Confederate States of America

WIP

The Confederate States of America (CSA) was the state in the South Eastern areas of the United States. The listed states were in the CSA:

Texas, Arkansas, Louisiana, Tennessee, Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia, Florida, South Carolina, North Carolina, Kentucky, Missouri, Virginia, and Missouri

https://www.britannica.com/topic/Confederate-States-of-America

Character
Male:The male version is the most known version of the character.

The male version of this character is shown wearing 1700s - 1800s battle clothes. Either gender; they can be shown with either blank, dull, white eyes; or pitch black.

Female: WIP

Description
As stated before the Confederate States normally are seen wearing 1700s - 1800s battle clothes. He commonly is shown with black eyes, sometimes depicted with an eye patch. The CSA is mainly shown with grey military pants. They would also wear military shoes from the 1700s - 1800s.

Personality
WIP They have a really dark personality, they have no respect for anyone else. They are very racist to anyone.

Interests

 * Expand territory
 * Spread/keep slavery in America

Flag Meaning
The flag of the CSA is a symbol of southern heritage and was adopted by some southern states after the American Civil War.

Nicknames

 * Confederate
 * CSA
 * Confederate states
 * Stars and Bars
 * Confederacy

Summary/History
The CSA began on February 4 1861 representatives from Mississippi, South Carolina, Florida, Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana, and Texas meeting in Montgomery, Alabama to later form the Confederate States of America on February, 8, 1861. The CSA had 3 flags in its history the Stars and Bars (March 1861 - May 1863), The Stainless Banner (May 1863 - March 1865), and The Blood Stained Banner (March - april 1865). The Confederacy continued to expand their territory claiming North Carolina (May 20, 1861), Arkansas (May 18, 1861), Kentucky (December 10, 1861), Tennessee (July 2, 1861), Missouri (November 28, 1861), and Virginia (April 23, 1861) The Confederate dissolved on May 6, 1865 after the events of the American Civil War.