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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 5 page discussion
of the contribution of the ideology of manifest destiny, the belief in
a divine right for the stronger to dominate the weaker, in the
outbreak of the Civil War. Recounts the major events leading up to
the war including the 1846-1848 war with Mexico, the Secession Crisis
of November 1860-April 1861, the annexation of Texas, the Wilmot
Proviso, expansionism, the repeal of the Missouri Compromise and the
Presidential election of 1860. Bibliography lists 4 sources.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: AM2_PPcvWrDe.doc
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
peoples who would eventually form the United States. This Great War of the nineteenth century tore the United States into two opposing forces. Forces which were divided by
what most think were simple views which revolved around the issue of slavery alone. The Civil War, in reality, was a much more complex in its causes, however, very
old issues which simply came to a head in the mid 1800s. Many were related to the ideology of "manifest destiny", a relict of nationalism where those of common
origins banded together in an "us against them attitude". The ideology of "manifest destiny" started to tear at the very soul of the young nation many years
before the actual war erupted. Two of its offshoots were the war with Mexico of 1846-1848 and the Secession Crisis of November 1860-April 1861. Each of these larger
factors encompassed many subcomponents such as the annexation of Texas, the Wilmot proviso, expansionism, the repeal of the Missouri Compromise and the Presidential election of 1860 which were critical elements
in determining the direction that this country would ultimately take. There were many individuals in the years preceding the actual eruption of the
war who resented the Union it for the control it tried to place on issues which they considered to be issues of the state and not ones which should be
controlled by the federal government. The young nation found itself divided into two camps of people separated on the basis of a complex belief system and not simply
by color. White citizens and free and enslaved blacks alike held very strong opinions on the war and on the issues of expansionism, annexation and other political processes which
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