How did the American Civil War Actually Happen? (Part 1) - From 1819 to 1861

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  • Опубликовано: 23 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 10 тыс.

  • @Knowledgia
    @Knowledgia  Год назад +89

    Part 2 is here! -> ruclips.net/video/GiW_supSSOk/видео.html
    Part 3 is here! -> ruclips.net/video/t56cwRxBtG8/видео.html
    Part 4 is here! -> ruclips.net/video/wu2mZOuvCsQ/видео.html
    You can help support our work directly by Joining this channel and get access to perks:
    ruclips.net/channel/UCuCuEKq1xuRA0dFQj1qg9-Qjoin
    You can also support us on Patreon: www.patreon.com/Knowledgia

    • @uniq7778
      @uniq7778 Год назад +3

      By the way, your map wrong West Virginia, split off from Virginia to become part of the North

    • @SolRC
      @SolRC Год назад

      You missed the part about Mexico renting us Texas and when they wanted it back we stole it ...with force. Stop warping history with your ignorance or agendas.

    • @Darkn3ssF4ll
      @Darkn3ssF4ll Год назад +2

      Oh my goodness !!!!!! How has this not shown up for me.

    • @Hairybuffalo
      @Hairybuffalo Год назад

      dude this is such a lie. You are rewriting history. The north had already profited MASSIVELY from slavery. The southern states succeeded from the union and the north invaded.

    • @anneli1735
      @anneli1735 11 месяцев назад +2

      Unbearable: how that background music and form of speech dramatizes the in itself interesting history! There must be something seriously wrong with it as an honest historian would stick to facts and not trying to manipulate viewers 😢 What about telling about the indigenous population living in those captured territories before since ages btw?

  • @kabloosh699
    @kabloosh699 Год назад +901

    The years leading up to the civil war really quite honestly is more important to learn about than the actual war itself.

    • @treeherder2201
      @treeherder2201 Год назад +67

      Well we didn't learn anything. Look at the divide in the country now.

    • @anthonymoran1121
      @anthonymoran1121 Год назад +42

      I’ve been saying this for months now, I honestly think we’re heading towards the same thing today

    • @VodShod
      @VodShod Год назад +78

      @@treeherder2201 I think that is mostly due to the confederates and their families pushing alternative history pretending that the civil war had nothing to do with slavery. Even now they teach that sort of thing in southern schools. Racism is still entrenched deep within southern states. The two parties had a huge change in their platform and positions as one democratic president signed into law the civil rights for black people. This angered the racists so they shifted over to the republican party, it took a while because people tend not to switch party that much later in life, it was just the younger racists who easily moved to the republican party. That is why the KKK, neo-Nazis, and white supremacists organizations are all have members almost exclusively in the republican party. They were recently rallied together to support trump during his presidential term. Currently Qanon is following "The Protocols of the Elders of Zion" a Nazi propaganda article that was plagiarized by an old satire piece.

    • @Tokomi
      @Tokomi Год назад

      @@VodShod More of both sides pushing false history but ok, Don't forget that Kamala Harris is a descendent of a black slave owner. It's either the republicans going "I don't see color while being a brute of a human that no one supports me" then democrats going "Color is the only thing i see to the point I ignore any facts in front of me, while thinking only white people can be bad". To this day there's still no way to support a middle ground that focuses on the labor of the country because America abolished its forming of a labor party through the final blow into American understanding was the "red scare" that's still fairly around today especially with the older generation because the average American can't tell the difference between a regime and general socialism that helps everyone at the cost of a few percent extra in tax that doesn't hurt anyone. Especially if you look at the cost of private health insurance per an individual could possibly save many people hundreds to thousands per year.

    • @user-fr5hs4vj4d
      @user-fr5hs4vj4d Год назад

      The party’s did not switch, that’s a lie. The democrats are the party of slavery and the kkk. Dinesh disouza already proved this. 2 dixicrats switched to the republican side . The rest lived and died and were celebrated in the Democratic Party. Go watch his videos so you stop spreading democrat propaganda.

  • @deadmeat8754
    @deadmeat8754 10 месяцев назад +321

    As the bearer of a degree in American History and the beneficiary of a classic American education, I can say that your Civil War series is quite accurate. It is sad that modern American education has deprecated the teaching of _actual_ American History. Your well researched and produced American Civil War series should be required viewing in every American classroom. +1

    • @johnfoster535
      @johnfoster535 10 месяцев назад +40

      ....except that this video needs to add specifics that bear on events TODAY ! While slavery was the obvious cause of anger between the states, it was the act of secession that triggered an actual war itself ! Lincoln was told by Supreme Court justice Salmon P. Chase that the states had the RIGHT to secede, based especially on Connecticut wishing to leave the Union during the War of 1812. Lincoln DISREGARDED this advice and declared that FORCE would be used against any seceding state. Robert E. Lee then decided that to lead such an attack against Americans would be DISHONORABLE, and he refused Lincoln's offer to command the Union Army. Lee, and many others held no affection for slavery, but, felt DEEPLY that they must defend their homes from the violence and destruction to come. Jubal Early had voted REPEATEDLY as a delegate for Virginia to STAY in the Union,but, became one of Lee's top generals. These were honorable soldiers and hence were respected by General U. S. Grant. Most rebels fought bravely to defend their homes, and NOT to defend slavery....yet, TODAY, ignorant miscreants tear down statues and memorials to brave Americans who perished just as tragically as the Yankees did. In 1858, Lincoln made disturbing statements in an effort to equal Stephen Douglass's white supremacy position. Lincoln said : " I will always say that whites are superior to the negro, and I'll always be on the side of the whites in that argument". Lincoln further stated : "...if the whites mate with the negroes, a new and violent race will emerge, which will THREATEN the very existence of white people ! " You won't see THOSE quotes carved into the marble of the Lincoln Memorial, will you ???

    • @jamesalexander949
      @jamesalexander949 10 месяцев назад

      Except, he leaves out how the 1828 tariff of abominations sparked talks of seccession 50+ years earlier. He then ignores the corwin amendment to the constitution. Drafted under President Buchanan, it was a way to prevent war, by protecting slavery in the constitution.

    • @BulborbPlays
      @BulborbPlays 10 месяцев назад +19

      @@johnfoster535 So in fairness to your first point, states do have a right to secede. However, the only form of succession permitted under the constitution is one of mutual consent between the Federal Government and the State Government, as established in Texas v White (1868). Funnily enough, Chase voted with the majority in Texas v White, so he clearly agreed that while succession is possible, all of the Confederate states did so illegally. Despite this, the Civil War probably wouldn't have actually led to outright conflict and could have eventually led to legal succession, except the new Confederate States couldn't resist constantly seizing federal property, which culminated in their assault on Fort Sumter in 1861 and forced the escalation that led to fighting.
      As to your second series of points, Lincoln was no doubt racist by modern standards, as was essentially every other white official on both sides of the conflict civilian and military. However, since sucession was illegal, the fact that confederate generals violated their oaths and joined a force in rebellion is a massive mark against their character in addition to their almost certainly more intense racist beliefs (Lee saw slavery as a 'neccesary evil' that hurt white people more than blacks, Jubal Early was very much pro-slavery even if he was anti-sucession). Combined with the political officials (aka the people who actually caused the civil war) all being slave owning scumbags that explicitly seceded to keep their political power and preserve the rubbish social order where owning people was permissible, I think the thoughts of the average Confederate can be neglected, especially since they were under no obligation to side with the rebel army that put their homes in danger to begin with (see West Virginia, who left Virginia due to their opposition to the war, and the four slave states that did not join in with the illegal actions of the confederates.

    • @dcasper8514
      @dcasper8514 10 месяцев назад +6

      President Lincoln put a blockage of cotton for guns & ammo with England. All shipping ports were blocked,causing tons of cotton to sit & rot on shore. With no resolvement in sight, the students of Citadel University
      Took action on Fort Sumpter.

    • @scott7270
      @scott7270 10 месяцев назад +9

      This series leaves out SO MUCH, and is extremely inaccurate in many ways, Yet the victor's always write history

  • @user-useff
    @user-useff 9 месяцев назад +120

    Finally a format in which I could digest it all in one sitting instead of splashes of history, never a beginning to end. Thanks!

    • @barefootroofer
      @barefootroofer 3 месяца назад +1

      It’s impossible to do that in one setting
      But good luck in your limited scope

    • @sammychapman1730
      @sammychapman1730 2 месяца назад

      ​@@barefootrooferare you really that friggin lame, lol.

    • @RobertDixon-di7ru
      @RobertDixon-di7ru 2 месяца назад +1

      @@barefootrooferthank you. Someone else on here with a little common sense. It’s sickening to hear these people praise this clown. He may know a lot of facts but a few things he said were lies

    • @barefootroofer
      @barefootroofer 2 месяца назад +1

      @@RobertDixon-di7ru outright lies…
      Several
      🤦‍♂️

    • @StONed-yx5qq
      @StONed-yx5qq Месяц назад

      I just watched a Ken Burns documentary on himself doing the documentary on the day leading up to the days before the start of the start of the civil war documentary . Appalling……

  • @johnwright6706
    @johnwright6706 5 месяцев назад +104

    The hardest part about understanding history is putting aside the current morals and cultural norms, and looking at things from the perspective of the peoples of the time you're studying

    • @nickroberts-xf7oq
      @nickroberts-xf7oq 3 месяца назад +12

      ..... THEN to realize that nobody living today was a slave or a slave holder and move on ! 🇺🇸

    • @MrChambers8109
      @MrChambers8109 3 месяца назад +19

      ​@nickroberts-xf7oq But denying that Slavery had no current impact, is assassin and foolish. Only the oppressor can deny that it ever happened.

    • @nickroberts-xf7oq
      @nickroberts-xf7oq 3 месяца назад +12

      @@MrChambers8109
      It was THE impact !
      But nobody today owes anybody today anything today !

    • @markmcdonagh4660
      @markmcdonagh4660 3 месяца назад

      Yeah, slavery was wrong then and it's wrong today! Nothing to examine or compare!

    • @angneatb6036
      @angneatb6036 3 месяца назад +9

      ​@nickroberts-xf7oq history always has an impact be it negative, or positive. Lessons learned and progress made. We don't tell Holocaust survivors to get over it. Sometimes ppl can't empathize with issues not related to them. Or we choose to justify feelings based on what we are taught, regardless of the facts.

  • @whodidit99
    @whodidit99 2 года назад +948

    I learned more from this short video than a year of high school US history.

    • @liquidpadlr3151
      @liquidpadlr3151 Год назад +107

      that's because you chose to watch this rather than being held captive in a classroom

    • @Sllice
      @Sllice Год назад +54

      you should fact check everything in this video still..

    • @aprilgeneric8027
      @aprilgeneric8027 Год назад +22

      i learned more in 1 year of 7th grade history that this author omitted and that there were world powers involved in the entire history of the usa even still. take a guess which top 5 were involved the whole way and still are playing us like a violin

    • @donoberloh
      @donoberloh Год назад +9

      School, public or otherwise are still wrapped around curriculum made by the industrial machine, to make good employees. Even universities tailor their academics for the market place, except for a few research scholars they keep behind to get grants for the University.

    • @brianwnc8168
      @brianwnc8168 Год назад +22

      Probably cuz you actually want to learn it now where as back in high school, we learned far less than what we were taught because of the mentality that most teenagers hold when it comes to learning.
      "Do as little as you need to do to make the grade."
      At this point, you are likely truly curious which makes people learn far more and retain far more information than when they have an emotional block to learning the info and they're just learning it to make the grade they want to make for that test or class.
      I made mostly A's but I had no real interest in learning. I especially hated studying history and now it's one of my favorite things because I'm actually curious about what has made the world the way it is today. Back in high school, I only had interest in being seen by my peers and parents as a student who is successful.

  • @frankmcdonnell7377
    @frankmcdonnell7377 2 года назад +260

    As a Brit who's lived in the US for over 40 years this presentation is the first time I've ever understood the contextual circumstances that caused the Civil War (other than the American Revolution and its connection to the Somerset Case in 1771), much appreciated 👍.

    • @garyhendrick4391
      @garyhendrick4391 2 года назад +18

      Search 'Checkmate Lincolnites'. Also a really good series.

