AMERICA'S CIVIL WAR

CHAPTER 2 - A CHANGING LANDSCAPE

At the start of the War Between the States - when cows grazed near the White House and daisies surrounded the Smithsonian - opposing ideals split the country in two. Seemingly irreconcilable differences caused fathers and sons to leave home "to fight," never to return again. In many cases, family members had no idea how their loved ones died - or where they were buried.

Did either side think the war would be over quickly? Despite the typical early enthusiasm to "fight for the right" of one’s convictions, the war dragged on. By its end, the country and her people had been devastated - especially in the South.

While many Americans have heard of the places made famous by the Civil War, few have actually "been there." Thanks to U.S. Archives, it is possible to "meet" the people involved, "visit" the scenes of conflict and examine the evidence of what actually happened in America's first highly photographed war.

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