There's a good book (I cannot remember the author) called "Bushwhackers and [something else, can't remember]: The Civil War in Western NC". It is a very good account of the bitter Unionist-Secessionist feuds in the western part of NC, particularly in and around Wautauga and Avery counties, as well as further south into the Smoky Mts.Ibanez wrote:Less than 1% of the population owned slaves. Additionally, the rule of thumb is, the further from the coast you went, the less and less you would encounter slave plantations. Once you got into the mountains, it was rare. Most mountainous areas were extremely Pro-Union. This has been brought up ad nasuem by myself and others. Some people, like dback, could careless about hte facts and stats. They hold onto the Slavery position without fully understand this socio-economic turmoil and make up of a slave state in the Southern section of the USA.OL FU wrote:While very few southerners owned slaves, it has been estimated that 3/5s of the wealth in South Carolina at the time of secession was in the form of human capital. That is a very powerful motivator for those that control the social order to maintain it. As far as the vast majority of soldiers not owning slaves, through out history the vast majority of soldiers have not been property owners or at least not affluent property owners. Considering that South Carolina seceded following the election of a President from a party formed by abolitionists, there is little doubt as to why South Carolina seceded ( for additional proof read DECLARATION OF THE IMMEDIATE CAUSES WHICH INDUCE AND JUSTIFY THE SECESSION OF SOUTH CAROLINA FROM THE FEDERAL UNION. http://facweb.furman.edu/~benson/docs/decl-sc.htm" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;. South Carolina seceded mainly to preserve its peculiar institution. However, and it may be semantics but I don’t think so and to the extent that secession can be separated from the war, the south fought the war for independence. One can argue the rights and wrongs of independence, but there seems to be little evidence that the main reason the north fought the war was to free the slaves. It did become part of the policy in the latter years of the war and once again you can argue whether it was policy or propaganda, but in the end the slaves were freed.
I will agree with Death Dealer, that secession was a stupid act on the part of South Carolina, but the question that remains is considering the loss of 500,000 citizens, the continued de facto slavery that existed in all states for another 100 years that only ended during the civil rights movement, the dire poverty that existed in the south for 100+ years and a myriad of other facts I won’t list, was the war worth the fight or should the north have allowed the split to occur?
The book is out of UNC Press, I highly recommend it. The book "Cold Mountain" (and subsequent movie) touches on some of what was going on up there, particularly with the Home Guard.





