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Union (American Civil War)

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Map of the division of the states during the Civil War.  Blue represents Union states, including those admitted during the war; light blue represents Union states which permitted slavery (border states); red represents Confederate states. Unshaded areas were not states before or during the Civil War.
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Map of the division of the states during the Civil War. Blue represents Union states, including those admitted during the war; light blue represents Union states which permitted slavery (border states); red represents Confederate states. Unshaded areas were not states before or during the Civil War.

During the American Civil War, the Union was a name used to refer to the United States, the twenty-three northern states that were not part of the seceding Confederacy. Because the term had been used prior to the war to refer to the entire United States (a "union of states"), using it to apply to the non-secessionist side carried a connotation of legitimacy as the continuation of the pre-existing political entity. Also, in the public dialogue of the United States, new states are "admitted to the Union" and the President's annual address to Congress and to the people is referred to as the "State of the Union" Address. 

During the American Civil War, Loyalists to the United States living in the Border States and Confederate States were termed Unionists. Nearly 120,000 Southern Unionists served in the Union Army during the Civil War, and every Southern state, except South Carolina, raised 'Unionists' regiments. Southern Unionists were extensively used as anti-guerrilla forces and as occupation troops in areas of the Confederacy occupied by the Union.

Since the Civil War, the term has been a widely used synonym for the Northern side of the conflict, and has increasingly lost the more subtle historical connotations. It is usually used in contexts where "United States" might be confusing, "Federal" obscure, or "Yankee" dated or derogatory. Example uses:

However, the term Union remains more popular with historians than it does with the general public.

References

See also

 
 
American Civil WarNavigate through History: 
Issues & Combatants Prelude: OriginsTimelineAntebellumBleeding KansasJohn BrownSecessionBorder statesAnaconda Plan
Slavery: Abolitionism • African- AmericansSlaveryFugitive slave lawsUncle Tom's CabinEmancipation ProclamationFrederick DouglassHarriet Tubman
Combatants: Union (USA)Union ArmyUnion NavyConfederacy (CSA)Confederate States ArmyConfederate States Navy
Theaters & Campaigns Theaters: Union naval blockadeEasternWesternLower SeaboardTrans-MississippiPacific Coast
1862: New MexicoJackson's ValleyPeninsulaNorthern VirginiaMarylandStones River
1863: VicksburgGettysburgTullahomaBristoe
1864: Red RiverOverlandAtlantaValley 1864Bermuda HundredRichmond-PetersburgFranklin-NashvilleSherman's March
1865: CarolinasAppomattox
Major Battles List by state • List by date • Naval battlesAntietamAtlanta1st Bull Run2nd Bull RunChancellorsvilleChattanoogaChickamaugaCold HarborFive ForksFort DonelsonFort SumterFranklinFredericksburgGettysburgHampton RoadsMobile BayNew OrleansNashvillePea RidgePerryvillePetersburgPickett's ChargeSeven DaysSeven PinesShilohSpotsylvaniaStones RiverVicksburgWilderness
Key CSA
Leaders
Military: AndersonBeauregardBraggCooperEarlyEwellForrestGorgasA.P. HillHoodJacksonA.S. JohnstonJ.E. JohnstonLeeLongstreetMorganMosbyPriceQuantrillSemmesE. K. SmithStuartTaylorWheeler
Civilian: BenjaminDavisMalloryStephens

Key USA
Leaders
Military: AndersonBuellButlerBurnsidedu PontFarragutFooteGrantHalleckHookerHuntMcClellanMcDowellMeadeMeigsPopePorterRosecransScottSheridanShermanThomas
Civilian: AdamsChaseEricssonLincolnPinkertonStantonWadeWelles
Aftermath 13th Amendment14th Amendment15th AmendmentAlabama ClaimsCarpetbaggers • Freedmen's BureauJim Crow lawsKu Klux KlanReconstructionRedeemers
Other Topics ACW TopicsDraft RiotsNaming the WarPhotographyRail TransportSupreme Court CasesTurning points
State involvement: CaliforniaIllinoisOhio
Military: CavalryField ArtilleryMilitary LeadershipOfficial Records
Politics: CopperheadsCommittee on the ConductPolitical GeneralRadical RepublicansTrent AffairWar Democrats
Prisons: AndersonvilleCamp Douglas
Categories

• • • • • • • • •

InterWiki
[[wiktionary:Special:Search/American Civil War|American Civil War]] from Wiktionary
[[wikibooks:Special:Search/American Civil War|ACW Textbooks]] from Wikibooks
[[wikiquote:Special:Search/American Civil War|ACW Quotations]] from Wikiquote
[[wikisource:Special:Search/American Civil War|ACW Source texts]] from Wikisource
[media] from Commons
[[wikinews:Special:Search/American Civil War|ACW News stories]] from Wikinews

 


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