DiogenesLamp #15: "Isn't this the only thing you really need to know?"
ComputerGuy #24: "It’s the only thing that matters. Always has been."
Our pro-Confederates love to forget that Confederate forces also invaded every Union state & territory they could reach, including:
In the Civil War's first year, more battles were fought in the Union than in the Confederacy and more Confederate soldiers died on Union soil than on Confederate grounds.
Sure, as the war progressed, most battles were indeed fought in Confederate states, but even as late as the summer and fall of 1864, there were still Confederate attacks in Union states like Kansas (i.e., Mine Creek), Missouri (Little Blue River) and Maryland (Folck's Mill).
Civil War battles, by year:
*AFTER* Lincoln started a war with them.
That's fair game, *AFTER* someone invaded them first.