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Definition: slave states supporting the union The Border States came to be at the start of the American Civil War after the election of Abraham Lincoln in 1860. After Lincoln’s election the lower south immediately started seceding from the union; Beginning with a convention held in South Carolina. With a unanimous vote on December 20, 1860 SC seceded from the union. During the next to months the states of Mississippi, Florida, Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana, and Texas adopted constitutions of secession. (President James Buchanan, in the last days of his administration, declared that the federal government would not forcibly prevent the secessions.) In February 1861, the seceding states sent representatives to a convention in Montgomery, Alabama. The convention adopted a provisional constitution and chose Jefferson Davis of Mississippi as provisional president and Alexander Hamilton Stephens of Georgia as provisional vice president. A convention, on March 11, 1861, unanimously ratified a permanent constitution creating the Confederate States of America. Between December 30, 1860, and February 18, 1861, the Confederates had seized 11 federal forts and arsenals from South Carolina to Texas and harassed Fort Sumter in Charleston, South Carolina. The number of states in the Confederacy was increased to 11 by the secession of Virginia in April and of Arkansas and North Carolina in May, followed by Tennessee in June after the fall of Fort Sumter. Border States, name applied during the American Civil War (1861-1865) to the slaveholding states adjoining the free states. The border states were Delaware, Maryland, Kentucky, Virginia, and Missouri. The issue of secession sharply divided their citizens, but only Virginia withdrew from the Union . The western part of the state, however, declared its independence from Virginia and was admitted to the Union as West Virginia in 1863. The problem of slavery in the border states preoccupied Lincoln. In the spring of 1862, Lincoln tried to persuade the border states to abolish slavery, instead of forcing them to. Congress then passed a resolution offering federal compensation to states that voluntarily abolished slavery. Facts Lincolns Administration regarded Kentucky, Missouri, Maryland and Delaware as border states mainly on their geographical location and questionable loyalty. These four states had strong ties with both the north and the south. Slavery existed in all 4 states, but the importance of slavery diminished in Delaware and Maryland as their prewar economies became increasingly interwoven with the North's. Delaware Delaware rejected an invitation to join the Confederacy early in 1861, and throughout the war remained loyal to the North. Delaware mobilized its industries to provide supplies for the Union Army; despite some Southern sentiments, it never seriously threatened to leave the Union. Maryland Marylanders were much more divided in their sympathies, being distinctly Southern in character and they were attached to the South by strong blood ties. They resented radical secessionists and abolitionists alike as the cause of hostilities, urging recognition of the Confederacy. The first blood was spilled during the Baltimore Riots in March 1861, and though the state contributed substantially to the war effort with men and material, the Federal government garrisoned troops in the state as a precautionary measure. Kentucky Believing Kentucky to be a buffer zone, Governor Beriah Magoffin refused the call for troops and formally declared the states neutrality. But the attempt proved futile: both Union and Confederate recruiters operated in the state, with Kentuckians serving on both sides. When Confederate troops moved into western Kentucky in Sept. 1861, and Brig. Gen. U.S. Grant occupied Paducah, the legislature officially endorsed the Union. Pro-South Magoffin established a provisional government at Russellville, ratified the Confederate Constitution, and Kentucky was admitted to the Confederacy in November 1861. The state, like Missouri, suffered the tragedy of a war that pitted father against son, brother against brother. Missouri Missouri attempted neutrality after delegates at a secession convention ,in February 1861 refused to secede. Federal invasion in May pushed many Unionists into the Confederate camp, and as in Kentucky, proUnion and proConfederate governments were established. Missouri became a Confederate state November, 1861. Its thriving prewar economy was devastated and its people were terrorized by brutal guerrilla warfare. The border states represented a serious dilemma for President Lincoln. Convinced they were the key to victory, he could not afford to alienate them with his emancipation policies, thus incurred the scorn of Radicals by failing to abolish border-state slavery until the 13th Amendment, passed in 1865. The federal troops in the Western border states had to protect the occupied territory from Confederate invaders. Soldiers also policed the polls to protect loyal Unionists during wartime elections. Though the border states remained pro-Union, even the severely divided Kentucky and Missouri, put aside their issues in the effort to nurture their loyalty. These struggles however weighed heavily on Lincoln's overall plan to win the war. White Slave Free Black Total Delaware 90,589 1,798 19,829 112,216 Kentucky 919,484 225,483 10,684 1,155,651 Maryland 515,918 87,189 83,942 687,049 Missouri 1,063,489 114,931 3,572 1,181,992 Total 2,589,480 429,401 118,027 3,136,908 http://www.civilwarhome.com/borderstates.htm http://www.sewanee.edu/faculty/Willis/Civil_War/tables/BorderPop18 60.html www.wikipedia.com Liberty Equality Power A History of the American People Third Edition Microsoft ® Encarta ® 2007. © 1993-2006 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.