Secession Crisis/Related Articles
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
- See also changes related to Secession Crisis, or pages that link to Secession Crisis or to this page or whose text contains "Secession Crisis".
Parent topics
- U.S. Constitution [r]: The document defining the fundamental purpose and structure of the United States government; it became effective in 1789. [e]
Subtopics
- Confederate States of America [r]: Government formed by eleven southern states of the United States between 1861 and 1865, during the American Civil War. [e]
- American Civil War [r]: {1861-65) war by the U.S. to prevent 11 of its states (the Confederate States of America) from seceding; won by the U.S. after the death of 600,000 people and the abolishment of slavery. [e]
- Abraham Lincoln [r]: (1809-65) Sixteenth U.S. President (from 1861 to 1865) who prosecuted the American Civil War to reclaim 11 seceding states and abolish slavery; assassinated in 1865 near the beginning of his second term. Considered the greatest of all American presidents. [e]
- James Buchanan [r]: Only U.S. President (15th), 1857-1861, that never married. Democratic Senator and Secretary of State under President James K. Polk. [e]
- James Buchanan [r]: Only U.S. President (15th), 1857-1861, that never married. Democratic Senator and Secretary of State under President James K. Polk. [e]
- Empire of Japan [r]: That part of the History of Japan in which territorial expansion was pursued by military means, roughly from the Meiji Restoration to the Surrender of Japan [e]
- Liberal internationalism [r]: A political philosophy that sees the greatest world benefits coming from an active movement to an international order, not necessarily world government [e]
- North Carolina (U.S. state) [r]: A state in the southeastern region of the United States [e]
- Georgia (U.S. state) [r]: medium-sized, populous state in southeast U.S. on the Gulf of Mexico; one of the country's original 13 colonies that rebelled during the civil war (1861-1865). [e]
- Seminole [r]: Native American tribe formed in Florida by Creek people and members of other tribes; now living in Oklahoma as well as Florida. [e]