    • @aaronfleming9426
      @aaronfleming9426 2 года назад +20

      @@kayvan9057 you've added some needed nuance to the north's racist problems, but you've got a few facts a bit skewed.
      1. It is true that cotton was the USA's biggest export, but tariffs are not paid on exports. Tariffs are paid on imports, and over 60% of imports came through New York City. When the south seceded, tariffs dropped 25%, a significant blow to be sure but an obvious indication that the south was paying less in taxes than the north.
      2. It's true that about 12,000 freed blacks owned slaves...out of nearly 400,000 slave owners in the USA. And 94% of them owned less than 10 slaves, with about 50% owning only one. We aren't sure, but the best theory is that an enormous majority of black slave owners were men who purchased their wives and never bothered to manumit them. Besides...what's the point of mentioning that blacks owned slaves?
      3. Considering that the Cherokee sued the state of Georgia in a famous case that went all the way to the supreme court, it seems a bit disingenuous to suggest that Georgia was somehow innocent in the Trail of Tears. The Cherokee obviously didn't think so!
      4. Northern visitors to the South were also appalled by the inhumane treatment of slaves. Many observers also noted that, considering the Southern view of blacks as sub-human and the pervasive fear of miscegenation, there were an alarming number of mixed-race folk.
      I am familiar with the Abbeville Institute. Some of their material is very interesting and even helpful. Some of it is the regurgitation of the same lame talking points the secessionists were using in 1860 and the same bilge the Lost Causers started using in 1866. Handle with care.

    • @garyhendrick4391
      @garyhendrick4391 2 года назад +2

      @GM_Steelhaven Lolololol
      iTs PrOpAgAnDa
      I suppose next you are gonna say The Lost Cause Myth is 100% legit

    • @aaronfleming9426
      @aaronfleming9426 2 года назад +7

      @@kayvan9057 the larger point is that cotton planters were still making huge profits on cotton. And the cotton planters dominated Confederate politics...for example, over half of Mississippi's secession delegates owned at least 10 slaves. So the whole "tariffs are making us poor" doesn't fly any way you cut it.

    • @aaronfleming9426
      @aaronfleming9426 2 года назад +7

      @@kayvan9057 Why was there a Cherokee Confederate general? Well, as you rightly note, issues are never as cut and dried as we might like to think. The Cherokee sued Georgia in 1832 and were removed to Indian Territory by 1838. The Civil War didn't start for another 22 years, Georgia wasn't the sum whole of the Confederacy, and of course the Cherokee rightly had grievances with the Federal government as well as Georgia.
      The Cherokee DID sue Georgia for failing to protect them. And they won. And then Jackson went ahead and drove them out anyway. So plenty of blame to go around.

  • @TrevorDennis100
    @TrevorDennis100 Год назад +128

    As an ex-pat Brit living in New Zealand, most of this was a revelation for me. It was not a subject covered in UK schools when I was a lad. Incredibly interesting.

    • @marilynbables8071
      @marilynbables8071 Год назад +2

      VIVA APPOMATTOX 🧑‍⚖️🇺🇸🎆✅😁

    • @thekingflea2199
      @thekingflea2199 Год назад

      If it wasn’t for UK navel interference we wouldn’t have our state taxes when your king or queen were mad they couldn’t impose their taxes on us in the revolutionary war
      In the initial vote states were 12/13 were confederate states Maine I believe was the odd ball out which happens to be the bordering state of canada which your king/queen stole from us for trying to make our own country thats the only reason we aren’t 💀 thats what caused the revolutionary war to end we’re allies by force technically then you helped the underdog in the civil war making us sorta in debt now all of us in America get taxed “heavy” while politicians sit on stacks and our country feeds yall $$ of course this was all then when the UK was one of the biggest trading spots not now, although we still have the tax issue we just booming trade making the government richer and us poorer

    • @Sun-gs6hq
      @Sun-gs6hq Год назад

      Expat?

    • @particles343
      @particles343 Год назад +2

      @@Sun-gs6hq It means you emigrated to another country. NZ is a different country than the UK, though still in the Commonwealth.

    • @srothbardt
      @srothbardt Год назад +3

      Brit history is really confusing to we Yanks.

  • @mktny6028
    @mktny6028 7 месяцев назад +35

    Best video i have ever seen in 10+ years! Should be shown in every classroom. Its amazing how many people in the US don't understand Gettysburg. Totally enjoyed video!!!! I love history.

    • @I.AM.JUPITER
      @I.AM.JUPITER 6 месяцев назад

      I did not understand Gettysburg until I got older. I am aghast at these soldiers that laid their life for my ancestors and my freedom

    • @USArmyVet25th
      @USArmyVet25th 5 месяцев назад

      Hows that freeing of the slaves workin out for ya now? Not so fuckin good is it?

    • @Bellephrontos
      @Bellephrontos 4 дня назад

      I always thought it was the north that didn't accept the decision of the south and started the war. Actually the south started it at that island?

  • @yuukiyoshizawa7007
    @yuukiyoshizawa7007 2 года назад +54

    l love the way he speaks in such a way l can understand as being a non native English speaker and also being very dramatic in tone, wish more RUclipsrs were like this.

    • @christopherdibble5872
      @christopherdibble5872 2 года назад +1

      So you do understand how meaningful abolishing slavery was and is.

    • @yuukiyoshizawa7007
      @yuukiyoshizawa7007 2 года назад

      @@christopherdibble5872 Yeah? Where do you wanna go with that?

    • @christopherdibble5872
      @christopherdibble5872 2 года назад

      @@yuukiyoshizawa7007 yeah.just like slavery was wrong so what we did to the American Indian was just wrong and unconcivable.

    • @marilynbables8071
      @marilynbables8071 Год назад

      VIVA APPOMATTOX 🇺🇲🧑‍⚖️

    • @Kana-wk4rj
      @Kana-wk4rj 8 месяцев назад

      @christopherdibble5872
      you’re really giving racist undertones xoxo

  • @stevenclancey1947
    @stevenclancey1947 Год назад +63

    This is such a better to tool to use for classrooms rather than words on a textbook. I loved history in high school, but having a video like this would have made it so much more fun for me and others as well.

    • @henrybutchy3242
      @henrybutchy3242 10 месяцев назад +2

      Some people learn better visually, some learn better audibly. It aint right or wrong; it's diff strokescfor diff folks. The only wrong way is not learning.

    • @johnduckworth6868
      @johnduckworth6868 10 месяцев назад

      ⁿ99999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999⁹⁹​@@henrybutchy3242

    • @mrrooster4876
      @mrrooster4876 10 месяцев назад +1

      Well it's extremely inaccurate, so it's not

    • @marionburchett6873
      @marionburchett6873 9 месяцев назад

      ​@@mrrooster4876
      I'm know history buff so please tell how this was inaccurate.

    • @PurpleflashCraps
      @PurpleflashCraps 9 месяцев назад +1

      @@mrrooster4876 It is not inaccurate.

  • @asdeathstalksyou2
    @asdeathstalksyou2 2 года назад +79

    As an American myself I never knew just how deep the history of the civil war ran. Thank you for providing this and other videos that teaches us, in amazing detail of our countries' past.

    • @ShonnMorris
      @ShonnMorris 2 года назад +14

      As a fellow American I feel the same. In school, they never showed the connection between the Civil War and Mexican-American War.

    • @iamaloafofbread8926
      @iamaloafofbread8926 2 года назад

      The conservatives want to erase history and defund the education system and have been for some time now (decades). I'm not surprised you don't know.

    • @Batony
      @Batony 2 года назад +7

      Yes they did. It’s just easier for people to watch videos about it, than read it in books.

    • @AR-qk3mg
      @AR-qk3mg 2 года назад +8

      @@Batony not all school districts teach the same thing

    • @motomike3475
      @motomike3475 2 года назад

      @@AR-qk3mg If you have children, you are abusing them if you send them to any liberal city's schools.

  • @alexhoffee1865
    @alexhoffee1865 3 месяца назад +4

    Think of how many hours of study you’d have to complete to understand what was presented here in 23 minutes. Great job!

  • @georgeherod4252
    @georgeherod4252 Год назад +146

    How can people hate history? It's fascinating. I see it repeating itself.

    • @thadrobinson8343
      @thadrobinson8343 Год назад +27

      Most people aren't very smart.

    • @MegaSandyvagina
      @MegaSandyvagina Год назад

      It's repeating itself because a the wealthy keep doing the same shit over and over to maintain their status quo.

    • @aaronfleming9426
      @aaronfleming9426 Год назад

      @@SecondPlaceSince1865 yes, indeed, let the truth be known! "Our position is thoroughly identified with the institution of slavery-- the greatest material interest of the world. Its labor supplies the product which constitutes by far the largest and most important portions of commerce of the earth. These products are peculiar to the climate verging on the tropical regions, and by an imperious law of nature, none but the black race can bear exposure to the tropical sun. These products have become necessities of the world, and a blow at slavery is a blow at commerce and civilization. That blow has been long aimed at the institution, and was at the point of reaching its consummation. There was no choice left us but submission to the mandates of abolition, or a dissolution of the Union"

    • @steveroberts9222
      @steveroberts9222 Год назад

      Repeating itself? Perhaps - when the communists come for our guns.

    • @brianmanthey562
      @brianmanthey562 Год назад

      History does repeat its self. Look at today's democrats want your guns, control the media, education system of brainwashing , use federal govt to go after political opponents hmm sounds like nazism

  • @Brushy01
    @Brushy01 Год назад +30

    Finally a piece done without two hours of modern demonetization but the facts as they were then and from their perspectives.

    • @repentandbelieveinJesusChrist3
      @repentandbelieveinJesusChrist3 Год назад

      Repent to Jesus Christ “But seek first his kingdom and his righteousness, and all these things will be given to you as well.”
      ‭‭Matthew‬ ‭6‬:‭33‬ ‭NIV‬‬
      T

  • @dynamicmediacurations
    @dynamicmediacurations Год назад +120

    This was incredible. Way better than any boring textbook I read in school. You brought history to life. Bravo 👏🏼

  • @garyvaughn9475
    @garyvaughn9475 7 месяцев назад +10

    this by far the best historical video I have ever watched. so many things between the lines that you could make this video 3 hours long. and I would watch it. my hat is off to you.

  • @scottphelps1776
    @scottphelps1776 Год назад +135

    An interesting side note. During the war some prisoners were given the option of changing sides. One of my ancestors joined the Union. Was captured by the Confederates and chose to fight for them instead of a POW camp. He was then recaptured by the Union and fought for them until the end of the war.

    • @billisham451
      @billisham451 Год назад +7

      My 2nd great grandfather was captured at Little Round Top, Gettysburg, sent to Rock Island POW camp where he signed onto a Union frontier unit. His widow received a Union pension, but was rejected for a Confederate, being classified as a deserter.

    • @thekingflea2199
      @thekingflea2199 Год назад +17

      Sounds like a bunch of traitors to me

    • @Peet_McFly
      @Peet_McFly Год назад +11

      @@thekingflea2199 Well, and if we think about how the US waged wars, fighting only weaker enemys or joing wars only after years of fighting, we are getting a total different picture of this "brave Nation".

    • @thekingflea2199
      @thekingflea2199 Год назад +8

      @@Peet_McFly the brave nation that was 13 little colonies that held their own against the far superior UK who was preying on the weak because America had no millitary 😂😂😂

    • @thekingflea2199
      @thekingflea2199 Год назад

      @@Peet_McFly the US wages war with everyone because we are the superpower whatever side we join is winning

  • @denisdaily7877
    @denisdaily7877 Год назад +29

    How refreshing it is to see/hear a documentary in which the narrator DOES NOT mumble his words. Well done.

    • @magnaman1963
      @magnaman1963 Год назад +5

      or used a robo voice... gawd I hate those robovoice videos

    • @jackswanson8326
      @jackswanson8326 Год назад

      He has an annoying sigh sound at the end of some sentences though.

    • @Efebur
      @Efebur Год назад

      What sort of documentaries do you watch where they mumble their words?

    • @denisdaily7877
      @denisdaily7877 Год назад +1

      The ones where I say that are the ones where people do. Most young narrators swallow the last parts of sentences and never listen to what they produce. Many are good writers; I am spoiled, I was taught to over-pronounce everything in radio training in College. And, I am in a different generation. Thanks for commenting. So few take the time to say anything. Dennis

    • @RobertDixon-di7ru
      @RobertDixon-di7ru 2 месяца назад

      Yea, the way it sounded was much more important than the truth!!!!!!

  • @adrenalinmatt1
    @adrenalinmatt1 Год назад +287

    We need a Part 2!!! Aussie here, I've been learning about the civil war and found this very informative.

    • @thomass6757
      @thomass6757 Год назад +1

      Its a Northern narrative - no real mention of Tariffs or the "American Plan" = a national bank, high protective tariff and "internal improvements" (the federal government spending the money it raised by the tariff which is collected in the South (80%) to pick winners and losers - hint: North wins Canals etc; South loses)

    • @dmmusicmusic
      @dmmusicmusic Год назад +19

      I'm American and from NC (North Carolina) and this is one of the best and most succinct explanations i've seen. A part II would be great if it focused on the effects of the civil war on slavery and manifest destiny on Native Americans- there's aa lot of wicked history there wrapped up in Greed.

    • @johngalt-Princeton
      @johngalt-Princeton Год назад +30

      Technically it was not a "civil war", but rather a war of Northern agression.

