![]() “The Second War of Independence” was also used, as was the curious if not ironic “War of Northern Arrogance.” To Southerners, the conflict was often called the “War of Secession” or even the high-minded sounding “War for Southern Independence.” Other Confederates called it the “War of Northern Aggression” - a name that persists within some quarters to this very day. And how one chose to refer to the events of 1861 to 1865 often depended on which side they were on. ![]() ![]() Not surprisingly, they couldn’t even come to a consensus over what to call the very conflict that divided them.īefore arriving at the almost universally-accepted “American Civil War,” a vast assortment of names were applied to the four-year struggle. THE UNION AND the Confederacy had violently differing views on issues like states’ rights and slavery. (Image source: WikiCommons) “Before arriving at the almost universally-accepted ‘American Civil War,’ a vast assortment of names were applied to the conflict.” And it didn’t end there: Northerners and southerners couldn’t even agree on what to call the war itself. The Yankees named the September 1862 clash after a creek that ran through the battlefield the Rebels named the struggle for the town of Sharpsburg, Maryland. ![]() Was it the Battle of Antietam of Sharpsburg? That depended on what side of the U.S. ![]()
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