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| USPS 32c Civil War pane of twenty source (note: the back has mini biographies!) |
The Civil War is the U.S. war that ended slavery. It took place from 1861 to 1865.
Before the war, the United States was divided. The northern states (Union) wanted to keep the country together, while the southern states (Confederacy) wanted to leave the Union. A major issue was slavery.
Even before the war, many people worked to end slavery. These people were called abolitionists. For example, Frederick Douglass spoke and wrote against slavery. Harriet Tubman helped enslaved people escape to freedom. William Lloyd Garrison used his newspaper to argue for immediate abolition.
The war began on April 12, 1861, at the Battle of Fort Sumter. During the war, President Abraham Lincoln issued the Emancipation Proclamation on January 1, 1863. This order freed enslaved people in the Confederate states, but it did not end slavery everywhere and depended on the Union winning the war.
Because of this, leaders in Congress decided to create a permanent law to end slavery. In 1864 and 1865, members of Congress debated a new amendment to the Constitution. Some lawmakers strongly supported it, saying slavery must end forever. Others opposed it or worried about its effects. The debate was difficult, and the amendment did not pass at first.
President Lincoln supported the amendment and encouraged Congress to act. In January 1865, the House of Representatives finally approved the 13th Amendment after a close and important vote. The Senate had already passed it earlier.
After Congress approved it, the amendment was sent to the states. By December 1865, enough states had approved it, and the 13th Amendment became law. It officially ended slavery in all parts of the United States.
In simple terms, the Emancipation Proclamation began freeing enslaved people during the war, and the 13th Amendment made the end of slavery permanent in the Constitution.
The Civil War is important because it kept the country united and led to the final and legal end of slavery.

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