17-2
War Affects Society
Ø The Civil War caused social,
economic, and political changes in the North and the South.
Ø Some changes, like the growth of
industry, affected Americans long after the end of Civil War.
· As the Civil War moved into its
third year, the constant demand for men and resources began to take its toll
back home. Sometimes, the hardships endured by civilians resulted in angry
scenes like that witnessed by Agnes, a resident of
· On
“The crowd now rapidly increased,
and numbered, I am sure, more than a thousand women and children. It grew and
grew until it reached the dignity of a mob-a bread riot.”
---Agnes, quoted in Reminiscences of
Peace and War
· The mob then went out of control. It
broke into shops and stole food, clothing, and other goods. Only the arrival of
Confederate president Jefferson Davis and the threat of force ended the riot.
These hardships caused changes in civilian society in both the North and the
South.
· In the spring of 1863, riots like
the one in
· Faced with the difficulties of
waging war, the Confederate states fell into disagreement. The same principle
of states' rights that led them to break with the

· Disagreements over the conduct of
the war also arose in the North.
· As the war dragged on, both the
North and the South needed more soldiers. As a result, both sides passed laws
of conscription, also known as the draft. These laws required men to
serve in the military.
· The Confederates had been drafting
soldiers since the spring of 1862. By 1863, all able-bodied white men between the ages of 18
and 45 were required to join the army. However, there were a number of
exceptions. Planters who owned 20 or more slaves could avoid military service.
In addition, wealthy men could hire substitutes to serve in their place. By
1863, substitutes might cost as much as $6,000. The fact that wealthy men could
avoid service caused poor Southerners to complain that it was a "rich
man's war but a poor man's fight."
· The Union draft law was passed in
March 1863. Like the Confederacy, the
· Even so, the draft was extremely
unpopular. In July 1863, anger over the draft and simmering racial tensions
led to the
· Many people suffered economic
hardship during the war. The suffering was severe in the South, where most
battles were fought, but the North also experienced difficulties. Food
shortages were very common in the South, partly because so many farmers
were fighting in the Confederate army. Moreover, food sometimes could not get
to market because trains were now being used to carry war materials. The
Confederate army also seized food and other supplies for its own needs.
· Another problem, especially in the South,
was inflation, an increase in price and decrease in the value of money.
The average family food bill in the South increased from $6.65 a month in 1861
to $68 by mid-1863. Over the course of the war, prices rose 9,000 percent in
the South. Inflation in the North was much lower, but prices still rose faster
than wages, making life harder for working people. Some people took advantage
of wartime demand and sold goods for high prices.
· Overall, though, war production
boosted Northern industry and fueled the economy. In the short term, this gave the
North an economic advantage over the South. In the long term, industry would
begin to replace farming as the basis of the national economy.
· During the war, the federal
government passed two important economic measures. In 1861, it established
the first income tax-a tax on earnings. The following year, the government
issued a new paper currency, known as greenbacks because of their
color. The new currency helped the Northern economy by ensuring that people had
money to spend. It also helped the
· Some Southerners in the
· INFLATION IN THE SOUTH During the
Civil War, inflation caused hardship in the North and the South. But inflation
was especially severe in the Confederacy. where
prices could become outrageously high. The food prices shown below are from
1864. Consider how many days it took a Confederate soldier to earn enough money
to buy each of these foods.
· $.6.00 Dozen Eggs
· $6.25 Pound of Butter
· $10.00 Quart of Milk
· $12.00 Pound of Coffee
· $18.00 Confederate Soldier's Monthly Pay
· Another factor that affected the
South was the growing resistance from slaves. To hurt the Southern economy,
slaves slowed their pace of work or stopped working altogether. Some carried
out sabotage, destroying crops and farm equipment to hurt the plantation
economy. When white planters fled advancing Union armies, slaves often refused
to go along. They stayed behind, waiting for Union soldiers to free them. Some
enslaved people even rose up in rebellion against their overseers. More commonly,
though, slaves ran away from plantations to join the Union forces as
they pushed farther into Confederate territory. One Union officer described a
common sight.
“It was very touching to see the
vast numbers of colored [African-American] women following after us with babies
in their arms, and little ones like our Anna clinging to their tattered skirts.
One poor creature, while nobody was looking, hid two boys, five years old, in a
wagon, intending, I suppose that they should see the land of freedom if she
couldn't.”
Union
officer, quoted in The Civil War
· After
· With so many men away at war, women
in both the North and the South assumed increased responsibilities. Women
plowed fields and ran farms and plantations. They also took over jobs in
offices and factories that had previously been done only by men.
·
Trained as a schoolteacher, Clara Barton was working for the government
when the Civil War began. She organized a relief agency to help with the war
effort. "While our soldiers stand and fight," she said, "I can
stand and feed and nurse them." She also made food for soldiers in camp
and tended to the wounded and dying on the battlefield. At
· Other social changes came about
because of the thousands of women who served on the front lines as
volunteer workers and nurses. Susie King Taylor was an African-American woman
who wrote an account of her experiences as a volunteer with an African-American
regiment. She asked her readers to remember that "many lives were
lost,-not men alone but noble women as well."
· Relief agencies put women to work
washing clothes, gathering supplies, and cooking food for soldiers. Also,
nursing became a respectable profession for many women. By the end of the war,
around 3,000 nurses had worked under the leadership of Dorothea Dix in Union
hospitals. Southern women were also active as nurses and as volunteers on the
front.
· Women also played a key role as
spies in both the North and the South. Harriet Tubman served as a spy
for Union forces along the coast of
· Women caught spying were thrown into jail, but soldiers captured in battle
suffered far more. At prison camps in both the North and the South,
prisoners of war faced terrible conditions. One of the worst prison camps
in the North was in

· Conditions were also horrible in the
South. The camp
with the worst reputation was at
· People who saw the camps were
shocked by the condition of the soldiers. The poet Walt Whitman-who served as
a
· Around 50,000 men died in Civil War
prison camps. But this number was dwarfed by the number of dead on the
battlefronts and even more from disease in army camps.