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Uncle Tom's Cabin, By Harriet Beecher Stowe

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Uncle Tom's Cabin, By Harriet Beecher Stowe
On July 21, 1861 a four year war between the Northern and Southern United States began when the Confederate army invaded Fort Sumpter. However, this was not the beginning of Political differences between the Northern and Southern territories of the United States in a country doomed for Civil War. The election of 1860 was the first year the Republican Party ran against the Democratic Party for President. This was significant because the Republican Party was against slavery, and the Republican representative, Abraham Lincoln, became the sixteenth president. As a result, on December 20, 1860, South Carolina seceded from the union. Many events prior to the Civil War prove that it was America’s destiny, and that violence between abolitionists and slave owners would not stop without war. …show more content…
When abolitionist John Brown dragged 5 proslavery settlers out of bed in an act known as “Bleeding Kansas” it showed that the violence was going to continue until a war broke out. Border Ruffians from Kansas also engaged in violence defending their proslave viewpoint. Harriet Beecher Stowe’s novel Uncle Tom’s Cabin also became a major factor in the developing war. This novel provided an inside look at the lives of slaves, and eventually became a top selling play. The effects of this book enraged abolitionists and moved neutral Northerners to have an anti-slave bias. With the North and South divided solely on an issue regarding human lives it became clear that the once proud country of America would engage in a Civil

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