Compare And Contrast The Civil War

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Though debated by many historians, the Civil War is often referred to as a “total war,” meaning that the conflict permeated every aspect of life in the United States. The home front of both the Union and the Confederacy played crucial aspects in supporting their armies; however, there were many issues that both sides faced. On both sides the respective home fronts faced a failing economy and inflation as well as shortages of material and labor. There was the controversial question of slavery and whether emancipation was approaching and the political tension that traveled with it. While both sides did the best they could to provide for their troops and support the war effort in stressful times, the Union dealt most effectively with issues on …show more content…

The Union continued to be recognized as a sovereign nation throughout the war so they were able to keep trading with other countries and was better able to support their economy. The South was able to maintain a relationship with Britain at the beginning of the war due to their massive amounts of cotton exports. However, the South severely underestimated the British’s reliance on their cotton and soon lost their main trading partner putting them with only local materials and resources to finance the war. The North was also far more industrialized than their Southern counterparts. While the Confederacy relied on agriculture to support their economy, the Union relied on both agriculture and industrialization. Most factories in the United States were located in the North giving them a greater advantage when it came to supplying their own materials and left the Confederacy with no where to create weapons and military necessities. Due to the unstable wartime economy, both the North and the South suffered from bouts of inflation. The South, however, had a rate of inflation upwards of 5,000%, “the Confederate government obtained three-quarters of its revenues from the printing press… and less than two percent from taxes” (McPherson 439) The North suffered …show more content…

While this was a significant problem throughout both sides of the war, the South suffered the most. The North, as said before, maintained its trade relations with outside nations so acquiring material was not nearly as difficult for the Unionists. Along with this, around eighty percent of eligible Southern men were fighting in the war as opposed to less than fifty percent of Northern men. The Confederacy had fewer workers to produce the mass amounts of war materials needed. Immigration and emancipation in the North also helped the Union overcome the shortage obstacles. While white males were off fighting in the war, plenty of immigrants and free blacks remained at home and worked jobs creating supplies and material. In the South, the majority of people left behind were slaves, who without their masters and overseers, often would not work as hard when the lady of the plantation was left in charge. The war did cause a decrease in output in both the Union and the Confederacy but the Union was able to figure out a way to successfully produce enough goods to support the economy and the war

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