Civil War HUSH Civil War Basics 1861 1865
Civil War HUSH
Civil War Basics � 1861 -1865 �Confederate States of America v. United States of America �SC was the 1 st state to succeed
Importance of the Election of 1860 Showed the sectional division of the US � SC feared the south had lost its influence and seceded Dec 20, 1860 �MS, AL, GA, LA, TX followed over the next month �Lincoln refused to recognize the secession of the states � Confederate States of American (CSA) created in Montgomery, AL Feb, 4, 1861 �CSA wants to revive US Articles of Confederation, each state is absolutely sovereign �Jefferson Davis is chosen President
“I hope to have God on my side but I have to have Kentucky” -- Abraham Lincoln 4 Why were border states important?
So who had the advantage? Advantages North South Population 21. 5 Million 9 Million Railroad 21, 700 Miles 9, 000 Miles Factories 110, 100 20, 600 Number of Soldiers 2, 100, 000 1, 064, 000 Military Leaders 5/8 Union Generals graduated from West Point 6/6 Confederate Generals graduated from West Point Location of Battles Home Field Advantage Visitor The CSA only needed to defend their land. The US was on the offensive!
Union Leaders Name West Point Graduate Class Rank Military Experience Nathaniel P. Banks No N/A None Don Carlos Buell Yes 32 Mexican War Ambrose B. Burnside Yes 18 Mexican War Benjamin f. Butler No N/A None Samuel R. Curtis Yes 27 Mexican War John C. Fremont No N/A None Ulysses S. Grant Yes 21 Mexican War George B. Mc. Clellan Yes 2 Mexican War Irvin Mc. Dowell Yes 23 Mexican War
Confederate Leaders Name West Point Graduate Class Rank Military Experience P. G. T. Beauregard Yes 2 Mexican War Braxton Bragg Yes 5 Second Seminole War, Mexican War Thomas J. Jackson Yes 17 Mexican War Albert S. Johnston Yes 8 Black Hawk War, Texas War for Independence, Mexican War Robert E. Lee Yes 2 Mexican War John B. Magruder Yes 15 Second Seminole War, Mexican War Earl C. Pemberton Yes 27 Mexican War
Fort Sumter
Fort Sumter �April 12 -14, 1861 � 1 st battle of the Civil War �Union takes over Federal fort in Confederate territory. Confederates were determined to take back fort. Fort Sumter surrendered 34 hours later. AR, Union�Following battle VA, Confederacy NC, TN seceded Won Lost � http: //video. pbs. org/video/1832507650/ 1 causality 0 causality Maj. Robert Anderson Brig. Gen. P. G. T. Beauregard FIRST BATTLE IN THE CIVIL WAR LINCOLN RESPONDS WITH FORCE
Anaconda Plan
Anaconda Plan � 3 part plan to attempt to choke the CSA to death 1. Naval blockage of Southern ports, starve their supplies 2. Capture the Mississippi River and split the Confederacy in half, cutting out Texas and southwestern territory 3. Capture the Confederate capital of
Antietam
Battle of Antietam, MD (Sharpsburg) � September 16 -18, 1862 � Deadliest 1 day battle in American history, with over 26, 000 casualties. � Neither side won a victory, but Lee retreats � The significance of the Battle of Antietam was that Lee’s failure to win it encouraged Lincoln to Union issue the Emancipation Victory Proclamation. Emancipatio n Proclamatio n Confederacy Retreat Maj. Gen. George B. Mc. Clellan Gen. Robert E. Lee 12, 400 casualties 10, 300 casualties
Battle of Antietam September 1862 Did you know? During the Battle of Antietam 12, 401 Union men were killed, missing or wounded; double the casualties of D-Day, 82 years later. With a total of 23, 000 casualties on both sides, it was the bloodiest single day of the Civil War.
Abraham Lincoln at Antietam
Emancipation Proclamation
Emancipation Proclamation Document Questions: 1. How did the emotional effect of the proclamation differ from its actual effects? 2. How did the Slaves free in the emancipation areas of rebellion! proclamation benefit the union war effort? 3. Who was freed by the proclamation? 4. Who was not freed by the proclamation? 5. What does the proclamation promise to those freed?
