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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
7 pages in length. The writer discusses how amid the post Civil War chaos, various political groups were scrambling to further their agendas. Initially, southern Democrats, a party comprised of leaders of the Confederacy and other wealthy whites, sought to bring an end to northern domination. Secondly, moderate Republicans wanted to pursue a policy of reconciliation between the North and South yet at the same time ensure that slavery was abolished. Thirdly, Radical Republicans, comprised of northern politicians, were strongly opposed to slavery, unsympathetic to the conditions and consequences of the South, as well as desirous of maintaining their majority presence in Congress. President Andrew Johnson's major goal to unify the nation was to represent still another important political element at the end of the Civil War, while the final component was that of such groups as abolitionists and Quakers maintaining a strong motivation of principal and a belief in equality. Bibliography lists 6 sources.
Page Count:
7 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCSlvAm.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
other wealthy whites, sought to bring an end to northern domination. Secondly, moderate Republicans wanted to pursue a policy of reconciliation between the North and South yet at the
same time ensure that slavery was abolished. Thirdly, Radical Republicans, comprised of northern politicians, were strongly opposed to slavery, unsympathetic to the conditions and consequences of the South, as
well as desirous of maintaining their majority presence in Congress. President Andrew Johnsons major goal to unify the nation was to ultimately represent still another important political element at
the end of the Civil War, while the final component was that of such groups as abolitionists and Quakers maintaining a strong motivation of principal and a belief in equality
(Johnson PG). Of the political, economic, social, and legal changes that effectively began to slowly but surely discharge just prior to the outbreak
of Civil War, some of the most instrumental conflicts had to do with how blacks were treated by the whites, a social tension that had had a stronghold for decades.
Indeed, the student can easily surmise that this was the particular point in time at which the racial pot was about to boil over, and no attempts to quell
this surging rage would have proven effective at averting what was to inevitably follow. As the war raged on, black cotton farmers were
looking forward to a Northern victory, which would ultimately give them their freedom; however, if the South were to win, those in the Confederate states would succumb to the ongoing
imprisonment of slavery. "...The toll of those...who died...left a gaping need for more and more hands to plant" (Williams 55). It appeared as though the white man did
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