    • @My2CentsYall
      @My2CentsYall Год назад

      Slavery was only 1 reason for the war but not the main reason. The NUMBER 1 reason for the war was to preserve the union that and nothing else. NOTICE this version omits the letters to Jefferson Davis where Lincoln said he could agree to free and slave state system as long as the south did not leave the UNION. 2. the southern state was afraid of the growing power of the federal government over states.

    • @kairidon3363
      @kairidon3363 Год назад +1

      @@johngalt-Princeton The South tried to leave the union to keep their slaves. Then the South attacked Fort Sumter. The South started it and the North won.

  • @daviddesmond2143
    @daviddesmond2143 10 месяцев назад +11

    Excellent video. I wish i could have seen this in 1962 when in USA grade school we studdied the Civil War. I do not recall them discussing what led to the cause of this terrible war. ALSO, THE bACKGROUND MUSIC TO THIS VIDEO IS AMAZING AND COMPLIMENTED THE NARRATION. YOU DESERVE AN AWARD FOR THAT!

    • @scottemory1470
      @scottemory1470 8 месяцев назад

      Despite what they say, this is what we were taught prior to desegregation and bussing.

    • @RobertDixon-di7ru
      @RobertDixon-di7ru 2 месяца назад

      Terrible video. Do you believe the lies this clown told too?

  • @mikeyslots_
    @mikeyslots_ Год назад +564

    Rarely do I ever go to the comments to applaud a video, but this was phenomenal. Extremely engaging, the effects, the music, the tone of the narrator and all the history well put together and flowed perfectly. Great video. Earned a subscriber, please do a part 2 if you haven't, I'ma go check if you do or not

    • @mikeyslots_
      @mikeyslots_ Год назад +7

      Damn it

    • @Mrjasinek1
      @Mrjasinek1 Год назад +3

      very impressive... if it was true... It is amazing how children in 2022 explain how the things were happening in 1822 just as little as 400 (four hundred) years ago... Great... Keep going. I believe that these children would have created much better Constitution of the USA and free all the slaves back in 1774 and avoid this Civil War altogether... and we will pay retribution to all the slaves anyway... just for the hack of it... 400 years later...

    • @jimmyangel4120
      @jimmyangel4120 Год назад +5

      That all sounds good…. If the story is true

    • @berserko2008
      @berserko2008 Год назад +13

      @@Mrjasinek1 Abraham Lincoln was a "good ol' man"......... good ol' honest Abe didn't GAF about the freedom of slaves......... just see what Louis Farrikhan said about President Lincoln.........

    • @redskywalker3374
      @redskywalker3374 Год назад +1

      NYC had a slave market & Northern Generals even owned slaves

  • @richaunfacey5447
    @richaunfacey5447 Год назад +27

    All I can say is WOW! This was so well done. This page should be the new way we teach history. Great job people.

  • @WillieParker-z7i
    @WillieParker-z7i 9 месяцев назад +9

    As a Brit who's lived in the US for over 40 years this presentation is the first time I've ever understood the contextual circumstances that caused the Civil War (other than the American Revolution and its connection to the Somerset Case in 1771), much appreciated .

    • @Muhammads_pork_chops
      @Muhammads_pork_chops 3 месяца назад

      How did you do it?
      I was itching for blighty after a fortnight.

  • @jaymantisgaming
    @jaymantisgaming Год назад +23

    that Dred Scott case would make one HELL of a movie. like, a racial historical period courtroom drama

    • @John-fr6ze
      @John-fr6ze Год назад +1

      Yes it would make a great movie! Dred Scott changed everything. The Democrats argued that only white people could be protected by constitution. Chief Justice Roger Taney conspired with presidents and senators to nationalize negro slavery through the Supreme Court.

  • @cd1690
    @cd1690 Год назад +35

    I'm British and found this exceptionally interesting and informative. I'm motivated to find out much more of American history!

    • @MexicoTijuana741
      @MexicoTijuana741 Год назад

      Regardless now the Mexicans are the slaves working all the fields of the US

    • @brandonbp122
      @brandonbp122 Год назад

      The US schools teach that Abe Lincoln was a great president and that the Civil War was about slavery. What a shame that our US schools are such a scam. Lincoln imprisoned thousands of journalists and slavery didn't enter into the fray until way after the war had kicked off. The US schools teach white guilt. And that every minority is a victim. What a shame that American students aren't taught the truth.

    • @MexicoTijuana741
      @MexicoTijuana741 Год назад

      @Mandie Shumway There is a lot of shit In history that is pathetic too. How many Jews did Hitler kill like 10 million

    • @FinkleisEinhorn52
      @FinkleisEinhorn52 Год назад

      @Mandie Shumway totally. America was the only place w a history of slavery

    • @williamanderson2326
      @williamanderson2326 Год назад

      @Mandie Shumway Most people’s countries have a sordid history

  • @Thescienceguy-a
    @Thescienceguy-a 2 года назад +41

    The history videos you make are amazing. So so much better than any detailed long documentaries that are not even available for free.

  • @aldasilva8847
    @aldasilva8847 10 месяцев назад +5

    Thank you for this refresher summary. It's been 60 years since I studied this in school

    • @eiriksinclair5986
      @eiriksinclair5986 Месяц назад

      You people are like children, you have no idea what you are talking about! The Federated States of America started in 1040AD, they militarized the Celtic Indian tribes to wipe out the Vikingar (Cretan Guard) who had been in America since 1200BC. The Great Schism happened in 1054AD, the Vikings were wiped out by 1066AD. The Franciscan Movement into America happened in 1201AD with the St. Clare Expedition at the mouth of the St. Lawrence River. The Phoenicians of the Appalachians who had been in America since 261BC after the fall of Carthage rebelled. The Orion Armistice with the Heads & Tails Accord created the Confederate States of America in 1255AD. Let's open up this debate, and get even more controversial. In 1307AD it was all out war, with the Templar Knights making beachhead at Boston in 1309AD. The Plague hit in 1347AD. The Scottish Rite brought the Templar to the Mountain of Rushmoor in 1362AD for the Last Stand. These three Sinclair Expeditions created the Aztec warriors who fought the Mongols by the Volga River in 1325AD, and Inca warriors who were sent to the Caucassus Mountains in 1438AD. It is the Grecco-Roman War, the Aesir-Vanir War, the Western Roman Empire vs. the Eastern Roman Empire. Slavery was a tool to get rid of lazy white people who had gotten fat. The Union had more plantations than the south. After the Civil War, the Union army went to South Africa and took out the German controlled regime. That started WW1 & 2. Only idiots cry about slavery as the cause, you are uninformed. This is a social cast system designed to force Titan white people to mix with Gold Coast tribespeople from Egypt (500BC from Ethiopia) to pass on intelligence to a new cast of people. It is the story of the Minotaur. Primordials replaced by the Titans, who were replaced by the Olympians, who were replaced by the Troians, who were replaced by the Ionians, who were replaced by the Hellenes who sent Rheingold Maidens to America in the Ptolemaic Era of Egypt to create American Indians. Geez, read a book or something.

  • @RollTide1987
    @RollTide1987 Год назад +104

    Just a couple of quick corrections: Robert E. Lee was not a general until 1861. At the outbreak of the Mexican-American War, he held the rank of Captain and was a Lieutenant Colonel at Harpers Ferry. Same thing with Grant. Grant was not a general at the time of the Mexican-American War, he was a Second Lieutenant at the outbreak of the conflict.

    • @nbawinningtips
      @nbawinningtips Год назад

      who gives a shit

    • @JustLikeHeaven77
      @JustLikeHeaven77 Год назад +8

      Also, the south was not dependent on free labor. There were just a few Plantation owners who wanted to be rich and had pocketed politicians. There were many independent farmers making an honest living.

    • @garrystone561
      @garrystone561 Год назад

      And Grant was disgusted by this unjust war.

    • @godfather92370
      @godfather92370 Год назад

      ​@@JustLikeHeaven77please do more research. Whataboutism never looks good in any way. Here is the truth
      Slavery was so profitable, it sprouted more millionaires per capita in the Mississippi River valley than anywhere in the nation. With cash crops of tobacco, cotton and sugar cane, America's southern states became the economic engine of the burgeoning nation. Their fuel of choice? Human slavery.Mar 6, 2018

    • @cind9493
      @cind9493 10 месяцев назад +3

      This guy doesn't care about actual facts...😂😂

  • @grking01
    @grking01 2 года назад +53

    I spent months in school learning this. Being a visual learner, i felt more clear learning from this than all the reading in school.

    • @jamescook6564
      @jamescook6564 2 года назад +8

      Well you probably made the correct decision. All they teach in school now is how to argue over what gender you are.

    • @whatthetech7647
      @whatthetech7647 2 года назад

      Learning styles aren't real

    • @whatthetech7647
      @whatthetech7647 2 года назад +3

      @@jamescook6564 .... get back to your street corner with your cardboard sign yelling about how the world is ending

    • @jamescook6564
      @jamescook6564 2 года назад +2

      @@whatthetech7647 I can see you're part of the problem.

    • @grking01
      @grking01 2 года назад +2

      @@whatthetech7647 I beg to differ, may I have your source, please? Do you also believe the earth is flat and not round? (Yes, I am questioning your intelligence.)

  • @atbattson
    @atbattson 2 года назад +34

    the most clean and simple, yet comprehensive, civil war build up explanation I have found. Thanks for helping me understand it better.

  • @mohamedmohamed-kc8yb
    @mohamedmohamed-kc8yb 3 месяца назад

    The storytelling in this ancient history documentary is top-notch! It really makes the ancient world feel alive and relevant today.

  • @iamsandeep
    @iamsandeep Год назад +142

    This definitely needs a part 2. Extremely engaging and worth translating in as many other languages as possible as the world needs to understand the history of one of the strongest nations and how it came to be. Good job.

    • @victorherreraguzman5014
      @victorherreraguzman5014 Год назад +2

      I would offer to do it in Spanish, without a problem

    • @iamsandeep
      @iamsandeep Год назад +2

      @@victorherreraguzman5014 I am not sure how well it will come out but I can help with the Bengali and Hindi. 2 of the major language of the Indian subcontinent. If it helps.

    • @MD-tu3dp
      @MD-tu3dp Год назад +4

      Part 2 ~ rough timeline of the release date?

    • @skillcoiler
      @skillcoiler Год назад +1

      Maybe in part 2 he could stop talking bullshit lost cause myth.....

    • @theshlongdoctor
      @theshlongdoctor Год назад +1

      @@skillcoiler Where does he mention anything relating to the lost cause myth?

  • @techman2471
    @techman2471 2 года назад +45

    Great unbiased synopsis of what transpired antebellum and the start of secession. Remember, we must learn from history here and not to repeat it.

    • @mr.patriotjol
      @mr.patriotjol 2 года назад +13

      unfortunately, due to certain situations, the current climate is leading to a divide nation.

    • @TimDyck
      @TimDyck 2 года назад +7

      Those who study history are doomed to watch history be repeated by those who are ignorant to history.
      We can see a lot of the division in today's society mimic the divisions that tore apart past societies. The issues may not be the same but the effects of division may well end up being the same if we cannot reunite society.

    • @garyhendrick4391
      @garyhendrick4391 2 года назад +1

      The biggest obstacle to that, is that the Confederates went in to damage limitation after the war and tried to sanitize their reasons for fighting in the first place. "Oh no it wasn't about slavery, it was about "states rights". These idiots in the south today who glorify the slave owners rebellion have swallowed The Lost Cause Myth hook line and sinker. Once these falsehoods are finally buried, we can all move on

    • @techman2471
      @techman2471 2 года назад +1

      @@mr.patriotjol agreed!

    • @alderstifen7738
      @alderstifen7738 2 года назад

      @@TimDyck The issues are of the fallout of the civil war, sparked by capitalist coporations who get off on the partisan conflict. I'm worried for my southern neighbour.

  • @wiseone1013
    @wiseone1013 2 года назад +133

    Many things in current times are explained by events of the past. American history is fascinating and looking forward to learn more on their civil war. It seems the war was inevitable and even necessary but it also caused a lot of damage to the unity of its people.

    • @rypatmackrock
      @rypatmackrock 2 года назад +5

      And if you read Colin Woodard‘s American nations and American character, he bluntly stated in an interview “We’ve always been this way!”

    • @shock_n_Aweful
      @shock_n_Aweful 2 года назад +1

      As terrible as it was, it was necessary. I think we have again reached that same crossroads with the Republicans turning into a fascist cult bent on overthrow of democracy.

    • @rypatmackrock
      @rypatmackrock 2 года назад +8

      @@shock_n_Aweful largely brought in part by the southern strategy for the past half century, neoliberalism or Reaganomics, the rise of Trump, and many other issues indeed.

