Confederates Attic

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    Sam Houston Essay

    Samuel Houston Sam (Samuel) Houston was born on March 2, 1793, as the fifth child/son of Major Samuel Houston Sr. and Elizabeth Paxton. He fought in several battles and was a lawyer. He was the governor of Tennessee, and ran for State Senator at one point. He then moved to Texas and became a general in the Texan army, even though he was a heavy drinker. Later, when he received news of the defeat at the Alamo, Sam Houston decided to retreat for a month to regroup and strength Texas’ army strength

    Words: 409 - Pages: 2

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    How Did Cotton Gin Changed Slavery

    Eli Whitney's, Cotton Gin changed slavery, the South and American history because before the farmers living in the South who grew cotton could only remove could only remove the seed, from the soft fiber of cotton, from only about one-pound of short staple a day by hand which was not very slow to do since you had to take the seeds from one plant at a time. Soon after seeing the problem’s that American Cotton farmers had Eli Whitney had the idea of making the Cotton Gin that worked efficiently at removing

    Words: 328 - Pages: 2

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    How Did Abraham Lincoln's Assassination Unjust

    assassination happened in 1865 at Ford’s Theater after Booth failed to kidnap him prior to the Confederacy’s downfall. One of the most of atrocious assassinations had happened in the most ironic of areas. The original intention was to use captured Confederate leaders as a ransom for Lincoln but he did not show up where Booth had been ready to take him. The idea was to save the Confederacy by killing Lincoln, the Vice President, and the Secretary of State to gain the advantage over the Union. On the night

    Words: 715 - Pages: 3

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    Rhetorical Analysis: African-Americans During The Civil War

    Rhetorical Analysis Essay The Union In 1861, Africans were free, although free “African Americans still were not allowed to enlist in the army. Towards slavery during this time isn’t quite enough to convince blacks to join them in their battle against the Confederacy. So, in April 1861, Alfred M. Green delivered a speech to persuade African Americans to prepare to fight in the Civil War. Green used rhetorical devices such as pathos and repetition to prove why joining this bloodshed was important

    Words: 371 - Pages: 2

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    The Role Of Radical Republicans In The Civil War

    Radical republicans believed that black men and women should be treated as equal as white men and women. They believed that leaders of the confederacy should be punished for their roles in the Civil War. Some leaders apposed Andrew Johnson’s policies. There would soon be a great political war. “Reconstruction” refers to the efforts made in the U.S. to restructure the political, legal and economic systems in the states that had succeeded from the Union. The Civil War ended slavery but left many unanswered

    Words: 273 - Pages: 2

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    The Missouri Compromise, And The Dred Scott Case

    As the United States began to grow and spread into new territories, one of the biggest debates was where places were going to allow slavery and where places were not. Over time there were many different court cases and compromises that went through to help people try to work out where slavery would be legal. Some of the events that influenced these decisions were The Northwest Ordinance, The Missouri Compromise, and the Dred Scott Case. The Northwest Territory was a Confederacy surveyed

    Words: 477 - Pages: 2

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    The Difficulties Of Dred Scott's Declaration Of Rights

    Although the case was completely legal, there were difficulties that Scott, such as being able to prove the legitimacy of his ability, and therefore, lost many cases. The case was tried on June 30, 1847. However, due to a legal technicality—Scott was unable to prove that Eliza Emerson was his owner, and the court favored the defendant. Scott then had to file for a retrial. Scott faced many difficulties in trying to having his cases pass through court as he was faced with not only the fact that he

    Words: 287 - Pages: 2

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    Radical Reconstruction

    included the Grandfather Clause and the literacy tests required for voting in Southern legislatures. These Codes were able to gain the vast popularity and momentum they did because of the lenient policies of Lincoln and Johnson, which allowed former Confederate leaders to retake public office after the fall of the Confederacy. As a result of these policies, it was almost as if slavery had never been ended, and all the men that died in the

    Words: 1059 - Pages: 5

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    How Did Eli Whitney Contribute To The Civil War

    In 1794 Eli Whitney patented the Cotton Gin, and marketed it as a cheap and easy way to make a profit growing cotton in the American south. The Cotton Gin created an economic boom in the U.S. and helped grow the nation. However, the invention also encouraged slavery, which contributed the American Civil War. While the gin provided a quick and easy way to separate useless seeds from valuable cotton fiber,

    Words: 580 - Pages: 3

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    Civil War DBQ Essay

    suffered from many shortages and major inflation. The mass production of paper money caused inflation to get so bad that at one point a soldiers pay couldn’t even buy him a pair of socks. The South took such a downhill toll that in April of 1862, the Confederate Congress passed a law that all white males who were able-bodied and between the ages of seventeen and fifty were liable to serve for the rebel army. The government even adopted a policy of

    Words: 840 - Pages: 4

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