At the beginning of the Civil War, Jefferson Davis reminded the southern population that slavery had made the south a prosperous and wealthy place to live and that slavery “had become absolutely necessary to the wants of civilized man.” The south saw all of its money being made through the use of slaves so it became a normalized institution to the people. Whether a white, southern-farmer owned slaves or not, the people of the south did not want to see the end of slavery; they feared that having free blacks in the south would disrupt their way of life and cause more problems than what was posed by slavery. Southerners felt threatened by the agenda of the north, who aimed to stop the spread of slavery in the United States, thus changing everything the south had known since the colonies were created. Thomas Jefferson even tried to put blame on the British Crown for introducing the principle of slavery, he stated that the British had prevented the colonies from ever outlawing slavery because Britain had caused their economy to be so dependent on