Out of the 9.1 million people living in the South during the civil war, 3.6 million of them were slaves.
The population of the South at the beginning of the Civil War was around 9 million people. This was quite small compared to the 22 million people who lived in the North.
North was against making slaves states in the west South wanted to make slave states in the west
that's what the civil war was... The civil war was over the south, slave states and the north, slave-free states. The north won.
At the start of the US Civil War, there were 3,950,528 slaves in the south. This was up from a population of just over one million at the start of the century. Ever increasing international demand for southern raw materials caused the number of slaves to rise.
was the key general of the south during the civil war
3.5 million were slaves out of a population of 9 million.
At the outbreak of the war, the slave population was approximately 3.5 million.
The Union had an overwhelmingly larger population than the Confederacy. This was true before, during and after the US Civil War. The North's population was about 23 million, while the South's population was about 9 million. Almost four million of this was the slave population.
South- Texas was a slave state
The population of the South was approximately 9 million in 1861 at the beginning of the conflict.
The North had a population of about 20 million and the South about 9 million. Actually, slaves made up around 43% of the Southern population. The slave population among "border states" was not significant. Delaware as example had less than 1,000.
Slaves were treated poorly in the South, were it was legal. They were free in the north.
Much smaler population from which to recruit armies.
I think 30%. :) ^_^'
I think 30%. :) ^_^'
The population of the South at the beginning of the Civil War was around 9 million people. This was quite small compared to the 22 million people who lived in the North.
Yes. Slave gangs did most of the laying of track in the South.