    • @johnbeechy
      @johnbeechy 2 года назад

      at the time of the outbreak of the civil war, Only 3% of the white men in the Southern Usa owned slaves
      that means 97% (rest of the white male pop) were piss poor farmers there was not much manufacturing, not much tourism, or service sector in the South.
      Any time two economic Masters bump into the Present of a Day and date, then they learn how little they know about business models.
      the majority of the white in the South were enslaved to the whims of a few white men.
      slavers do not allow their slaves to use tools, much. for the tools might end the enslavement /
      Note: the Hebrews of the Bible, out of Egypt with moses in charge, had slaves the Hs were not known as slaves of Egypt, rather 'paid laborers'.
      slavery is not banned, rather used to push the leftovers from 'bad economic zones where overbreeding occurs'.
      or
      where wars happen and the leftovers prefer to be a slave, over being dead their choice
      Jesus was dark skinned, so enslaving blacks might seem stupid. God spoke thru the blacks before speaking thru Joan of Arc.
      not one white man has HEARD (not an amber alert) the words except in C Heston's voice. lol so enslaving the skin tone of JC might piss off God, u think?
      the economic model of owning a human is too High vs the setting them free to work for other shareholders
      shareholders have learned to allow the slaves to move from Job 3:14, to another and another all the while the wages remain lower than the actual cost of enslaving, housing, hiring men to wipe them, rape them and keep them in line. too much cost
      so the Southern States now use low wages to enslave their slaves and it works the few shareholders r well maintained, just like in the Pre Civil war days
      myop dumb asses should not be Bloodlined into wealth they should have to pass a business model test and learn the proper methods of making more Profits // slavery is not banned by the Bible, but only a dumb white man would enslave a Black Fellow (kkknowing Jesus, Son of God, was in deed not a white bread)! better to enslave the white skinned humans JUST Like Rome did than waste time playing small g god and pissing off the 1 God //
      the atheists will always hate Jesus for Commanding all toe RENDER on to Caesar as per the Constitution's Article 1 S 8 P1, words written by white men.
      He whom be a dumb white of the inability to read, shall be called Kiffur. and shall be read into the words of the White Founder!
      Dumb whites are never going to unify under the white Founder's words, because the dumb white men do not read the words, and if they did, they would admit to hating the white Founder's words! they r the Kiffurs, by their low wage acceptance it has not a THING to do with their skn tone.

    • @shock_n_Aweful
      @shock_n_Aweful 2 года назад

      @@rypatmackrock oh yea this has been brewing for a long time and it definitely started with the southern strategy. Them cuddling up to the religious right and feeding their voters on hate and fear of the other came long before Dump. He is a symptom of the disease not that cause. I don't really see a path for them to turn that around either, deprograming someone out of a cult is possible but extremely difficult and more likely to fail than succeed. Doing that with 30 million people is not a reasonable expectation. We have to prepare for a steady increase of mass shootings and other terrorist activity from them. The leadership knows they cannot win legally and once the people on the ground accept that they will turn to more violence.

  • @grimdiannabones4361
    @grimdiannabones4361 4 месяца назад +17

    When brother fights brother theres never a winner

  • @rc59191
    @rc59191 2 года назад +45

    Also a slight nitpick the Confederate State's didn't fail to industrialize once they shifted their economy into a war time one they became one of the largest industrial powers in the world right behind the United States, Britain, and France. They were cranking out cannons and ironclad warships without much issue not to mention Atlanta was known as the workshop of the Confederacy.

    • @aaronfleming9426
      @aaronfleming9426 2 года назад +5

      I read your comment and thought, "No, that's not right," but I googled some stats on Confederate cannon production and lo and behold, it was much higher than I imagined. Thanks for the comment!
      I would note that although the Confederacy did produce a number of iron clads, it was never enough in the same place at the same time, and thus never made a substantive difference. They probably would have been much better off producing locomotives instead. Hindsight is 20/20 though.

    • @davidrice3337
      @davidrice3337 2 года назад

      @Sam Doe first of all , without Spain and Germany and France the South would not have been able to do this - Thankfully Lincoln put Grant in charge or english may not be our first language - having said this , a few very wealthy people used propaganda and pushed a false narrative in order to garner support - the average Reb wasn't defending slavery - they didn't have the resources to even think about the concept - they were fighting for their home + again , this was because of the false narrative - sound familiar ? It was a different time - impossible to judge those unless you are a narcisstic piece of shit who doesn't have a clue about our true history -

    • @Mister3Pac
      @Mister3Pac 2 года назад +1

      @Sam Doe well, war does change things

    • @rc59191
      @rc59191 2 года назад +1

      @@aaronfleming9426 you're welcome ya you're right about the ironclads it's still pretty impressive though considering not that long ago they were entirely an agricultural society.

    • @rc59191
      @rc59191 2 года назад +1

      @Sam Doe what do you mean your forced labour away? My family all fought for the Union and I'm a Sons of Union Veterans member.

  • @NiTRoSVK
    @NiTRoSVK Год назад +67

    I don't recall being taught much about American history here in Slovakia, this was very informative and I finally have at least an idea on what civil war really was. Will there be part two ?

    • @hockeyislife2
      @hockeyislife2 Год назад

      @@1noduncledude what the fuck?

    • @zbt62
      @zbt62 Год назад +6

      No offence but why do u care as a slovakian

    • @NiTRoSVK
      @NiTRoSVK Год назад +33

      @@zbt62 US media dominates the world, most of the music, podcasts, tv shows, movies, video games, etc. are either made in or centered around America
      sometimes the civil war was mentioned in said media, yet I had very little idea about what was really going on at the time (and it is not THAT distant past either). I felt like I should really educate myself about the events, and this video was very helpful.

    • @kennybachman35
      @kennybachman35 Год назад +24

      @@zbt62it’s called intelligence. Knowledge is power.

    • @younassidrissi2429
      @younassidrissi2429 Год назад +3

      ​@@zbt62 we Europeans care as much as you Americans care about world domination and spreading democracy 😂

  • @dharuacharya
    @dharuacharya Год назад +27

    I haven't even looked at your other videos but if they are a half as good as this, you have won me over. Instant subscribe just based on this video. Thanks for all your hard work and research. Well done mate.

  • @BethanyWooton
    @BethanyWooton 9 месяцев назад +6

    This was an absolute masterpiece of a video. Subscribed

  • @denniseudela411
    @denniseudela411 2 года назад +45

    This presentation would easily defeat the cumbersome reading of history books and will be retained much better due to audio-video graphics.
    Thanks so so much!
    Eagerly awaiting the Concluding Part 2.

    • @jds6206
      @jds6206 Год назад +5

      What makes you think "this presentation" is entirely true and not without bias?

    • @denniseudela411
      @denniseudela411 Год назад +1

      @jds6206
      I don't care.
      As long as i got the basic idea that's what's important.
      Any argument about it, I won't pay much attention.
      Why?
      Coz it's history as in HISTORY not only in terms of time but in terms of RELEVANCE.
      If you want to get to the nitty gritty of things, that's your call and not my concern.
      The general idea & concept of the events is what's important as far as I'm concerned.

    • @timmayeaux2743
      @timmayeaux2743 Год назад

      it did not mention all the constitutional abuses that Lincoln committed. He first used the Patriot Act, had people arrested and never charged. G W Bush is the one who put IT into law. Just ask the J6 people. history repeats itself

    • @denniseudela411
      @denniseudela411 Год назад

      @knowledgiagiveaway
      Hehe... Cool.
      How do I get to you in Telegram, sir.

    • @denniseudela411
      @denniseudela411 Год назад

      @knowledgiagiveaway
      Thanks!

  • @brooks3racing1
    @brooks3racing1 Год назад +36

    I with my social studies class in Canada had videos like this. I would’ve actually paid attention. Great job.

    • @jimmyfumbanks6081
      @jimmyfumbanks6081 Год назад

      This is Propeganda, The US Schools have been taken over by Communist that are stirring up Racism. Read a History Book if they havent burnt them all . Not a BS text book.

    • @samus4040
      @samus4040 Год назад

      🇨🇦🤝

    • @robrussell5329
      @robrussell5329 Год назад

      We in the U. S. never had them either. Just boring textbooks with a few maps. And I'll bet the textbooks in the South may be different than the textbooks in the North. The conflict continues to this day.

  • @cloric1
    @cloric1 Год назад +18

    As a non American this was fantastic,
    I appreciated the continuity of the map so you can actually see what was happening and where as the scale of the U.S can make it difficult to grasp what was where.

    • @aniya8759
      @aniya8759 Год назад

      Kentucky wasn't the south.

    • @speedy01247
      @speedy01247 11 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@aniya8759it was a slave state, that's what it was showing. (Maryland and Delaware as well)

  • @lawrencelako3078
    @lawrencelako3078 3 месяца назад +4

    Thanks for video... Well presented ❤

  • @shahareffendiaazizi5360
    @shahareffendiaazizi5360 Год назад +13

    I hv many books on the Civil War and many topics have been written on it especially on why it came about. But somehow your video was very clear and makes me fully understood why it happened. Kudos!!

  • @wtripley
    @wtripley 2 года назад +67

    I just finished a class that covered all of these topics, and honestly this is a really great summary. The only mistake I saw was the Mexican Cession also included the later Gadsden Purchase, but everything else seemed really well done. I would also mention that the South’s 9 million inhabitants included millions of enslaved people, from whom they could not recruit. By the end of the conflict, the percentage of white men who were forced into the confederate army was 80%… mind blowingly high

    • @motomike3475
      @motomike3475 2 года назад +15

      Towards the end of the war, black slaves actually did fight on the side of south. Sure, very few, but woke history doesn't like that idea, instead insisting that any new Viking movie must have black actors in them, like History's Vikings last season (their worst of course) where they put not only a woman but a black women as chief of Viking Kattegut fort/town. Needless to say, this idiocy put an end to an othewise good series.
      Next we'll see shows where blacks were really great chiefs of most of the plains indian tribes...

    • @Hideyoshi1991
      @Hideyoshi1991 2 года назад +29

      @@motomike3475 the only black slaves I know of who "served" in the confederate army were laborers, cooks, musicians, and so on. They were not armed or given uniforms, and very very few of them were paid. The Confederates wouldn't even allow the Louisiana native guard to fight in the war, even in the very end they only allowed slaves to enlist and "earn" their freedom if their masters would allow it.

    • @toddnolastname4485
      @toddnolastname4485 2 года назад +1

      And after so many deaths, General Lee and President Davis weren't executed for their crimes against the nation. And the Democrat party wasn't immediately abolished. They managed to spend the next 100 years trying to keep black people (and women of all colors) from voting. And then suddenly overnight, apparently in the 60s, they became the party of women and colored?

    • @aaronkuhlman1392
      @aaronkuhlman1392 2 года назад +25

      @@motomike3475 No black man ever formally served as a Confederate soldier on the battlefield. If you believe otherwise, please provide the man's rank, name, and unit.

    • @maninredhelm
      @maninredhelm 2 года назад +27

      @@motomike3475 I don't know why people bother arguing over this. It was illegal for blacks to serve as soldiers in the Confederate army until out of desperation they changed the law in the last 3 weeks of the war, too late to have any impact. But let's say for the sake of argument they had recruited them from the very beginning. Sure, they would have found some dupes to sign up. So what? People fight for causes against their own best interests all the time. It's happened in every recent US election, on both sides. You drag some poor soul off a plantation who was never even taught to read, convince him that firing a rifle is more fun than picking cotton, and now suddenly the South's cause is validated? It's ridiculous.

  • @positive8373
    @positive8373 Год назад +8

    This is the type of "good-info" that young adults and adults can turn to again and again to review the beginnings of the bloodiest war ever fought on US soil. Don't let the revisionists change how it came to be. Good Job!

    • @marilynbables8071
      @marilynbables8071 Год назад

      VIVA APPOMATTOX 🧑‍⚖️🇺🇸🎆✅😁✝️

  • @LuisDiaz-qy7wt
    @LuisDiaz-qy7wt 8 месяцев назад +4

    Excellent video! Definitely looking forward to part 2

  • @andrewbowles65
    @andrewbowles65 Год назад +18

    The reason this video exists is because school is daycare now

  • @shawnv123
    @shawnv123 2 года назад +7

    i like how the video ends with “the civil war had begun” chilling

  • @Angiie884
    @Angiie884 2 года назад +7

    Babe wake up, Knowledgia just uploaded!

  • @suekelley2109
    @suekelley2109 Год назад +18

    I'm a history buff (I actually minored in it almost by accident) and American Civil War is my specialty area but I've never seen such a thorough but understandable video on this complicated topic. Thank you.

    • @snoodydoody2685
      @snoodydoody2685 Год назад +1

      Then you arent a history buff. Go watch one nation under God by David Barton. America's history is Godly, not secular.