Vicksburg
Battle of Vicksburg � May-July 1863––Grant laid siege to Vicksburg, MS, b/c the army that controlled its high ground over a bend in the Mississippi River would control traffic on the whole river. � Starved the people into Turning Point surrender (siege) in the � Grant achieved one of the South/West Union’s major strategic goals: Anaconda Plan! � He gained control of the Miss. River. Confederate troops and supplies in AK, LA, and TX were cut off from the Confederacy. � Turning point for the Western theater (Union controls the river) Union Confederacy Maj. Gen. Ulysses S. Grant Lt. Gen. John C. Pemberton 10, 142 casualties 9, 901 casualties Won Lost
Battle of Vicksburg – July 1863 Did you know? On July 4, 1863, after 48 days of siege, Confederate General John C. Pemberton surrendered the city of Vicksburg to the Union’s General, Ulysses S. Grant. The Fourth of July was not be celebrated in Vicksburg for another 81 years. Gen. Albert Johnson Gen. Ulysses S. Grant
Gettysburg
Gettysburg – Turning Point � July 1863 � Lee marched north to PA, where he was met by Union troops at Gettysburg. � In a 3 -day battle, as many as 51, 000 were killed. Turning Point for the � Deadliest battle of the American North…boosts morale Civil War. Gettysburg � Lee failed to show GB & FR they should assist the Confederacy, Address � gave up attempts to invade the Union � TURNING POINT OF THE CIVIL Maj. Gen. George G. WAR Meade � Four months later, Lincoln Won delivered his Gettysburg Address at the dedication of the Gettysburg 23, 000 casualties Confederacy Gen. Robert E. Lee Lost 28, 000 casualties
Gettysburg Address
Gettysburg Address One Score = 20 Four Score = ? + 7 = 87 1863 – 87 = ? “Four score and seven years ago our fathers brought forth on this continent, a new nation, conceived in Liberty, and dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal…That from these honored dead we take increased devotion to that cause for which they gave the last full measure of devotion -- that we here highly resolve that these dead shall not have died in vain -that this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom -- and
Gettysburg Address � Lincoln shaped popular opinion in favor of preserving the Union. � The occasion was the dedication of a military cemetery at the Gettysburg battlefield 4 months after the deadly battle � “Four score and seven years ago. ” He spoke for just two minutes in what is now considered one of the greatest speeches. � His address helped raise the spirits of northerners. He convinced the people that the United States was one indivisible nation.
Second Inaugural Address
Second Inaugural Address “With malice toward none, with charity for all, with firmness in the right as God gives us to see the right, let us strive on to finish the work we are in, to bind up the nation's wounds, to care for him who shall have borne the battle and for his widow and his orphan, to do all which may achieve and cherish a just and lasting peace among ourselves and with all nations. ”
Battle of ATL
The Battle of Atlanta The March to the Sea � July-September 1864–– Union Gen. William T. Sherman � surrounded Atlanta, Georgia, for six weeks before capturing the city � Union wants to shut down rail system � Sherman burned Atlanta to the ground, and then marched to the Atlantic Ocean, destroying the railways, roads, and bridges along their path. � Sign for a Northern victory � Lincoln easily won reelection against a candidate who wanted a truce with the Confederacy. � Savannah fell to the
Sherman’s March “I only regarded the march from Atlanta to Savannah as a shift of base, as the transfer of a strong army. . . from the interior to a point on the sea coast, from which it could achieve other important results. I considered this march as a means to an end, and not as an essential act of war. Still, then and now, the march was regarded as something extraordinary. . . ; whereas, in fact, I simply moved from Atlanta to Savannah, as one step in the direction of Richmond. ”
Impact on Civilians “Gen. Sherman told Mr. Cuyler that he did not intend to leave so much as a blade of grass in South-West Georgia, and Dr. Janes told sister that he (Sherman) said he would be obliged to send a formidable raid here in order to satisfy the clamors of his army, though he himself, the fiend Sherman, dreaded it on account of the horrors that would be committed. What Sherman dreads must indeed be fearful. They say his soldiers have sworn that they will spare neither man, woman nor child in all South-West Georgia. It is only a question of time, I suppose, when all this will be done. It begins
Appomattox Court House
Lee Surrenders Did you know? On May 13, �Lee’s Confederate 1865, a month after Lee’s surrender at Appomattox, troops Private John J. Williams of the 34 th Indiana became the last �Starving and man killed in the Civil War, in a clothes were rags battle at Palmito Ranch, Texas. The final skirmish was a �Trapped Confederate victory. �Forced to surrender at the Appomattox Courthouse on April 9, 1865 �Grant’s Union troops �Well-fed and well supplied �Surrounded the Confederate soldiers �THE WAR WAS OVER!
