Civil War Aftermath
The long war was over, but for the victors the peace was marred
by the assassination of Abraham Lincoln, the greatest figure of the war. The
ex-Confederate states, after enduring the unsuccessful attempts of
Reconstruction to impose a new society on the South, were readmitted to the
Union, which had been saved and in which slavery was now abolished. The Civil
War brought death to more Americans than did any other war, including World War
II. Photographs by Mathew B. Brady and others reveal some of the horror behind
the statistics. The war cost untold billions and nourished rather than canceled
hatreds and intolerance, which persisted for decades. It established many of the
patterns, especially a strong central government, that are now taken for granted
in American national life. Virtually every battlefield, with its graves, is
either a national or a state park. Monuments commemorating Civil War figures and
events are conspicuous in almost all sizable Northern towns and are even more
numerous in the upper South.
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