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For the most part, there is little to separate Northerners and Southerners other than geographical boundaries, such as the Mason-Dixon Line. But had you grown up in the Deep South during the time of William Faulkner's short story, "A Rose for Emily," the differences would be a little clearer. The South's hatred of the Northern states had been building since long before the Civil War. Most Northerners disapproved of the slavery still in existence in Southern states, and Southerners did not care for the large number of immigrants that flocked to Northern cities. As the Civil War drew near, the North's political power became overwhelming; and when Abraham Lincoln was elected president, the Southern states soon seceded, and Lincoln sent troops into the new Confederacy to bring them under control--and back into the Union.

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