Over 618, 000 military deaths during Civil War.
EFFECTS OF CIVIL WAR �Preservation of the Union �Abolition of slavery �Increased power to fed. gov't – killed the issue of states rights �U. S. now an industrial nation �A stronger sense of nationalism �West the lands increasingly opened to settlement Railroads! �South was economically and physically devastated, with the plantation system crippled. . . thus Reconstruction (rebuilding the U. S. ) - but a deep hatred of the North remained. . .
Profiles Leaders of the Civil War
"In your hands, my dissatisfied fellow countrymen, and not in mine, is the momentous issue of civil war. The government will not assail you. . You have no oath registered in Heaven to destroy the government, while I shall have the most solemn one to preserve, protect and defend Little political experience it. “ – Inaugural Address, 1861 (served 1 term in the House of Representatives) • President during the war • Main goal as president: Preserve the UNION • Five days after the South surrenders, Lincoln was assassinated. 39 Abraham Lincoln “A House divided against itself cannot stand” – -- A. Lincoln
A War President � Draft � Martial Law � Suspension of Habeas Corpus �Article One, Section 9, clause 2, which demands that "The privilege of the writ of habeas corpus shall not be suspended, unless when in cases of rebellion or invasion the public safety may require it. " � With Congress not in session until July 1861, Lincoln assumed all powers not delegated in the Constitution, including the power to suspend habeas corpus. �Basically, habeas corpus represents the legal right that a person in a free society has to not be whisked from his or her home without reason or cause and to not be detained or punished by the authorities without getting a fair hearing in court and a chance of self-defense.
Ulysses S. Grant
Ulysses S. Grant • Leader of the Union forces later in the war “When the Confederate commander asked for terms, Grant replied, "No terms except an unconditional and immediate surrender can be accepted. " The Confederates surrendered, and President Lincoln promoted Grant to major general of volunteers. ” • Fought predominately in the Western Theater, will end the war in the Eastern Theater • Reputation for boldness, resourcefulness, & persistence • Will become the 18 th President “When in doubt, fight” ---U. S. Grant
William T. Sherman
William Tecumseh Sherman � Served under Grant � Used "total war, " � commanded the Union armies of the West in the decisive drive from Chattanooga to Atlanta and the famous "march to the sea" across Georgia. � Sherman's troops carried the war to the Southern home front and blazed a wide path of destruction that delivered the death blow to the Confederacy's will and ability to fight. � recognized as a great strategist, a forceful leader, and--together with
Jefferson Davis
Jefferson Davis �West Point graduate �Colonel in Mexican- American war �Secretary of War �Senator from Mississippi �President of the C. S. A. With the formation of the Confederacy, he hoped for a high military position, and when news arrived of his selection as provisional President, his wife described him as "so grieved that I feared some evil had befallen our family. " Davis, nevertheless, accepted the position, and on February 18, 1861 was inaugurated President. “All we ask is to be left alone” -- J. Davis
Robert E. Lee
Robert E. Lee • West Point Graduate • Father was a Revolutionary War hero • Mexican American War veteran • Put down John Brown’s Harper’s Ferry Raid • Offered command of Union armies – denies – Will stay with VA • Will try to invade the North – believes this is the only way to win – failure twice “It is a good thing war is so terrible; else we should grow too fond of it” -- R. E. Lee
Stonewall Jackson
Thomas “Stonewall” Jackson • War hero and one of the South's most successful generals • graduated from West Point • fought in the Mexican War • reputation for fearlessness and tenacity during the Shenandoah Valley Campaign later that same year. • served under General Robert E. Lee for much of the Civil War. • Jackson was a decisive factor in many significant battles until his wounding by friendly fire at the age of 39 during the Battle of Chancellorsville
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