The Civil War (1861-1865)

Approval Rate: 5%

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Reviews 23

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  • by

    oscargamblesfr_o

    Wed Oct 20 2010

    Why can't we be friends? Why can't we be friends? Why can't we be friends? Why can't we be friends?

  • by

    magneticd

    Wed Oct 20 2010

    Slavery is bad, hmm-kay. My family was BALLIN' in the south, though. Damn it. I guess I can accept the trade off. Tremendous profits and human servants for the right to use the word 'BALLIN!'

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    twansalem

    Wed May 14 2008

    This list is a good indication that most people can't view events from before their time in the proper perspective. At the time that I am writing this review, 9/11 is ranked higher on this list. But in reality, 9/11 pales in comparison to the Civil War. No other event in the history of this nation comes close to being as tragic as the Civil War. In many of the border states, it was not uncommon for one family member to enlist in the Union Army, and another family member to enlist in the Confederate Army. This war tore the country apart, tore families apart, and destroyed huge amounts of the South, all with a huge loss of life. While it has died down in recent years, some parts of the South still resent the North for the Civil War. A war that happened almost 150 years ago continues to have residual effects on this country.

  • by

    englander14

    Tue Nov 27 2007

    Our country at War with itself over Slavery(Another True Tragedy)is a most Tragic Event.

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    victor83

    Fri Mar 16 2007

    First of all, this was not technically a civil war at all. It was a war that was both stupid and unnecessary.

  • by

    drummond

    Wed Dec 28 2005

    Except for the results.

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    pabobe99

    Wed Jun 22 2005

    Most would rate 9/11 as the most tragic event in our history, but a good understanding of this country's history would have many conclude that there was nothing more tragic than the Civil War. The Civil War literally tore this country apart, and the price to put it back together was more costly in terms of blood than anything else in the history of our great nation.

  • by

    james76255

    Tue May 10 2005

    A tragic war that divided the country, and in some ways still does. Oddly, it may very well have saved the country in some ways.

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    tjgypsy2

    Tue May 10 2005

    Easily one of the most tragic events in our history, since this one was us fighting us. Problem with a war like that is that it's hard to tell who wins. (The South may have surrendered, but both sides paid horribly) I suppose we should all be thankful that the weapons of the time weren't any better than they were...

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    spartacus007

    Mon May 09 2005

    More Americans died than in any other event, and I don't have to explain its lasting impact.

  • by

    defbean

    Mon Dec 20 2004

    I had 5 relatives fighting for the South and all made it home. As my grandpa said there is no war worse than one where you fight yourselves.

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    wavebacker

    Sat Dec 11 2004

    Tragic but inevitable. Many died in the war, but the Union was preserved, slavery ended.

  • by

    stolypin

    Sun Nov 14 2004

    2% of the American population died so that Abraham Lincoln could exert unconstitutional power over soverign states.

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    jglscd35

    Sun Oct 24 2004

    without question the most devastating war in the history of america. the fabric and future of the union was at stake as the southern states seceded and the issues of state rights and eventually slavery would be settled in blood. if the south had won, both nations would have undoubtedly survived, but america would be nowhere near as strong and vital as she is now, and negroes would probably still be second class citizens in the c.s.a.

  • by

    seraph

    Thu Sep 30 2004

    Sure, the fact that it was the deadliest war for America in its history (mostly because it involved America beating the crap out of itself), but it did solve a lot of issues. It ended slavery and helped out state's rights...I think the South just needed to get that frustration out of its system. Thank God Lincoln handled a terrible situation so well. I think a civil war can make or break a country. It made us.

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    eschewobfuscat_ion

    Tue Jul 20 2004

    The Civil War was certainly the most tragic war in US history, but I don't consider it an event. Certainly the North was justified in fighting for its beliefs: that the Union was a single entity and the federal government had the authority to criminalize slavery. The Confederacy was justified in fighting for its beliefs: that each state was responsible for deciding its own laws, any area of law not specifically delineated in the Constitution. The founding fathers (i. e. Jefferson) decided not to include any mention of the legality of slavery in the Constitution because the southern Colonies would not have ratified it in the first place. There is much, much discussion and argument on record about slavery in Philadelphia by members of the Continental Congress. Omitting it was the only way to form the USA at the time, but they left a time-bomb ticking for 75 years. It was only a matter of time.

  • by

    enkidu

    Wed Mar 24 2004

    There is no question to me that this, and American slavery, are the greatest tragedies on the list, and September 11 comes in third or fourth (possibly after Pearl Harbor). The division in the country, the savage nature of the combat, the staggering death toll, the incomprehensible amount of suffering and generations of hatred that resulted from this terrible conflict boggle the mind. In some parts of the South you can still feel the presence of this long-ago conflict as though it were within living memory. In my own family brothers fought against brothers, and their poignant stories have survived telling and retelling to the present day. I hope nothing like this ever happens again.

  • by

    canadasucks

    Mon Feb 16 2004

    Hello! HELLO!? You tunnel-visioned 9-11 gazers have to wake up. It's the Civil War- period. This was the war that made sure that one country would dominate North America (and ultimately the western hemisphere) This war involed millions of people with casualty rates that would be nauseating by today's standards. It was a tragedy because the weapons outweighed the tactics. It was also a war lenghened by inept northern generals. The war ruined one economy- changed our history- and insured our dominance (for better or for worse) on this side of the globe. The sheer hundreds of thousands of people directly affected by this war make it the pure American tragedy. Had the result of the Civil War been different, it probably would have negatively affected our history. It's time for the 9-11 generation to read a book and turn off the T.V.

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    anonymous

    Mon Jan 19 2004

    The Civil War was the most tragic event in American history in that it divided the nation for years, and brothers fought against brothers. More soldiers died in the Civil War than in any other war in American history.

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    irishgit

    Tue Jan 13 2004

    Of all wars, Civil Wars may be the worst. A terribly tragic war, with immense effects on America and ultimately the world.

  • by

    kolby1973

    Sat Sep 13 2003

    Because of all the people that were slaughtered, I would consider this one of the worst tragedies in our country's history. I can't even imagine what these people went thru during this war.

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    president_x_d

    Wed Aug 13 2003

    The Civil War was tragic in that it ever happened. The South should have been allowed to secede from the Union without bloodshed. The South claimed that increased tarriffs from exports to other nations with no way of having retaliatory tarriff control was one cause of grief. (Tarriffs are controlled at the Federal level, not the State.) Another cause of contention was the fact that many foreign imports to the US were being run through northern cities, causing southern businessmen to pay twice for imports. A third cause was the fact that norther states and cities boycotted southern products to great effect. But here is what they always avoid: the underlying cause of the tarriffs, the imports to the north rather than the south, and the boycotts were all based upon foreign nations and northern consumers using economic pressure DUE TO THEIR HATRED OF SLAVERY. The south would have split from the union in order to tax northern goods and tax imports, but this plan would backfire like all type... Read more

  • by

    redoedo

    Tue Jul 15 2003

    Never was our nation in more turmoil than from 1861 to 1865, for in those four years, the Civil War was raging, and the Union was deeply divided. Thousands and thousands of Americans (both Union and Confederate) lost their lives in this bloody war which led to deep divisions between the North and the South for the next century.

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