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Transcript
Social Studies Survey
I CAN:
Explain the significance of major battles that
happened during the Civil War
2. Analyze how the improvement of technology (such
as the Minie ball) but the lack of improvement in
war strategy lead to massive casualties unlike any
seen in American History
1.
Fort Sumter (SC)
 Battle of Fort Sumter (April
12, 1861)
 Begins the Civil War
 Confederates demanded that
Fort Sumter surrender
 Union troops refused
 Confederates opened fire
 April 13 – Union surrendered
 Started the 4 year war
 4 more states join the
Confederacy
after the Battle of Fort
Sumter
(AK, TN, VA, NC)
First Battle of Bull Run/Manassas
July 21, 1861 (Virginia)
Union
Confederates
 2896 Casualties
 1982 Casualties
 Irvin McDowell
 Joseph E. Johnston and P.G.T
Beauregard
 Victory
Bull Run Cont.
 Thomas J. Jackson was given
the nickname “Stonewall”:
“There is Jackson standing
like a stone wall! Rally
behind the Virginians!”
 Defeat lead North to realize
they needed a large, welltrained army
 Two names because North
named them by natural
resources and South by
nearby towns, farms, etc.
Battle of Shiloh
April 6-7, 1862 (Tennessee)
Union
 13,047 Causalities
 U.S Grant
 Victory
Confederates
 10,700 Causalities
 Albert Sidney Johnston
(highest ranking officer to be
killed in battle)
Battle of Shiloh Cont.
 Up to this point,
bloodiest battle in
American History
(23,700 causalities)
 “Bloody Pond”
probably not there;
definitely not that
bloody
 In Hebrew, Shiloh
means “place of peace”
Battle of Antietam/Sharpsburg
September 17, 1862 (MD)
Union
Confederate
 12,400 Casualties
 10,300 Casualties
 General George B. McClellan
 General Robert E Lee
 Probably victory
Battle of Antietam Cont.
 Bloodiest single day of war in
American History (6,000
dead, 16000 wounded)
 General Lee’s battle plans
were known in advance but
General McClellan did not act
upon this knowledge until it
was too late
 Battle lasted for 12 hours (5:30
am- 5:30 pm)
 Crucial Victory for two
reasons: British did not
intervene for South and it
convinced Lincoln it was time
to end slavery
Battle of Perryville
December 8, 1862 (KY)
Union
Confederate
 4220 Casualties
 3401 Casualties
 Don Carlos Buell
 Braxton Bragg
 Victory
Perryville Cont.
 Largest Battle fought in




Kentucky
Most Northern Battle and
Western battle on Eastern
Front
Probably First time Henry
repeating rifles were used
Douglas MacArthur father
fought at Perryville
Maybe first monument
dedicated to Confederate dead
paid for by the US
Government
Battle of Chancellorsville
April 30-May 1, 1863 (VA)
Union
Confederate
 18,400 Casualties
 11,400 Casualties
 General Joseph Hooker
 General Robert E. Lee
 Victory
Chancellorsville Cont.
 Took over as
Bloodiest Battle of
Civil War
 General Stonewall
Jackson was
wounded by his
own men; would
die 8 days later
Siege of Vicksburg
May 18- July 4, 1863 (MS)
Union
Confederate
 4,910 Casualties
 32,492 Casualties
 US Grant
 John C. Pemberton
 Victory
Vicksburg Cont.
 Cut the Confederate Army
into two, especially on the
Mississippi River
 Grant’s troops foraged for
food while trying to capture
the town of Jackson
 Victory came by putting the
town under siege and
waiting out the enemy
 Combined arms of US army
and navy
Battle of Gettysburg
July 1-July 3, 1863 (PA)
Union
Confederate
 23,049 Casualties
 28,063 Casualties
 George G. Meade
 Robert E Lee
 Victory
Gettysburg Cont.
 Lee lost more than 1/3 of his






army at this battle
Turning point and decisive
battle for Eastern front
Lee would be on the defensive
for the remainder of the war
Bloodiest Battle of the Civil
War (51,000)
9 of the 120 generals were
killed at Gettysburg
1/3 of all civil war dead photos
were taken here
Started without the consent of
either General Lee or Meade
Pickett’s Charge
Mile-wide line that saw 7000
casualties in less than ½ hour
Sherman’s March to the Sea
November 16-December 21, 1864
 Went across the state of
Georgia leaving a 60 mile wide
path of destruction
 Purpose was to show civilians
in the South the horrors of
war, hoping they would
surrender
 Destroyed military targets,
houses, crops, livestock, etc.
 Reached Savannah on
December 21; it was Georgia’s
first settlement
Sherman’s Christmas Present to
Lincoln: City of Savannah
 I am tired and sick of war. Its glory is all
moonshine. It is only those who have neither
fired a shot nor heard the shrieks and groans
of the wounded who cry aloud for blood, for
vengeance, for desolation. War is hell.
- William Tecumseh Sherman