    • @suekelley2109
      @suekelley2109 Год назад +3

      @@snoodydoody2685 possibly you should go read the first amendment to the Constitution of the US. The Founding Fathers specifically stated the US might be “under God” but the government is not to be a religious one

    • @snoodydoody2685
      @snoodydoody2685 Год назад +1

      @@suekelley2109 So again, you arent a history buff, because thats not what it says lololol

    • @suekelley2109
      @suekelley2109 Год назад

      @@snoodydoody2685 and I am and have the degree to prove it 😁

    • @snoodydoody2685
      @snoodydoody2685 Год назад

      @@suekelley2109 Anyone can get a degree, thats not even that hard to do. That doesn't mean you know anything. A head full of knowledge is not a head full of truth. You might want to go relearn your history and go look at what the US constitution and the Declaration of Independence say my dear. Because you don't know what you're talking about. And it shows. I would bet money you don't have a degree in American History. I bet you have a degree in revisionism.

  • @Tessa-Morgan
    @Tessa-Morgan 10 месяцев назад +1

    This was excellent, I recently visited the Civil War Museum (renamed from the Confederate Civil War museum) in New Orleans. This video cleared up a lot of what I may have missed while walking through the museum. I also have read a few book s on the Civil War but this brought it home, great video.

  • @ajx2956
    @ajx2956 Год назад +29

    Please do part 2. I love the way you cover this topic, I read so much of the civil war in the past and your video definitely makes it more fun to learn about it.

  • @lalochivafan
    @lalochivafan Год назад +7

    Hold on a minute…yes Polk was looking for any excuse to declare war on Mexico however the Mexican American war was inevitable since Mexico never recognized Texan independence. Under practices at the time, it was against the “rules of war” to make a foreign leader sign any treaty under duress, which was exactly what Mexico considered Santa Anna to be under when he surrendered in San Jacinto. The proper formal delegations of both countries (Texas and Mexico) never met to discuss terms of surrender and instead forced Santa Anna to make promises he didn’t have the authority to make. Later when USA annexed Texas (which Mexico still claimed similar to China and Taiwan today) it angered Mexico and the political ambience was tense to say the least. It was inevitable for Mexico to try and reclaim Texas. So yes, Polk did look for the excuse however, it wasn’t just the US that looked for the fight. Mexico wanted it too. I’m a Mexican born in Mexico and has lived in Texas since 2002. I’ve studied both sides of history here and this is what seems to be the most complete picture.

    • @aaronfleming9426
      @aaronfleming9426 Год назад

      Do you think Mexico would have eventually declared war on the United States to try to reclaim Texas?
      I think Guatemala/Belize might be a better analogy than China/Taiwan. Guatemala knows they'll never get Belize back, though it remains a convenient political red herring. Santa Anna and others might have talked tough about Texas, but surely they would have known they weren't getting it back???

    • @lalochivafan
      @lalochivafan Год назад +1

      @@aaronfleming9426 To answer your question: Absolutely! It’s kind of difficult to imagine a country with the military prowess that Mexico has declaring war on the most powerful nation. However this wasn’t the case back then. The USA was not the global superpower that it is today. They were a powerful nation in the midst of industrialization but compared to European powers, it’s military lacked in strength. In fact, it wasn’t until the civil war where the American military was competitive in terms of strength. The only reason why big stick diplomacy worked was because of the logistics involved for the European powers to wage war across the ocean. It wasn’t until WW1 and WW2 where the US militarized and got up on the global stage as the super power of the world. We also have to remember that Texas’ territorial claims were so big that even Mexico (who was a larger country than the US at the time) had difficulty controlling and taming the land and it’s inhabitants. So to sum it all up, the Mexican government didn’t view the American government as powerful and they thought the USA would not be able to defend the newly annexed Texas and her territorial claims. For the longest time the viewpoint in Mexico was that we would take back Texas eventually (internal disputes kept kicking the can down the road) however as the US kept industrializing and growing as en economic prowess, the belief that we would retake Texas was slowly waning. It was however still popular opinion that Mexico would call forth her sons to defend itself to what was viewed as American expansionism.

    • @aaronfleming9426
      @aaronfleming9426 Год назад +1

      @@lalochivafan I certainly agree that Mexicans were right to be concerned about American aggression. We have rarely treated our southern neighbor fairly. I can't agree that retaking Texas was ever a rational goal, though...the war of 1846-48 was lopsided and decisive even though it was well before the USA's emergence as a super power.

    • @davestang5454
      @davestang5454 Год назад

      I would not consider the U.S. and Mexico historically to be like China and Taiwan. Very different situations. As for Santa Anna, he was given mercy when many would have hanged him on the spot.

  • @PickleRick65
    @PickleRick65 Год назад +12

    I appreciate the careful wording. Well done.

  • @jardennis4nd
    @jardennis4nd 6 месяцев назад +3

    Wow. This was thorough. Respect.

  • @deteon1418
    @deteon1418 2 года назад +23

    Excellent video. Quality is very nice and the topic is well explained! 👍
    Best one so far, can't wait for the rest!

  • @Mike-lh4wn
    @Mike-lh4wn 2 года назад +82

    This was very well done. I was looking for Part 2...but notice this was just released three days ago. So looking forward to find out what happens next. : )
    I probably learned more about the civil war in 23 minutes than I had in all of high school and two semesters of college history. Nicely done.

    • @a.grimes4202
      @a.grimes4202 2 года назад +9

      *SPOILERS:* The Union wins.

    • @victorperez2939
      @victorperez2939 2 года назад +1

      The exact same thing happened to me. Great content and great delivery.

    • @grenadenazi
      @grenadenazi 2 года назад +1

      Great delivery. Not accurate maps or info.

    • @I.Odnamra
      @I.Odnamra 2 года назад +1

      I believe Amazon has a pretty good documentary that is super informative about the eras before during and after the civil war. Forgot the name of it but definitely look into it if you'd like to be properly educated.

    • @LilBipper
      @LilBipper 2 года назад

      Next one 😭😭😭

  • @d.edwardmeade3683
    @d.edwardmeade3683 10 месяцев назад +2

    Excellent video. I enjoyed this very much. Just want to point out a small detail in the narrative @19:50 ...Robert E. Lee was a Colonel of the U.S. Army when he led the militia force to stop the raid on Harpers Ferry. He would go on to resign the U.S. Army when Secession began to take place and become a General for the Confederate Army of Northern Virginia.

  • @AlxndrHQ
    @AlxndrHQ 2 года назад +26

    Great job! Definitely looking forward to part 2!

  • @ken2tou
    @ken2tou 2 года назад +16

    I’ve studied the war between the States deeply for nearly 45 years. This is a fairly accurate assessment. Thank you.
    I had family on both sides of the conflict. My fathers side were Germans who emigrated in 1853. They enlisted in the Indiana Infantry when called upon.
    My Mothers side has been in this country since 1635 and being from (at that time)
    Missouri, were southern sympathizers. They moved to Tyler Texas, where my 2G Grandfather (Cpt Steven Carter Ragan) formed a Calvary unit that fought many battles, including the Siege of Vicksburg, Chickamauga, Battle of Atlanta to Mobile, AL, upon the end of hostilities, then they went home to farm their crops. Steven was next a two term State Senator and later Undersheriff of Kansas City MO.

    • @MGTOWPaladin
      @MGTOWPaladin 2 года назад +1

      As famed radio announcer, Paul Harvey, used to say.... and now, The Rest of the Story!
      Lincoln was pro-secession as a lawyer elected to Congress.
      Abraham Lincoln, US Congressman, 12 January 1848 on the floor of the US House of Representatives:
      "Any people anywhere, being inclined and having the power, have the right to rise up, and shake off the existing government, and for a new one that suits them better. *THIS IS A MOST VALUABLE, - A MOST SACRED RIGHT - a RIGHT,* which we hope and believe, is to liberate the world. Nor is this right confined to cases in which the whole people of an existing government, may choose to exercise it."
      Lincoln would not leave Ft Sumter because he wanted REVENUE TAX MONEY!
      Lincoln's Presidential Proclamation NO. 81, April 19 1861, five days after the Union evacuation of Ft Sumter.
      "Whereas an insurrection against the Government of the United States has broken out in the States of South Carolina, Georgia, Alabama, Florida, Mississippi, Louisiana, and Texas, and the laws of the United States *FOR THE COLLECTION OF THE REVENUE (TAX MONEY)* can not be effectually executed therein conformably to that provision of the Constitution *WHICH REQUIRES DUTIES (REVENUE TAX MONEY) TO BE UNIFORM THROUGHOUT THE UNITED STATES;* ......"
      Lincoln's Presidential Proclamation NO. 82, April 27 1861 (after more Southern States secede due to the Union invasion of Ft Sumter)
      "Whereas since that date public property of the United States has been seized, *THE COLLECTION OF THE REVENUE (TAX MONEY) OBSTRUCTED,* and......"
      Crittenden-Johnson Resolution issued by the US House of Representatives, 25 July, 1861 (four days after the defeat of the invading US Army at Manassas, VA "Bull Run").
      "Resolved by the House of Representatives of the Congress of the United States, That the present deplorable civil war has been forced upon the country by the disunionists of the Southern States now in revolt against the constitutional Government and in arms around the capital; that in this national emergency Congress, banishing all feelings of mere passion or resentment, *WILL RECOLLECT ONLY ITS DUTY (REVENUE TAX MONEY) TO THE WHOLE COUNTRY;* that this war is not waged upon our part in any spirit of oppression, nor for any purpose of conquest or subjugation, *NOR PURPOSE OF OVERTHROWING OR INTERFERING WITH THE RIGHTS OR ESTABLISHED "INSTITUTIONS" (such as slavery) OF THOSE STATES,* but to defend and maintain the supremacy of the Constitution and to *PRESERVE THE UNION (TREASURY),* with all the dignity, equality, and rights of the several States unimpaired; and that as soon as these objects are accomplished the war ought to cease.
      WHY NOT LET THE SOUTH LEGALLY SECEDE?
      The Confederate States of America (1861-1865) started with an agrarian-based economy that relied heavily on slave-worked plantations for the production of cotton for export to Europe. *IF CLASSED AS AN INDEPENDENT COUNTRY,* the area of the Confederate States would have ranked as the *FOURTH-RICHEST COUNTRY OF THE WORLD IN 1860."* (Wikipedia: Economy of the Confederate States of America).
      English author, Charles Dickens, author of A Christmas Carol and Oliver Twist:
      "The Northern onslaught upon slavery was no more than a piece of specious humbug designed to conceal its desire for 'ECONOMIC CONTROL* (cotton and other raw materials) of the Southern states." (Google: Charles Dickens, piece of specious humbug).
      Dickens owned a magazine called All the Year Round. In it, an article attacked the tariff . “…under all the passion of the parties and the cries of battle lie the two chief moving causes of the struggle,” it said. “Union means so many millions a year lost to the South; *SECESSION MEANS THE LOSS OF THE SAME MILLIONS TO THE NORTH. The love of money is the root of this, as of many other evils…”

    • @TheOnlyOneStanding8079
      @TheOnlyOneStanding8079 2 года назад +3

      Wow that's great story in itself...😎👍

    • @christopherdibble5872
      @christopherdibble5872 2 года назад +2

      With all that studying I hope you agree, SLAVERY was the greatest lesson.

    • @cmichaelhoover8432
      @cmichaelhoover8432 2 года назад +3

      @@christopherdibble5872 Actually, NOT. Slavery was the token for "states rights", the desire of the South to maintain their independence and rural agrarian way of life. The recent (1840-1861 improvements to the cotton gin had reduced by 80% the number of workers (slaves) required to remove the seeds from cotton, thus reducing the need for slaves. Had this trend been allowed to continue unfettered, slavery would have ended in the South without the "unfortunate war of Northern aggression". Certainly, not in 1864, but, even Southerners knew that they didn't need to feed, and clothe slaves that weren't making them money!

    • @coyoteodie4458
      @coyoteodie4458 2 года назад

      Ken, if you have more to tell I would certainly love to read it!!

  • @MatAK49
    @MatAK49 Год назад +210

    In high school, I learned as much as I could about our Civil War. This short video explained alot, filling in the missing pieces such as the Dred Scott case.
    Well done on this video as I'm adding you to my subscriber list!

    • @glideronthemoon
      @glideronthemoon Год назад +7

      Lol maybe read a few books instead, especially ones about who the southern elites were and the view of slavery by the common people.

    • @scotmandel6699
      @scotmandel6699 Год назад +6

      @@glideronthemoon well they didn't teach us about XXXX in school is a common and totally lame excuse.
      go to library, check out book, read, learn.

    • @toodjackson4438
      @toodjackson4438 Год назад +2

      @@glideronthemoon yeah are you kidding they don't want to teach this in school

    • @TheMrSuge
      @TheMrSuge Год назад +6

      Your high school didn't teach the Dred Scott case ?
      I think I see the problem here ...

