KEY EVENTS
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For decades, sectionalism had split the nation into the free North and the slave South with both attempting to impose their vision of America on the nation as a whole. The election of Lincoln is seen by many Southerners as the end to their way of life. Unable to address the problems facing the nation through compromise, a civil war erupts into the bloodiest war in American history.
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KEY EVENTS
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The Emancipation Proclamation proved to be a political turning point in the war, forcing the morality of slavery to the forefront of the conflict and allowing blacks to join Union forces. However, the key to Union victory lay in the political leadership of Abraham Lincoln during the war as he expanded the role of the presidency with his war-time authority.
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KEY EVENTS
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With the Civil War fought and done, the South was left devastated and embittered by the war. Farms, railroads, and factories were destroyed throughout the South by Union forces and Richmond and Atlanta lay in ruins. Now, the nation faced the problem of figuring out where to go after the war and how to begin the restoration of a nation still deeply divided.
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KEY EVENTS
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As Reconstruction continued, one half of the nation found itself in a military occupation on the other half. This occupation was now that last attempt of the North to reform and restructure the South in the wake of the Civil War in a nation with freed slaves trying to find a new political and economic voice.
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