Was The Civil War Inevitable Before The Civil War Inevitable?

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"Both parties deprecated war; but one of them would make war rather than let the nation survive; and the other would accept war rather than let it perish. And the war came" (Abraham Lincoln). The period of time before the civil war was one filled with Social and economic divergence between the North and South, tension and compromise between North and South on the question of slavery, several Crises in the 1850s and the election of Abraham Lincoln. Considering these factors the civil war was essentially inevitable. In the earliest settlements, inhabitants of southern colonies shared significant characteristics with northern colonists “most whites in both sections were British and Protestant, spoke a common language, and celebrated their victorious revolution against British rule” (Roark 320). The future of america looked bright and White americans everywhere praised the prosperous young nation, and they looked forward to its seemingly boundless future. This “HoneyMoon” stage between the north and south did not last long because soon Southerners and Northerners grew increasingly different and “The French political observer Alexis de Tocqueville believed he knew why. I could easily prove, he asserted, that almost all the differences which may be noticed between the character of the Americans in the Southern and Northern states have originated in slavery” (Roark 320). Twenty five years later, Northerners and Southerners did not like developments occurring on …show more content…
As a result, in light of the deep political, economic, and social divides, as well as the failure of compromise attempts, armed conflict was