AMERICAN CIVIL WAR ON STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA
South Carolina on Confederate States of America Union after the Civil War
The state of South Carolina was the first state to withdraw from the Union in 1860 and still was among the states that founded the Confederacy in 1861.
Reason for South Carolina leaving the Union
The main cause of South Carolina seceding from the union was the election of Abraham Lincoln in 1860 and the Republican majority. However, the secession was a key overreaction to the political setback. The election of Lincoln endorsed the way the South interests lost power in the federal government. Also, the federal government would finally overwhelm the slavery institution. Furthermore, Lincoln’s win in 1860 was not close to dominant. For being a Republican candidate, Virginia Lincoln got 1,887 votes and was not on the ballot of any other state that later became a member of the Confederacy (Cauthen, 2005).
How South Carolina was affected by the Civil War
Economic Impact
- The economic condition between the freed slaves continued to be challenging throughout the Reconstruction period. Most southerners in South Carolina lost huge amounts of wealth as most farming lands were destroyed during the war period. Many wealth was lost by rich plantation owners when slaves were freed that were a big part of the assets.
- As the Civil War was mainly fought in the Southern states, most of the industries and economy in South Carolina were affected, unlike the Northern side. This resulted in South Carolina being economically weak and North emerging as an economic giant.
- After the war ended, most of the people in South Carolina did not support the African-American’s civil rights that hindered their participation or involvement in politics, unlike the Northside.
- After the war ended, cotton improved in value improved; the crop was the main crop grown in the South. However, this became an addition of the previous old castle scheme by uneven sharecropping. Blacks and a few poor whites well maintained Two-thirds of the overall crops grown. Nevertheless, these poor whites got greater benefits than black people.
- South Carolina slowly developed than the Midwest and North regions, which rapidly developed.
- Few immigrants were more attracted to the Northside due to its prosperity like improved infrastructure and housing, unlike Southern states like South Carolina.
- There was a division in America before 1861 into two cultural and social-economic systems, which involved an agricultural society grounded on slavery versus a capitalist society on entrepreneurial, which was allowed to free or open labor. Unlike the Northern side, South Carolina flourished from the former that thrived on the latter (Freehling, 1992).
- Considering that South Carolina’s territory of the slaves, the rigorous system on racial class and slave workforce dominated the government for some time. South Carolina had a greater possibility and capacity for expanding than the North.
Political Impacts
- The Civil War balanced most of the people in power from both South Carolina and the North.
- After the Civil War came to an end, most of the African-Americans begun participating in politics. After the civil rights bill was passed in 1875, outlawing discernment in churches, public transport, and schools in Plessy v. Ferguson ruling in the Supreme Court approved that segregation was unconstitutional.
Social Impacts
- Various amendments were made after the war to the Constitution being postponed that predominantly provide for the liberated slaves’ fate.
- The 13th Amendment resulted in the abolition of slavery completely in South Carolina. The next amendment, which was the 14th, allowed them to have equal citizenship while the 1st amendment finished the franchise on the newly freed slaves (Haygood, 1987).
- Even though over 3.5 million slaves being freed, racial prejudgment spreading in South Carolina did not end. There was the enforcement of racial segregation, which relates to facilities segregation, opportunities, and services for development concerning many black Americans through the imposed Jim Crow laws and Black Codes.
- Right after passing or approval of the 13th amendment, South Carolina had imposed Black Codes, which had details on when areas and how recently enslaved individuals could work and the compensation they would get.
- Violence increased in South Carolina despite efforts the government made to assist the black Americans in moving forward. Cruel organizations such as KKK that were created by Confederate veterans have a secret goal of terrorizing black communities.
- Both the Jim Crow laws and Black Codes constantly disseminating Cultures in America after decades of Civil War that is apparent for the violence in the present-day and resentment between African-Americans.
Troops sent by South Carolina and the effects
One of the main sources for the Confederate army and the union was South Carolina as the war advanced. Many ex-slaves assembled and joined the Union as the State of South Carolina slaves were more than the freemen.
Effects
- South Carolina provided food, uniforms, war equipment, textiles, and leaders, and well trainers, soldiers.
- The state hosted various prisoners camps despite being comparatively free from the Union until when the war was ending.
- South Carolina sent many white soldiers in fighting for the Union, similar to what other Confidence states.
Military actions in South Carolina and their effects on the state
While still Fort Sumter was being constructed, South Carolina withdrew from the Union; two companies guarded the harbor with federal troops. In 1862, a standoff was issued where a ship arrived in South Carolina; this led to the state firing upon the ship as it got nearer the Charleston Harbor that forced it back to the sea. After Major Anderson declined repeated calls on abandoning Fort Sumter, thousands of troops were surrounding his garrison (Hamer, 1918). However, in Deep South, a few US military facilities had been apprehended already. Most people saw fort Sumter is one of the standing hurdles to overwhelm in the South before attaining sovereignty.
Political effects of Reconstruction in South Carolina
Various political reforms were made by the delegates where they granted the local government power. Districts were turned into counties, and the voters in South Carolina elected county board of commissioners made of three men with financial and taxing power.
Economic effects of Reconstruction in South Carolina
- The economy in South Carolina remained to rest on cotton and agriculture, but now mostly relied on sharecropping instead of slave labor.
- Landowners were put under tax exemptions in South Carolina, which was to increase economic growth.
- Most of the properties were lost in South Carolina by most of the landowners.
- Unlike before the Civil War, where landowners were paying laborers or workers with paper currency, they now started only farmed and controlled their lands (Ford, 1988).
Social effects of Reconstruction in South Carolina
- This resulted in both the elite and middle-class to be involved in violence and extortion on the African Americans during reconstruction.
- Through the Ohio constitution, South Carolina delegates stimulate public equality and education with the new documents.
How the 1861 decision affected South Carolina future generations
There was an invention of the hospital in as before the Civil War people in South Carolina used to get treatment at home. When the war ended, hospitals improved in the State of South Carolina and other parts of the country. The current day hospitals are a straight descendant of the medical centers invented after the war.
References
Cauthen, Charles Edward. South Carolina Goes to War, 1860-1865. Univ of South Carolina Press, 2005.
Ford, Lacy K. Origins of Southern Radicalism: The South Carolina Upcountry, 1800-1860. Oxford University Press, 1988.
Freehling, William W. Prelude to Civil War: the nullification controversy in South Carolina, 1816-1836. Oxford University Press, USA, 1992.
Hamer, Philip May. The secession movement in South Carolina, 1847-1852. HR Haas & Company, 1918.
Haygood, Tamara Miner. Henry William Ravenel, 1814-1887: South Carolina Scientist in the Civil War Era. University of Alabama Press, 1987.