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  1. Secession in the United States - Wikipedia

    The most serious attempt at secession was advanced in the years 1860 and 1861 as 11 Southern states each declared secession from the United States, and joined to form the Confederate States of …

  2. Secession | History, Definition, Crisis, & Facts | Britannica

    May 6, 2026 · secession, in U.S. history, the withdrawal of 11 slave states (states in which slaveholding was legal) from the Union during 1860–61 following the election of Abraham Lincoln as president. …

  3. Secession: How and Why the South Attempted to Leave the ... - HistoryNet

    The secession of Southern States led to the establishment of the Confederacy and ultimately the Civil War. It was the most serious secession movement in the United States and was defeated when the …

  4. Secession in the United States: What the Law Actually Says

    5 days ago · The Supreme Court settled the secession question back in 1869, and between federal law and the Constitution, the legal picture hasn’t changed much since.

  5. Secession and the Right to Rebel—Primary Sources

    Eleven states eventually seceded from the Union and tried to start their own nation. But under the Constitution did a state have a right to secede? If it did not, whatever happened to the “right to rebel” …

  6. Chronology of Major Events Leading to Secession Crisis

    December 10, 1860 —South Carolina congressmen meet with Buchanan and promise that their forces will not attack U.S. forts before the issue of secession is debated, or the two governments reach an …

  7. Secession: The Ultimate Guide to a State Leaving the Union

    This is the core act of secession: a state's government, through its legislature or a popular vote, declares that it is no longer part of the United States. This is the step taken by the Confederate states in 1860-61.

  8. No Exit: There’s Been Talk of Secession; Could It Occur Nowadays?

    Jul 22, 2025 · Secession raises foundational political and legal questions about the United States. Why are we talking about secession now? To what extent, if any, is secession viable? And what can we …

  9. The Reasons for Secession: A Documentary Study

    Dec 9, 2013 · Every state in the Confederacy issued an “Article of Secession” declaring their break from the Union. Four states went further. Texas, Mississippi, Georgia and South Carolina all issued …

  10. War Declared: States Secede from the Union!

    When Abraham Lincoln won the U.S election of 1860, many southern states followed South Carolina in succeeding from the Union. This article provides dates of each states' secession from the Union.