First Four Date label your work Four Minutes
• First Four • Date & label your work Four Minutes – 1/5/17 1. Identify one academic goal you have for 2017 2. Identify one other resolution, goal, or just something you are looking forward to in 2017. • Be ready to share. End
Unit 2 Introduction: How do we resolve conflict? • Write down a list of ways that you/we can try to resolve various types of conflict. • Share with your table. • Discuss • Syllabus
Unit 2: The Civil War & Reconstruction Unit Question: How do we resolve conflict? Major Themes Sheet GQ#1 – Why did the Civil War last four years?
Causes of the Civil War?
Good morning! Please get out any notes you have and be ready for a brief quiz. Remember your academic integrity!
Unit 2: The Civil War & Reconstruction Unit Question: How do we resolve conflict? Major Themes Sheet GQ#1 – Why did the Civil War last four years? Gallery Walk & Chart Article So what?
The Union and Confederacy in 1861
Rating the North & the South
Railroad Lines 1860
Resources: North & the South
Men Present for Duty
Immigrants as a % of a State’s Population in 1860
Responses from Friday Compare the North & South on the eve of the Civil War. Why did the war last four years? Share responses
Document Analysis 1. Read the questions. 2. Read document carefully and answer the questions 3. How does the First Conscription Act fit into this discussion about resources and how long the war lasted? 4. Can we add anything to our charts?
Crash Course Video https: //www. youtube. com/watch? v=r. Y 9 z. H NOj. Grs 1. What can you add to your chart? Listen/watch for specifics.
Paper 2 Part A How/Why Question – 15 Min
Mobilizing for War - CSA Ø 800, 000 served Ø Conscription Act 1862 ØSubstitutes, 20 -Negro Law Ø Military Supplies ØTredegar Iron Works, Augusta Powder Works Ø Food & Clothing ØTransportation ØImpressment Act 1863
Mobilizing for War - Union 2 million + served Food & Supplies no problem Business organization & transportation a huge advantage! Enrollment Act 1863 – Substitution – Commutation - $300
Financing the War Huge Money Needs Confederate property tax & Script Union Income Tax War Bonds Legal Tender Act – Greenbacks, Inflation National Bank Act 1863 Size & Power of Government?
Political Leadership in Wartime Need for Government Power Copperheads Radicals Nature of Confederacy
advantages of each side North South
causes of each side North South
Overview of Civil War Strategy: “Anaconda” Plan “Anaconda Plan”
Lincoln Secures the Border States Maryland Habeas Corpus Delaware Ex Parte Merryman Kentucky 1861 Missouri West Virginia - 1863
significant civil war events
Battle of Bull Run (1 st Manassas), July, 1861 Significance?
The Battle of the Ironclads, March, 1862 The Monitor vs. the Merrimac (Virginia) Significance? For South? For Naval Power?
civil war diplomacy france & england commerce raiders – css alabama – laird rams the trent affair emancipation
Battle of Antietam September 1862 Significance?
War in the East: 1861 -1862
slavery & the war is the war about slavery? “contrabands” confiscation acts the border states – compensated emancipation? emancipation proclamation
Emancipation in 1863 Effects? ? ?
The War in the West, 1863: Vicksburg
The Road to Gettysburg: 1863
Gettysburg Casualties
Sherman’s March through Georgia to the Sea, 1864
Good morning! Please get out your Post-Seminar Reflections and any notes you may have taken on the homework reading.
Unit 2: How do we resolve conflict? Today’s Agenda GQ#2 - How great was the immediate impact of the Civil War? – Overview of war’s most significant events – Review social, economic, & political impacts GQ#3 - What were the aims and outcomes of Reconstruction? – Compare/Contrast different outlooks on Reconstruction after the war
Presidential Election of 1864
The Progress of War: 1861 -1865
Key Civil War Battles Ft. Sumter 1861 First Manassas (Bull Run) 1861 Antietam 1862 – Emancipation Gettysburg 1863 Vicksburg 1863 Atlanta 1864
African-Americans in Civil War Battles
End of the War - 1865 April 9 – Appomattox Court House April 14
Casualties on Both Sides
Civil War Casualties in Comparison to Other Wars
Effects of War Political Change – Politics, civil liberties, Power of President – “A more perfect Union” – States Rights? Secession? – Republican Party – Democratic Party Economic Change – South – North – Taxes Social Change – Women – Draft – End of Slavery – 13 th Amendment
What is next? What are the big issues facing Lincoln & the US government now that the war is over? Discuss with your group & make a “Top 3” list. Mid-Unit 2 Vocab Review
Reconstruction What was “Reconstruction”? What were the big questions going to be? See the Reconstruction Venn Diagram handout. Using the textbooks, your homework reading, and other appropriate resources, Complete as much of the chart as possible.
- Slides: 50