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Carpetbaggers
Daniel Webster
As men went to war many women took their husbands places running homes. Farms ,and businesses
Prior to the Civil War, John Brown led a group of 18 men into Harper's Ferry in Virginia. His plan was to start a slave rebellion in the south. He mission was unsuccessful and lasted only 36 hours until John Brown and his remaining men were captured. He was hanged for treason a few months later. Brown's plan was considered "an act of a madman" by Northerners and Southerners alike. He was regarded as a hero and martyr in the North, although southerners could not comprehend why anyone would have admiration for him.
It is uncertain to tell if any were actually part of the Confederacy in battle, but I highly doubt it. Most slaves were considered to be inferior and were forced to stay on the farms. If a slave was to fight it would probably be for the north. I only know of one actual group of slaves that fought in the war. (There were a couple hundred in the group) and people were racist towards them, and they were also kept out of battles.
Yeomen
Yeoman
group b
Group B
It divided the white Southerners into two groups. The group of people who owned slaves, and those who didn't.
sex
Kolhoz / kolkhozIn english, they were called collective farms.
It's not just farms - the concept is known as a Cooperative, or Co-Op.
southerners and landowners
Carpetbaggers
Appalachian mountain whites
Plantation Owners