    • @briannovak7651
      @briannovak7651 Год назад

      Not hearing about dredd Scott makes me assume you were educated in the south. Is this correct? Not trying to be rude or anything but I learned that name in grade school (by age 14not sure how early I heard about it but I believe 7th grade history so 13 years old)
      Also may I ask ur age as well? I think being educated in 96-04 for grade school (think that’s the correct number lol I hate math but not history) but yes older eras of education may have been more effected by what was out there and honestly if u were in the south…. The historical feelings if educated older folks that were closer to the civil war then it could have effected the education due to how some southerners still feel a certain way bout the war which is wild to me

  • @MattHermeyer
    @MattHermeyer 3 месяца назад

    This video was absolutely amazing! I do believe it helps to better understand the evolution of our nation and why the worst war in our history actually happened. Politics and big government has lead us and our thinking since the beginning.

  • @johnpijano4786
    @johnpijano4786 2 года назад +11

    This has to be the most amazing work you made so far.
    Please keep it up.

  • @Chuck44442
    @Chuck44442 2 года назад +16

    It feels like I've been studying this seen 8th grade. But, somehow, spreading it- out-over months..AND QUIZZES..something so- simply gets convenluted.

  • @michaelmurray8668
    @michaelmurray8668 Год назад +16

    As a North Carolinian, that grew up around people flying the confederate flag. I had no idea about the details of this video. This was very well made and informative. Thanks,

    • @thatsillyrabbit
      @thatsillyrabbit Год назад +1

      'Checkmate Lincolnites' series by a historian turned youtuber has a really entertaining way of giving a perspective I never got from growing up in a former southern state.

    • @AEdward-p5o
      @AEdward-p5o 9 месяцев назад

      You didn't know . Here in NC all confederate

  • @79klkw
    @79klkw 3 месяца назад

    I cant wait to listen fully when i have time. I hope this is impartial in its entirety, because it sounds fantastic, so far!

  • @donbalduf572
    @donbalduf572 2 года назад +23

    Thanks for a good summary. Small point of correction: Robert E. Lee was a colonel when he helped end the raid on Harpers Ferry, not a general. Lee became a general only in the Confederate army.

    • @vernwallen4246
      @vernwallen4246 2 года назад +3

      When Lee graduated high school he was voted most likely too"secede".😂😂😂

    • @MGTOWPaladin
      @MGTOWPaladin 2 года назад

      As famed radio announcer, Paul Harvey, used to say.... and now, The Rest of the Story!
      Lincoln was pro-secession as a lawyer elected to Congress.
      Abraham Lincoln, US Congressman, 12 January 1848 on the floor of the US House of Representatives:
      "Any people anywhere, being inclined and having the power, have the right to rise up, and shake off the existing government, and for a new one that suits them better. *THIS IS A MOST VALUABLE, - A MOST SACRED RIGHT - a RIGHT,* which we hope and believe, is to liberate the world. Nor is this right confined to cases in which the whole people of an existing government, may choose to exercise it."
      Lincoln would not leave Ft Sumter because he wanted REVENUE TAX MONEY!
      Lincoln's Presidential Proclamation NO. 81, April 19 1861, five days after the Union evacuation of Ft Sumter.
      "Whereas an insurrection against the Government of the United States has broken out in the States of South Carolina, Georgia, Alabama, Florida, Mississippi, Louisiana, and Texas, and the laws of the United States *FOR THE COLLECTION OF THE REVENUE (TAX MONEY)* can not be effectually executed therein conformably to that provision of the Constitution *WHICH REQUIRES DUTIES (REVENUE TAX MONEY) TO BE UNIFORM THROUGHOUT THE UNITED STATES;* ......"
      Lincoln's Presidential Proclamation NO. 82, April 27 1861 (after more Southern States secede due to the Union invasion of Ft Sumter)
      "Whereas since that date public property of the United States has been seized, *THE COLLECTION OF THE REVENUE (TAX MONEY) OBSTRUCTED,* and......"
      Crittenden-Johnson Resolution issued by the US House of Representatives, 25 July, 1861 (four days after the defeat of the invading US Army at Manassas, VA "Bull Run").
      "Resolved by the House of Representatives of the Congress of the United States, That the present deplorable civil war has been forced upon the country by the disunionists of the Southern States now in revolt against the constitutional Government and in arms around the capital; that in this national emergency Congress, banishing all feelings of mere passion or resentment, *WILL RECOLLECT ONLY ITS DUTY (REVENUE TAX MONEY) TO THE WHOLE COUNTRY;* that this war is not waged upon our part in any spirit of oppression, nor for any purpose of conquest or subjugation, *NOR PURPOSE OF OVERTHROWING OR INTERFERING WITH THE RIGHTS OR ESTABLISHED "INSTITUTIONS" (such as slavery) OF THOSE STATES,* but to defend and maintain the supremacy of the Constitution and to *PRESERVE THE UNION (TREASURY),* with all the dignity, equality, and rights of the several States unimpaired; and that as soon as these objects are accomplished the war ought to cease.
      WHY NOT LET THE SOUTH LEGALLY SECEDE?
      The Confederate States of America (1861-1865) started with an agrarian-based economy that relied heavily on slave-worked plantations for the production of cotton for export to Europe. *IF CLASSED AS AN INDEPENDENT COUNTRY,* the area of the Confederate States would have ranked as the *FOURTH-RICHEST COUNTRY OF THE WORLD IN 1860."* (Wikipedia: Economy of the Confederate States of America).
      English author, Charles Dickens, author of A Christmas Carol and Oliver Twist:
      "The Northern onslaught upon slavery was no more than a piece of specious humbug designed to conceal its desire for 'ECONOMIC CONTROL* (cotton and other raw materials) of the Southern states." (Google: Charles Dickens, piece of specious humbug).
      Dickens owned a magazine called All the Year Round. In it, an article attacked the tariff . “…under all the passion of the parties and the cries of battle lie the two chief moving causes of the struggle,” it said. “Union means so many millions a year lost to the South; *SECESSION MEANS THE LOSS OF THE SAME MILLIONS TO THE NORTH. The love of money is the root of this, as of many other evils…”

    • @christopherdibble5872
      @christopherdibble5872 2 года назад

      .

    • @christopherdibble5872
      @christopherdibble5872 2 года назад

      Colonel or general his surrender was not the death of the south but the birth of the United states.

    • @coyoteodie4458
      @coyoteodie4458 2 года назад

      @@vernwallen4246 how long have you waited to use that? Well played.

  • @aaronfleming9426
    @aaronfleming9426 Год назад +44

    This was an excellent video but honestly I learned all of this in high school because I liked history and I was paying attention.

    • @repentandbelieveinJesusChrist3
      @repentandbelieveinJesusChrist3 Год назад +3

      Repent to Jesus Christ “But seek first his kingdom and his righteousness, and all these things will be given to you as well.”
      ‭‭Matthew‬ ‭6‬:‭33‬ ‭NIV‬‬

    • @condorX2
      @condorX2 Год назад

      Aye. I learned a lot.
      6:09 This part seem highly suspicious about a southern US diplomat being ignored by Mexico.
      If I have to guess, the diplomat was a bait. He have no intention of trading territory with Mexico. He went there to survey the place and provoke the Mexicans. And then the first shot is fired.
      That's the sound of Land grabbing campaign is guaranteed xD

    • @rha101
      @rha101 Год назад +7

      @@repentandbelieveinJesusChrist3 What an odd comment for this video.

    • @aaronfleming9426
      @aaronfleming9426 Год назад +1

      @@repentandbelieveinJesusChrist3 solid advice, but not really on topic.

    • @aaronfleming9426
      @aaronfleming9426 Год назад +2

      @@condorX2 Provocation is the key. A time-honored way to pick a fight...send a diplomat with a proposal so outrageous your opponent is honor-bound to respond harshly, then blame them for the ensuing war.

  • @alexandertemiakov2002
    @alexandertemiakov2002 2 года назад +13

    Really well done honestly. I could listen to the narrators voice all day

  • @superchad4610
    @superchad4610 10 месяцев назад +1

    Wow. So much to learn at my late age. Ill have to watch this again. Excellent presentation.

  • @tritonmole
    @tritonmole Год назад +20

    For me as a Latvian whos countries hystory is completely different, studying civil war in US is very interesting. Completely different circumstances and events, very captivating! Thanks for your lecture!

    • @marilynbables8071
      @marilynbables8071 Год назад

      VIVA APPOMATTOX 🧑‍⚖️🇺🇸🎆✅😁✝️

    • @philliphall5198
      @philliphall5198 10 месяцев назад

      Biden has turned millions against the federal government now

  • @PurpleImpactStrategies
    @PurpleImpactStrategies 2 года назад +15

    Wow that war against Mexico 🇲🇽 was a serious blow to that country

    • @charlesfenwick6554
      @charlesfenwick6554 2 года назад +4

      An unfair land grab-an example of "might makes right".

    • @jamestiscareno4387
      @jamestiscareno4387 2 года назад +6

      @@charlesfenwick6554 we, the U.S. were in possession of Mexico City. Mexico's capital. One could say we could have fought on and taken possession of all of Mexico. We didn't and negotiated a peace settlement. A compromise. Not an unfair land grab as you assert.

    • @SavagelandHunting
      @SavagelandHunting 2 года назад +3

      @@charlesfenwick6554 in the treaty the US paid for the land. Not to mention that the population for those territories was miniscule. LA was the largest population with only a couple thousand. That's why Mexico agreed to the US purchasing it in the peace treaty.

    • @FRANK-cents
      @FRANK-cents 2 года назад

      i love how free states needed more land to defeat slave states so they they stole land from Mexico 🤦🏻

    • @solin1637
      @solin1637 Год назад +1

      That showed the hunger for power that white "Americans" have always had 🧐
      But now they say Russian should not try to get any more territory in Ukraine for example 🙄
      But the "Americans" coming from Europe took a big chunk of land from Mexico 🤫

  • @MomentsInTrading
    @MomentsInTrading 2 года назад +20

    I’ll add that, prior to the Civil War, each State was a lot more like a separate country. Also, People’s dedication and loyalties were ‘Their own State first, and then the entire country.’

    • @georgesakellaropoulos8162
      @georgesakellaropoulos8162 2 года назад +4

      Don't think that has disappeared. More and more people are sick of the Federal Government.

    • @someonethatwatchesyoutube2953
      @someonethatwatchesyoutube2953 2 года назад +6

      As it was meant to be. And I believe the south had every right to a divorce from it’s agreement to be part of the union.

    • @kaiseramadeus233
      @kaiseramadeus233 2 года назад +14

      @@someonethatwatchesyoutube2953 you think slavery was okay?

    • @xenetaulia
      @xenetaulia 2 года назад +1

      @@someonethatwatchesyoutube2953 ??? 😭

    • @yumad9830
      @yumad9830 2 года назад +3

      "State first, then country"
      George Thomas: "Hold my beer."

  • @williambowling8211
    @williambowling8211 2 года назад +8

    The difference in rail-miles of the North vs. South doesn't even begin to show the difference. The North's railroads were nearly all standard gauge and interconnected. In the South, there were a number of different gauges, many lines were not continuous through cities and they usually ran from plantations to the nearest river for the shipment of cotton. Furthermore, the South, lacking in heavy industry, produced no new rolling stock or locomotives through the entire conflict

  • @dsavx1528
    @dsavx1528 2 года назад +29

    The one thing that I very much dislike about the video is that it paints all the southern states at joining around the same time which is not true, 4 states joined the south after the Union declared war on south, Virginia, North Carolina, Tennessee, and Arkansas, with Missouri and Kentucky being added later as members. To add to that the Union was so scared that Maryland was going to leave because they declared war on the south that they arrested 31 members of the Maryland legislature were arrested along with the mayor of Baltimore George W. Brown, as well as other prominent citizens. Including Francis Scott Key’s grandson Frank Key Howard, a newspaper editor. This video more or less paints the civil war as black and white and no grey areas, but if you look deeper into the civil war it was a lot more grey than black and white.

    • @TheNinjaDC
      @TheNinjaDC Год назад +7

      Kentucky & Missouri never left the union.
      Kentucky in particular was critically important to not leave. One of Lincoln's most famous quotes of the war was, "I hope to have God on my side, but I must have Kentucky."

    • @dsavx1528
      @dsavx1528 Год назад +3

      @@TheNinjaDC I didn’t say they left I said they were added as members to the CSA. They recognized the pro-south government in Kentucky and Missouri that were government-in-exile. Missouri was admitted on November 28th, 1861, and Kentucky was admitted on December 10, 1861.

