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The American Civil War remains the deadliest conflict in US history. It was fought between the Northern states (The Union) and 11 Southern states that seceded to form the Confederate States of America. At the absolute core of the conflict was the institution of slavery and the expansion thereof into newly acquired Western territories.
While states' rights and economic differences played roles, slavery was the undeniable root cause.
Economic Differences:
The Slavery Debate and Westward Expansion:
The Election of Abraham Lincoln (1860):
The war began when Confederate forces fired on Fort Sumter in April 1861. Initially, the Union fought merely to preserve the country, not specifically to end slavery.
The Emancipation Proclamation (1863): Lincoln issued this executive order freeing all enslaved people in Confederate-held territory. This transformed the war from a political struggle to preserve the Union into a moral crusade to destroy slavery. It also allowed African American men to officially join the Union Army.
After four years of extraordinarily bloody battles (like Gettysburg and Antietam), superior Northern industry, larger population, and naval blockades gradually choked the South. Confederate General Robert E. Lee formally surrendered to Union General Ulysses S. Grant at Appomattox Court House in April 1865.
The Civil War proved to Europe that a democratic republic could survive massive internal rebellion, serving as an inspiration for democratic movements globally.
Impact on India: The foremost global economic impact of the war involved the global cotton supply chain. When the Union Navy blockaded Southern ports, European textile millsтАФspecifically those in Lancashire, EnglandтАФwere completely cut off from the Southern cotton that dominated the global market ("The Cotton Famine").
To feed their massive textile factories, the British drastically ramped up cotton production in their most critical colony: India (particularly in the Deccan Plateau region of Maharashtra/Gujarat) and Egypt. тАв This resulted in an enormous, temporary economic boom for Indian cotton farmers and merchants (like those in Bombay). тАв Land was heavily diverted from food crops to cash crops (cotton). тАв However, when the Civil War ended and American cotton re-entered the global market, prices crashed rapidly. Indian farmers, who had taken heavy loans to maximize production during the boom, fell into massive debt traps. This severe agrarian distress was a major contributing factor to the devastating Deccan Riots of 1875 against moneylenders.
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