once how…

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References

Catton, B. (1961). The coming fury, volume one. Garden City, NY: Doubleday & Co.

Naden, C.J. & Blue, R. (2000). Why fight? The causes of the American Civil War. Austin, TX: Steck-Vaughn Publishers.
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