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Webisode 6. Segment 2 Strategy in the South After Bull Run, Lincoln knew the North had a tough job ahead. Many Southerners were skilled fighters. They were mostly farmers, used to shooting guns, riding horses, and being out-of-doors But though President Jefferson Davis had superb generals, what he didn't have enough of was food, clothing, weapons, or ships. Slavery had kept the South feudal and agricultural while much of the world was turning industrial. The transportation system was out-of-date. Some farmers hoarded crops and the Confederate system gave Davis little power to do anything about it. Soldiers often went hungry. Munitions were in short supply. The Confederates were sure their longtime friends in England would help them. South Carolina senator James H. Hammond was among the many who thought England depended on southern cotton and tobacco. He said: "What would happen if no cotton were furnished for three years? England would topple headlong and carry the whole civilized world with her, save the South. No, you dare not make war on cotton. Cotton is king!" But the Confederates were wrong. When the Union navy blockaded Southern ports, the British navy didn't interfere. The world was changing and England with it. The British, along with others, had read Harriet Beecher Stowe's |
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