North Carolina, South Carolina, North Dakota, and South Dakota.
The South was the Confederacy - the eleven states that had seceded from the USA. The North meant all the other states, and these included four states of the Upper South that had remained loyal. But their loyalty was often uncertain (a major worry to Lincoln), and all of them recruited some regiments of Confederates.
North Carolina, Virginia, Arkansas, and Tennessee.ANSWER:There were 11 Southern states that seceded from the Union. They were South Carolina, North Carolina, Virginia, Florida, Georgia, Alabama, Tennessee, Mississippi, Louisiana, Texas, and Arkansas.
It started the war, pitting the industrial north against the better trained south
They did not all go out on the same day. The first was South Carolina, on December 20, 1860. By February, 1861, six more states from the deep south had also seceded. The other four of the upper south did not go out until after the firing on Fort Sumter. The day after Sumter surrendered Lincoln called on those states of the upper south to help fight the states of the lower south, so they had to chose whether to stay in the union and fight their neighbors, or go out and join with them. The last was North Carolina, on May 18, after Virginia and Tennessee had also done so, leaving them "surrounded" by states of the Confederacy.
North Carolina, South Carolina, North Dakota, and South Dakota.
The four states in the United States that have compass terms in their names are North Carolina, South Carolina, West Virginia, and New Hampshire.
There are four states in the United States that have compass terms in their names: North Carolina, South Carolina, West Virginia, and New Hampshire.
south,north,eastern,western
No. The South was the breakaway Confederacy. The North were the states that had remained loyal to the USA - the Union. (They included four slave-states)
North Dakota, South Dakota, Wyoming, and Idaho are the four states which border the US state of Montana.
Four states have two words in common North and South.
Four states have two words in common North and South.
North Dakota, South Dakota, Wyoming, and Idaho are the four states which border the US state of Montana.
Minnesota shares land borders with four states: Wisconsin, Iowa, South Dakota, and North Dakota.
1889. North and South Dakota, Montana, and Washington become states
Delaware, Maryland, Kentucky, and Missouri are the four border states of the North and South. (West Virginia is also a border state)