    • @King-kw1mo
      @King-kw1mo Год назад +1

      If Maryland did join then Dc would literally have to fight it’s creator and also it would be 100% surrounded by the enemies

    • @brianc3761
      @brianc3761 Год назад

      @@dsavx1528you smell of cheese.

    • @TruthB7Told
      @TruthB7Told 5 месяцев назад

      This sounds like a feeble attempt to justify, Slavery. Whether all the Southern States joined at the same time or not, your point is ridiculous at best. Because, the Civil War was a Black and White issue, it was about White European American's wanting to keep Black Slaves in bondage for the sole purpose of wealth and income! And as far as that virulent, degenerate racist Francis Scott Key that you so proudly speak of, he once prosecuted a man after the civil war for possessing, abolitionist literature, which carried the death penalty. So, I say to FSK, to hell with him and his racist poem turned song, that glorified the oppression of the hireling / Slaves! No, deeper look is needed into the civil war, because the facts, show us and tell us EXACTLY what the civil war was about. And it was about keeping the very Foundation of America, which is Black People in Bondage!!!!!!

  • @brewtank6738
    @brewtank6738 Год назад +6

    To even hear the words free states and slave states is such a wild thing.

    • @insideoutsideupsidedown2218
      @insideoutsideupsidedown2218 6 месяцев назад +1

      It is not confined at the time to such of a division. There were people in the North who still owned slaves until 1863. There were people in the South who did not, and would not own slaves.

    • @farayimatibiri1724
      @farayimatibiri1724 5 месяцев назад

      You're very right. They tried to whitewash those words. History is history. It is what it was

    • @Justinoid1
      @Justinoid1 3 месяца назад

      Is a little disingenuous.

    • @kninezbanks
      @kninezbanks 3 месяца назад

      ​@@insideoutsideupsidedown2218 90% of slaves were in the south. 33% of the south were slaves, 2% of the North were slaves.........Look up primary source documents, the pronouns of the country at the time were slave state, free state, slaveholdings state, non-slave holding state......Hundreds of thousands of words and admissions, every compromise, every secession commissioner confirmed, more proof that God's existence, that the divide was primarily over the future existence and expansion of slavery, this was the cause of the souths secession. Imagine saying that detroit isn't dangerous because salt lake city has crime too. when the south seceded, they took 90%+ of america's slaves with them.

    • @MiguelSanchez-pf6pd
      @MiguelSanchez-pf6pd 3 месяца назад

      We are still slaves to the banking cartel work pay taxes buy something pay taxes get $$$% out of the bank they want to know what you are doing with it is that freedom?

  • @glenn6583
    @glenn6583 10 месяцев назад +2

    Very wonderful episode! Well done looking now for part 2.
    Those troublesome Canadians sure have to be considered carefully!

    • @Bluearmy76
      @Bluearmy76 10 месяцев назад

      Blame Canada 🍁

  • @RonJDuncan
    @RonJDuncan Год назад +13

    One of the least covered topics is the Corwin Amendment. The fact that it failed even when Lincoln said he'd first support it suggests that this wasn't just about slavery. Slavery was an issue, but there were many other factors underlying that are far too easily overlooked.

    • @aaronfleming9426
      @aaronfleming9426 Год назад +1

      the Corwin Amendment is not covered very much because it was largely irrelevant. The Confederacy already thought of itself as an independent nation and saw Corwin as yet another sign of weakness from the north. The secessionists were building an army had pushed Buchanan around at will...why would they rejoin the Union where slavery would continue to be challenged despite Corwin which, by the way, would still have to be ratified by 75% of the states, not at all a foregone conclusion.

    • @RonJDuncan
      @RonJDuncan Год назад

      @@aaronfleming9426 I bring up the Cowin Amendment because at first, Lincoln himself made it publically known that he would not be in opposition to it. His stated goal to keep the union together might well have caused the necessary amount of free states to ratify it, and it's not like other states haven't been pushed politically to ratify amendments (think the 18th Amendment on prohibition, for example.)
      Of course, this just proves my point that it went beyond slavery - because they had indeed seen issues beyond slavery. Rather than seeing it as a sole cause, I see it more as a very visible symptom.
      Much of the distrust had come from the tariffs when it came to foreign trade with Europe. Since cotton and tobacco were largely in demand and it would be cheaper to trade directly, you have a civil war that was strongly about the economy. While slavery certainly fed into that, it just goes to show that history deserves to be researched to see beyond the assumptions we tend to carry.

    • @aaronfleming9426
      @aaronfleming9426 Год назад +1

      @@RonJDuncan but you continue to ignore that fact that the secessionists already considered their independence a fait accompli, and you haven't explain why they would have been tempted to rejoin the union when they had what they wanted - freedom to keep their slaves.
      The 18th Amendment actually weakens your position. It hadn't happened yet, of course, but the slave states knew full well that Corwin could be repealed...IF it was ratified in the first place.
      In terms of ratification, if they came crawling back to the Union before Corwin was ratified, what guarantee would they have that the free states would ratify it? And if they waited for ratification, that would have taken years, during which time the Confederacy would be functioning as an independent nation...and why would they want to come back?
      Again, Corwin isn't often discussed because the secessionists saw it for exactly what it was: a desperate attempt to avoid war. And that desperation emboldened the rebels, who already believed that one southern man could whip ten Yankees.
      Of course there was bickering about tariffs, but the fact is that the tariff of 1857 was written by a Virginian, approved across the south, and set taxes at a 50-year low. It was a very minor factor, which is why it's barely discussed in the Declarations of Causes.
      When I was growing up, most history texts were still peddling a conciliatory version of the Lost Cause, so I grew up thinking that it was a bunch of equal factors. My views are the result of much study and the reexamination of assumptions.

    • @mgreen9092
      @mgreen9092 Год назад

      I’m pretty sure that the confederate vp had a good understanding of why the south was in rebellion. 👉🏿 Our new government is founded upon exactly the opposite idea; its foundations are laid, its corner- stone rests, upon the great truth that the negro is not equal to the white man; that slavery-subordination to the superior race-is his natural and normal condition.

  • @TerryYelmene
    @TerryYelmene 2 года назад +12

    Thank You, for producing this easily understood backgrounder.

  • @originaltanman
    @originaltanman 2 года назад +14

    In summary…. The south wanted to own humans… the north didn’t.
    Also it’s weird how there’s no mention that American farmers moved to Texas region and brought slaves… even though Mexico abolished slavery in 1829. This decision was a reason why “Texans” or YT Americans provoke revolution and broke away from Mexico later asking for US annexation.
    Oh and there’s seems to be a chunk of history skipped… the trail of tears which is why the Indian Territory was made

    • @SireJaxs
      @SireJaxs 2 года назад

      that is good history all of us as humans must look back on and learn of course, but this video is on the topic of the civil war, something which the indian territories had very little effect on.

    • @ziggystardust1122
      @ziggystardust1122 2 года назад +2

      You assert the north didn't want to own slaves. So now explain why they did.

    • @maninredhelm
      @maninredhelm 2 года назад +1

      @@ziggystardust1122 They didn't. Don't talk about Delaware, Maryland, Kentucky and Missouri. They weren't "the North," they just didn't rebel. The goal was to find legal means to phase out slavery, most likely in the gradual way it was done in the Mid-Atlantic a generation earlier. The North didn't just wake up one day and charge into the South to end slavery immediately at gunpoint. It was the South that put the matter to gunpoint, and once it became clear they weren't going to surrender easily it was then that the switch was flipped on Emancipation, because the only reason for the gradual legal approach had been to avoid a costly war. Delaware, Maryland, Kentucky and Missouri didn't do that, so in their case there was still reason to take the gradual approach. That doesn't mean the North wanted to extend slavery in those states, they just wanted war even less than slavery.

    • @ziggystardust1122
      @ziggystardust1122 2 года назад

      @@maninredhelm Wow, well stated. Some conjecture, some opinion but overall... well said.

    • @Adsper2000
      @Adsper2000 2 года назад +3

      The Texan Revolution was not over the abolition of slavery, it was over Santa Anna becoming a dictator and suspending the Mexican constitution.

  • @angelicaschuylerchurch670
    @angelicaschuylerchurch670 8 месяцев назад

    Came back to say I used this to study for my AP US History Class unit exam and essay and I ended up getting a 6/7 with “excellent analysis”

  • @clowneymcclownface3362
    @clowneymcclownface3362 2 года назад +48

    General Lee was actually Colonel Lee during the Harpers Ferry incident

  • @Aceman52
    @Aceman52 2 года назад +4

    This is one of the best antebellum videos I have seen. And as a history buff I have seen more than my share and this one is top notch.

    • @MGTOWPaladin
      @MGTOWPaladin 2 года назад

      As famed radio announcer, Paul Harvey, used to say.... and now, The Rest of the Story!
      Lincoln was pro-secession as a lawyer elected to Congress.
      Abraham Lincoln, US Congressman, 12 January 1848 on the floor of the US House of Representatives:
      "Any people anywhere, being inclined and having the power, have the right to rise up, and shake off the existing government, and for a new one that suits them better. *THIS IS A MOST VALUABLE, - A MOST SACRED RIGHT - a RIGHT,* which we hope and believe, is to liberate the world. Nor is this right confined to cases in which the whole people of an existing government, may choose to exercise it."
      Lincoln would not leave Ft Sumter because he wanted REVENUE TAX MONEY!
      Lincoln's Presidential Proclamation NO. 81, April 19 1861, five days after the Union evacuation of Ft Sumter.
      "Whereas an insurrection against the Government of the United States has broken out in the States of South Carolina, Georgia, Alabama, Florida, Mississippi, Louisiana, and Texas, and the laws of the United States *FOR THE COLLECTION OF THE REVENUE (TAX MONEY)* can not be effectually executed therein conformably to that provision of the Constitution *WHICH REQUIRES DUTIES (REVENUE TAX MONEY) TO BE UNIFORM THROUGHOUT THE UNITED STATES;* ......"
      Lincoln's Presidential Proclamation NO. 82, April 27 1861 (after more Southern States secede due to the Union invasion of Ft Sumter)
      "Whereas since that date public property of the United States has been seized, *THE COLLECTION OF THE REVENUE (TAX MONEY) OBSTRUCTED,* and......"
      Crittenden-Johnson Resolution issued by the US House of Representatives, 25 July, 1861 (four days after the defeat of the invading US Army at Manassas, VA "Bull Run").
      "Resolved by the House of Representatives of the Congress of the United States, That the present deplorable civil war has been forced upon the country by the disunionists of the Southern States now in revolt against the constitutional Government and in arms around the capital; that in this national emergency Congress, banishing all feelings of mere passion or resentment, *WILL RECOLLECT ONLY ITS DUTY (REVENUE TAX MONEY) TO THE WHOLE COUNTRY;* that this war is not waged upon our part in any spirit of oppression, nor for any purpose of conquest or subjugation, *NOR PURPOSE OF OVERTHROWING OR INTERFERING WITH THE RIGHTS OR ESTABLISHED "INSTITUTIONS" (such as slavery) OF THOSE STATES,* but to defend and maintain the supremacy of the Constitution and to *PRESERVE THE UNION (TREASURY),* with all the dignity, equality, and rights of the several States unimpaired; and that as soon as these objects are accomplished the war ought to cease.
      WHY NOT LET THE SOUTH LEGALLY SECEDE?
      The Confederate States of America (1861-1865) started with an agrarian-based economy that relied heavily on slave-worked plantations for the production of cotton for export to Europe. *IF CLASSED AS AN INDEPENDENT COUNTRY,* the area of the Confederate States would have ranked as the *FOURTH-RICHEST COUNTRY OF THE WORLD IN 1860."* (Wikipedia: Economy of the Confederate States of America).
      English author, Charles Dickens, author of A Christmas Carol and Oliver Twist:
      "The Northern onslaught upon slavery was no more than a piece of specious humbug designed to conceal its desire for 'ECONOMIC CONTROL* (cotton and other raw materials) of the Southern states." (Google: Charles Dickens, piece of specious humbug).
      Dickens owned a magazine called All the Year Round. In it, an article attacked the tariff . “…under all the passion of the parties and the cries of battle lie the two chief moving causes of the struggle,” it said. “Union means so many millions a year lost to the South; *SECESSION MEANS THE LOSS OF THE SAME MILLIONS TO THE NORTH. The love of money is the root of this, as of many other evils…”

    • @christopherdibble5872
      @christopherdibble5872 2 года назад

      See, whether then or now SLAVERY is wrong.

  • @johnmark4677
    @johnmark4677 2 года назад +5

    This is pure masterpiece. Thank you from the bottom of my heart.

    • @christopherdibble5872
      @christopherdibble5872 2 года назад

      It's a pure masterpiece because every ingredient taught about SLAVERY makes it that.

