Government Changes post-Revolution War vs. post-Civil War
Close examination of the reasons for and the results of the Revolutionary War and the Civil War forces me to disagree with McPherson's position that more radical change in government occurred due to the Civil War than the Revolutionary War. In order to understand how this is true, one must look at several issues, such as the causes of each of the wars, the purposes and intentions, and the ultimate results.
The Revolutionary War was based on the struggle to become independent from Great Britain and this struggle began due to a series of taxes forced upon the citizens. So "taxation without representation" was the initial call to arms however, it grew to include other freedoms as well.
The Civil War was utterly a different process of situation. While claims by the South of freedom it was always an economic issue tightly woven with the issue of slavery. Southerners were outraged and afraid when the federal government decided to regulate the slavery issue in federal territories. This did not impact any previously slave state from continuing to use slaves, it merely deemed new territories would be free. The South viewed this as a threat to their control of government since more states would enter the Union as free thereby shifting the balance of power to the North. While this may be the case, the Southern argument for secession became the excuse to attack the Union. Indeed, relying upon the United States Constitution and the Articles of Confederation, South Carolina argued that the original framers, our "forefathers" intended to "expressly" delegate, not just delegate as stated in the 10th Amendment "powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution nor prohibited by it to the States are reserved to the States or to the people" (United States Constitution). Before taking the steps for secession, the South waited for the presidential election to proceed
Fearful of the possibilities that the southerners viewed as detrimental to their way of life, Abraham Lincoln was their nemesis. He represented and personified that fear, despite protests from Lincoln himself that such fears were unfounded. While campaigning for the presidency in 1860, Lincoln was invited to speak in New York City at Cooper Union. In that speech, Lincoln got to the heart of matters and sought to reach out to the South. He addressed the issue of forefathers and their intentions, and in particular, enumerated the mistaken position held by the South. The words "expressly delegate" were the issue and while Southern politicians interpreted it to be implied in the U.S. Constitution, Lincoln made clear this was not the case. The Ordinance of 1787 which said that the federal government was not prohibited from regulating slavery in federal territories had support of many original framers of the Constitution as members of Congress (Cooper Union Address). In 1789, an act was passed granting the government federal control to enforce the Ordinance of 1787, again supported by numbers of the original framers (Cooper). As a matter of fact, there were twenty-three of the thirty-nine original framers serving in Congress at the time and support was unanimous regarding the issue that no line divided authority on slavery or precluding federal involvement or leaving it to the territories (Cooper). The federal government had the authority, not the territories or anyone else. Finally, Lincoln pointed to the fact that while the 10th Amendment is almost identical to the provision in the Articles of Confederation, the word "expressly...
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