วันเสาร์ที่ 31 ธันวาคม พ.ศ. 2554

Causes of the American Civil War - Federal Versus State Power and Abolition

For most American students, some of the best days of elementary school are the ones foremost up to Thanksgiving. We make handprint turkeys from building paper, learn about corn, beans, and squash, and hear all about the idyllically symbiotic early interactions in the middle of Europeans and Native Americans. Life is good.

A few years down the road, the photo changes somewhat. We hear tell of fighting and betrayal - or even death. It was all just a big misunderstanding, we're told. We move on. But every so often, we get an further view of the nightmare surrounding early European involvement in the New World so that, by the time we're adults, we can best cope the fact that a fifth of the planet's population (guess which fifth) died as a follow of Columbus pilotage the ocean blue.

About The Civil War For Kids

This baby-steps process of learning about the Columbian replacement is more or less the American template for dealing with bad history. Just think back on the early days of school you spent tackling the Civil War. The lessons probably consisted of development stove-pipe hats and fake Lincoln beards - and joyfully hearing about how the war eradicated slavery.

Causes of the American Civil War - Federal Versus State Power and Abolition

. . . If You Traveled on the Underground Railroad Best

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. . . If You Traveled on the Underground Railroad Overview



If you traveled on the Underground Railroad
--Where was the safest place to go?
--Would you wear a disguise?
--What would you do when you were free?

This book tells you what it was like to be a slave trying to escape to freedom on the Underground Railroad.


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*** Product Information and Prices Stored: Dec 31, 2011 14:36:37

As early teens, we start reading about things like how Lincoln, dictator-style, not only gave speeches declaring that he would maintain slavery if it meant saving the Union, but also suspended the writ of habeas corpus. Regardless of either we'd even heard of habeas corpus up until this point, the moment feels like a bad breakup. As time goes on, a new piece is added to the puzzle. Although Lincoln remained publicly neutral toward slavery, he condemned it privately. This leads to someone else epiphany: politicians can be misleading. By the time we're in college, we've basically lost any footing we view we had in the argument.

People throw a lot of names around whenever they talk about the causes of the Civil War - John Brown, Dred Scott, the Mason-Dixon Line... Lincoln comes up every now and again - but something that doesn't often get its fair share of the attention is federal versus state power. No, it's not as catchy as some of the other topics, nor can it honestly be characterized via macaroni and building paper, but the fact that it's basically the longest running argument in Us history ought to give us some pause for thought.

After all, this is the stuff our founding fathers saw fit to duel each other over. When Aaron Burr was busy shooting Alexander Hamilton, the Us was less than half the size it was during Lincoln's inauguration. Suffice it to say that the issue of central control gets even trickier after your country has stretched all the way over the continent.

Secessionists believed that the Us government should ideally be a loose pact in the middle of states and that the federal government should have no power beyond what is explicitly outlined by the Constitution. Unionists, on the other hand, tended toward stronger central powers and a looser interpretation of the Constitution. They resented the idea a slave could be taken into a free state with no consequences from the federal government plainly because somewhere, a slaveholding state said it was a-okay.

Secessionists have since been accused of using the states' ownership argument to defend slavery... Just like unionists have been accused of using abolition to disguise an interest in addition federal power. either way, all the political, racial, financial, and moral grounds for fighting touched on the same old issue. And if you think that the Civil War was the final word on federal versus state power, just check out the Alaskan Independence party, Lynyrd Skynyrd's Confederate flag, the hard liquor smuggled into Utah, or the legitimacy of a same-sex marriage license in a state like Arkansas.

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