  • @henrysantos7160
    @henrysantos7160 3 месяца назад +1

    *Excellent documentary to watch no doubt with that*

  • @colonelblastpack169
    @colonelblastpack169 2 года назад +43

    Love your presentations. You can present one of the most polarizing events in American history without the over the top political hyperbole so often chained to this subject. I can just sit back and immerse myself for a while.

    • @wtripley
      @wtripley 2 года назад +23

      The people who like to pretend slavery wasn’t the cause probably didn’t enjoy all the talk about slavery lol

    • @jamesmith5960
      @jamesmith5960 2 года назад +4

      @@wtripley Slavery was the cause of succession, but succession was the cause of the war.

    • @BigSleepyOx
      @BigSleepyOx 2 года назад +11

      @@jamesmith5960 So, by the transitive property, slavery was the cause of the war.

    • @colonelblastpack169
      @colonelblastpack169 2 года назад +5

      @@jamesmith5960 secession

    • @kaiseramadeus233
      @kaiseramadeus233 2 года назад +7

      @@jamesmith5960 if a = b, and b = c, then a=c.

  • @justbe1451
    @justbe1451 2 года назад +117

    Whoa, this information is so much different than what I thought I knew about the Civil War! But then again we are taught what they want us to know, not the facts. Great job on expanding my knowledge. Ty

    • @Industrialitis
      @Industrialitis 2 года назад +8

      What were you taught?

    • @ConanTheContrarian1
      @ConanTheContrarian1 2 года назад +38

      Be aware that history is taught by the winners. Did the South "fail to industrialize" as stated in the video, or were they artificially prevented by Northern policy, in which southerners paid higher prices for tariffs which went to Washington, only to be spent on federal projects up north?

    • @Industrialitis
      @Industrialitis 2 года назад +1

      @@ConanTheContrarian1 Definitely a contrarian, if the south's economic survival depended on mass human enslavement it deserved to be destroyed.

    • @Badger1776
      @Badger1776 2 года назад +7

      Everyone that has ever taught teaches things they want you to know. Including this video.

    • @persistentpedestrianalien8641
      @persistentpedestrianalien8641 2 года назад +15

      @@ConanTheContrarian1 the south failed to not be gay.

  • @animekidz928
    @animekidz928 2 года назад +8

    I love their US History content. Keep up the good work!!!

  • @daleslover2771
    @daleslover2771 3 месяца назад

    Best breakdown of events that led the country into the Civil War that i have ever heard.👍 👍

  • @aetius215
    @aetius215 Год назад +4

    What a cliffhanger! I'm so curious what will happen. Great video!

    • @donaldmoore6763
      @donaldmoore6763 Год назад +1

      What will happen is, if the present administration manage to keep disregarding our Constitution, ,, we Americans will be enslaved. We need to protect our Constitution and demand our Congressman and Senators do their sworn duty to protect the constitution

  • @aztec0996
    @aztec0996 Год назад +6

    Nice!! Can't wait to see who wins when part 2 comes out !!

  • @LittleBabyBartholomew
    @LittleBabyBartholomew Год назад +26

    One of the best videos out there on the civil war. To the point and well edited. I subscribed !

    • @redskywalker3374
      @redskywalker3374 Год назад +1

      NYC had a slave market

    • @toodjackson4438
      @toodjackson4438 Год назад +1

      @@redskywalker3374 I think NY still does I live and work here and trust me.. most of us feel like we are

  • @drjasper100
    @drjasper100 Месяц назад

    Excellent. Really good explanation.

  • @billc.4584
    @billc.4584 2 года назад +7

    This was a very excellent summary. Nice job. :)

  • @vinnyx1240
    @vinnyx1240 2 года назад +19

    As a black American southerner this video was great to watch I learned a lot can’t wait for part 2

    • @MGTOWPaladin
      @MGTOWPaladin 2 года назад +2

      What they don't mention is the "definition" of FREE STATE. In the 1800s, the term meant WHITE STATE.
      Abe Lincoln said it this way in his speech in Peoria, IL.
      "Whether slavery shall go into Nebraska, or other new territories, is not a matter of exclusive concern to the people who may go there. The whole nation is interested that the best use shall be made of these territories. We want them for the homes of "free white people". This they cannot be, to any considerable extent, if slavery shall be planted within them. Slave States are places for "poor white people" to remove FROM; not to remove TO. New free States are the places for "poor (white) people" to go to and better their condition. For this use, the nation needs these territories."
      Lincoln invaded the South for money. Slaves were freed to strip the South of its political power under the Constitution's 3/5 Compromise Clause.
      Slavery was not "free labor" as it actually COST MORE to house, feed, clothe, care for the slaves than simply offer a wage.

    • @MGTOWPaladin
      @MGTOWPaladin 2 года назад

      The Union, and this video, talks about EXPANDING SLAVERY. *WHERE?*
      Once the States seceded, there was NO PLACE in which to expand. That was just another LIE to control black people in claiming the war was about slavery.

    • @MGTOWPaladin
      @MGTOWPaladin 2 года назад +5

      The history of secession in the US explains it all.
      The New England States wanted to secede in 1815 under the Hartford Convention. One of the reasons mentioned was the 3/5 Compromise Clause.
      The House of Representatives and the Electoral College are based on POPULATION. The South wanted every slave counted. The North wanted none of the slaves counted. So, the COMPROMISE was that only 3/5 of the total slave population were to be counted.
      The North thought that gave the South too much power in the federal government. So, they talked about secession.
      The tariff of 1828, called the Tariff of Abomination, started South Carolina's secession talk. Basically, the South was getting wealthy due to the Industrial Revolution and its textile mills demands for cotton.
      So the Union started taxing the South to pay for northern infrastructure, railroads, industry, and employees. But, very little was being paid to the South. This continued into the Nullification Crisis of 1832-1833.
      Look up the term "protectionism."
      South Carolina continued watching the federal tax laws. On May 10 1860, the House passed another pro-North tax bill, the Morrill Tax. A week later, the Republican Party Platform pledged their support. In November 1860, the Republicans won the election, and on December 20, South Carolina seceded.

    • @MGTOWPaladin
      @MGTOWPaladin 2 года назад +3

      Lincoln's Presidential Proclamation NO. 95 is the *ONLY* federal document that mentions "freeing slaves," but no one ever reads it!
      "That on the first day of January, in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and sixty-three, all persons held as slaves within any State or designated part of a State, the people whereof shall then be in rebellion against the United States, shall be then, thenceforward, and forever free;.."
      Lincoln illegally declared emancipation in the following locations in his Proclamation:
      "Arkansas, Texas, Louisiana, *(EXCEPT* the Parishes of St. Bernard, Plaquemines, Jefferson, St. John, St. Charles, St. James Ascension, Assumption, Terrebonne, Lafourche, St. Mary, St. Martin, and Orleans, including the City of New Orleans) Mississippi, Alabama, Florida, Georgia, South Carolina, North Carolina, and Virginia, *(EXCEPT* the forty-eight counties designated as West Virginia, and also the counties of Berkley, Accomac, Northampton, Elizabeth City, York, Princess Ann, and Norfolk, including the cities of Norfolk and Portsmouth), and which *EXCEPTED* parts, are for the present, left precisely as if this proclamation were not issued."
      *NOTE:* Does Lincoln release any of the estimated 1 million slaves still held in the Union States? *NO!* Does he release any slaves in the Union Territories? *NO!* Does he release any slaves held in Indian reservations or territories? *NO!* Did he release any slaves in the Southern Border States of Delaware, Maryland, Kentucky, and Missouri? *NO!* Does he release any slaves in West Virginia? *NO!* Does he release any slaves in the Confederate State of Tennessee? *NO!* Does he release slaves in select counties/parishes of the Confederate States of Virginia and Louisiana? *NO!*
      The REASON this is the ONLY document referencing slavery is because "slavery was legal under the Constitution" which makes Lincoln's Proclamation *ILLEGAL!*
      Slavery was legal under the Constitution: Migration and Importantion Clause, Fugitive Slave Clause, 3/5 Compromise Clause, 4th Amendment, 5th Amendment, 9th Amendment and 10th Amendment.
      Slavery was recognized as legal by federal laws of Congress: 1794 Fugitive Slave Act, 1820 Missouri Compromise, 1850 Fugitive Slave Act, 1854 Kansas - Nebraska Act, etc.
      Slavery was recognized as legal by SCOTUS in their decisions, such as 1857 Dred Scott v Sanford based on the 5th Amendment.
      Lincoln recognized slavery as legal in his first Inaugural Speech, paragraphs 4, 6 and 9 (quoting the Republican Party Platform plank #4 in paragraph 6 and the US Constitution 's Fugitive Slave Clause here).
      "No person held to service or labour in one state, under the laws thereof, escaping into another, shall, in consequence of any law or regulation therein, be discharged from such service or labor, but shall be delivered up on claim of the party to whom such service or labour may be due."
      *AND THERE IS THIS - WHICH NO ONE MENTIONS!*
      Lincoln sent General John Charles Frèmont to Missouri to head up the Western Department and control the further secession of States.
      Frèmont issued an emancipation edict on August 30 1861. For this action, Lincoln charged Frèmont with INSUBORDINATION and removed him from his post on November 2, 1861.
      But, Lincoln does the exact same thing thirteen months later?

    • @MGTOWPaladin
      @MGTOWPaladin 2 года назад +1

      Please look up Lincoln's Presidential Proclamations NO. 81 and 82 as well as the US House of Representatives Crittenden-Johnson Resolution.
      Here's what you'll find:
      Lincoln's Presidential Proclamation NO. 81, April 19 1861, five days after the Union evacuation of Ft Sumter.
      "Whereas an insurrection against the Government of the United States has broken out in the States of South Carolina, Georgia, Alabama, Florida, Mississippi, Louisiana, and Texas, and the laws of the United States *FOR THE COLLECTION OF THE REVENUE (TAX MONEY)* can not be effectually executed therein conformably to that provision of the Constitution *WHICH REQUIRES DUTIES (REVENUE TAX MONEY) TO BE UNIFORM THROUGHOUT THE UNITED STATES;* ......"
      Lincoln's Presidential Proclamation NO. 82, April 27 1861 (after more Southern States secede due to the Union invasion of Ft Sumter)
      "Whereas since that date public property of the United States has been seized, *THE COLLECTION OF THE REVENUE (TAX MONEY) OBSTRUCTED,* and......"
      Crittenden-Johnson Resolution issued by the US House of Representatives, 25 July, 1861 (four days after the defeat of the invading US Army at Manassas, VA "Bull Run").
      "Resolved by the House of Representatives of the Congress of the United States, That the present deplorable civil war has been forced upon the country by the disunionists of the Southern States now in revolt against the constitutional Government and in arms around the capital; that in this national emergency Congress, banishing all feelings of mere passion or resentment, *WILL RECOLLECT ONLY ITS DUTY (REVENUE TAX MONEY) TO THE WHOLE COUNTRY;* that this war is not waged upon our part in any spirit of oppression, nor for any purpose of conquest or subjugation, *NOR PURPOSE OF OVERTHROWING OR INTERFERING WITH THE RIGHTS OR ESTABLISHED "INSTITUTIONS" (such as slavery) OF THOSE STATES,* but to defend and maintain the supremacy of the Constitution and to *PRESERVE THE UNION (TREASURY),* with all the dignity, equality, and rights of the several States unimpaired; and that as soon as these objects are accomplished the war ought to cease.
      The Confederate States of America (1861-1865) started with an agrarian-based economy that relied heavily on slave-worked plantations for the production of cotton for export to Europe. *IF CLASSED AS AN INDEPENDENT COUNTRY,* the area of the Confederate States would have ranked as the *FOURTH-RICHEST COUNTRY OF THE WORLD IN 1860."* (Wikipedia: Economy of the Confederate States of America).

  • @captain0vell
    @captain0vell 2 года назад +7

    It's sickening. All the pain and torment.

  • @MrRooibos123
    @MrRooibos123 9 месяцев назад +1

    I'm from the UK but I'm fascinated by the American Civil War, I knew it was something that took place in the 1860s but the more I have read and watched about it, the more interesting it becomes. We learnt a lot about the USA during the 20th century at school, but the 19th century was barely covered - despite it being very useful in understanding how the country developed into the dominant global power.

    • @valleyboy3613
      @valleyboy3613 3 месяца назад

      it became a global power for a few reason and the bedrock is the 1st ammendment freedom of speech which UK doesn't have as you can be jailed for the thought crime of posting something on social media that may be truthful but govt and others find offensive. This cannot happen in the US as one does not have the right to not be offended

    • @NunYa953
      @NunYa953 3 месяца назад

      The answer to how we became the dominant global power is pretty simple. Our Constitution.

  • @ZoHarding
    @ZoHarding Год назад +4

    What a great video, amazing script, very easy to follow. I particularly appreciate the time they took in the middle to step aside and explain the moral dispute among both sides.