HIST 1050/Chapter10_ppt.pptx
... In 1863, Confederacy passed a general impressment law under which slaves could be seized at a price set by the government Owners didn’t like policy and neither did slaves ...
... In 1863, Confederacy passed a general impressment law under which slaves could be seized at a price set by the government Owners didn’t like policy and neither did slaves ...
Chapter 15 - vocab and notes
... The Civil War began as a war to restore the Union, not to end slavery, President Lincoln made this point clear. He handles the slave issue cautiously because there were still four slave states in the Union. Lincoln did not want to shift their loyalties. Mid 1862 – Lincoln came to believe that he cou ...
... The Civil War began as a war to restore the Union, not to end slavery, President Lincoln made this point clear. He handles the slave issue cautiously because there were still four slave states in the Union. Lincoln did not want to shift their loyalties. Mid 1862 – Lincoln came to believe that he cou ...
Planning Reconstruction Section 1 – 514-519
... – Johnson vetoed the bill and insisted that Congress could not pass any new laws until southern states were represented in Congress. • Congress responded with the Civil Rights Act of 1866 = African Americans were to have the same legal rights as white Americans. – Johnson vetoed this bill as well, c ...
... – Johnson vetoed the bill and insisted that Congress could not pass any new laws until southern states were represented in Congress. • Congress responded with the Civil Rights Act of 1866 = African Americans were to have the same legal rights as white Americans. – Johnson vetoed this bill as well, c ...
ch21TheFurnaceofCivilWar
... Lincoln was watching the play and shot him in the head. He died the next morning (“Now he belongs to the ages” – said Secretary of War Stanton) b. Impact of Lincoln’s Death i. The timing helped to erase all criticism and contributed towards his legacy ii. Many ex-Confederate soldiers, Southern civil ...
... Lincoln was watching the play and shot him in the head. He died the next morning (“Now he belongs to the ages” – said Secretary of War Stanton) b. Impact of Lincoln’s Death i. The timing helped to erase all criticism and contributed towards his legacy ii. Many ex-Confederate soldiers, Southern civil ...
The Border States (cont`d)
... Low on supplies Lincoln intended to send food. The Confederacy attacked and the defenders of Fort Sumter surrendered. War was greeted enthusiastically by communities on both sides. ...
... Low on supplies Lincoln intended to send food. The Confederacy attacked and the defenders of Fort Sumter surrendered. War was greeted enthusiastically by communities on both sides. ...
Why was the Confederacy Defeated
... thus lost the war. Such criticism is unfounded. Lee was commander of the Army of Northern Virginia: Virginia was thus his rightful priority. If anyone was to blame for a Virginia-focused strategy it was Davis. In fairness to Davis, it seems highly unlikely that the Confederacy could have won the war ...
... thus lost the war. Such criticism is unfounded. Lee was commander of the Army of Northern Virginia: Virginia was thus his rightful priority. If anyone was to blame for a Virginia-focused strategy it was Davis. In fairness to Davis, it seems highly unlikely that the Confederacy could have won the war ...
Reconstruction (1865-1876)
... voters of the Union's sacrifices during the Civil War It becomes a vote for control of Reconstruction: President or Congress? The Radical Republicans win a 3 to 1 majority in both houses and gain control of all Northern states They now have a "bulletproof" Congress and will be able to override ...
... voters of the Union's sacrifices during the Civil War It becomes a vote for control of Reconstruction: President or Congress? The Radical Republicans win a 3 to 1 majority in both houses and gain control of all Northern states They now have a "bulletproof" Congress and will be able to override ...
Goal 3 - Reconstruction Plans
... • Republicans banded together to override Johnson’s veto • Congress also adds 14th Amendment to give Constitutional basis for Civil Rights Act – Amendment guarantees “equal protection under the law” – Johnson advises South to reject amendment ...
... • Republicans banded together to override Johnson’s veto • Congress also adds 14th Amendment to give Constitutional basis for Civil Rights Act – Amendment guarantees “equal protection under the law” – Johnson advises South to reject amendment ...
teacher`s guide teacher`s guide teacher`s guide
... states into the Union, and how to ensure the liberty of over three million newly freed African Americans. Policies for reconstructing the South would be fought over bitterly in Congress and would shape American race relations for the next century. The essential debate pitted advocates of leniency to ...
... states into the Union, and how to ensure the liberty of over three million newly freed African Americans. Policies for reconstructing the South would be fought over bitterly in Congress and would shape American race relations for the next century. The essential debate pitted advocates of leniency to ...
Chapter 21 - mrsmcclary
... a careless Confederate soldier had stopped. This gave McClellan the information he needed to stop Lee’s advance. He did so at Antietam Creek in the bloodiest single day battle of the war. • The battle happened on September 17, 1862 and was essentially a draw however, Lee was forced to withdraw back ...
... a careless Confederate soldier had stopped. This gave McClellan the information he needed to stop Lee’s advance. He did so at Antietam Creek in the bloodiest single day battle of the war. • The battle happened on September 17, 1862 and was essentially a draw however, Lee was forced to withdraw back ...
July-Aug 2016 - American Civil War Roundtable of Australia
... Fort Monroe, is burned by Confederate forces; August 13, 1831 – Nat Turner slave insurrection begins in Southampton County, Va, with 55 whites and about 100 blacks killed; August 21, 1863 – Confederate guerrillas under command of Quantrill sack Lawrence, Kansas, killing about 150 men and boys and de ...
... Fort Monroe, is burned by Confederate forces; August 13, 1831 – Nat Turner slave insurrection begins in Southampton County, Va, with 55 whites and about 100 blacks killed; August 21, 1863 – Confederate guerrillas under command of Quantrill sack Lawrence, Kansas, killing about 150 men and boys and de ...
Chapter 17 - Merrillville Community School
... their interests and to promote their own participation. Five states had black electoral majorities. The Union League became the political voice of former slaves. ...
... their interests and to promote their own participation. Five states had black electoral majorities. The Union League became the political voice of former slaves. ...
24-Reconstruction_After_the_Civil_War
... Radical Reconstruction in Congress divided the South into five military districts. How did Southerners, most of which had already applied for readmittance under President Johnson, feel about this legislation? ...
... Radical Reconstruction in Congress divided the South into five military districts. How did Southerners, most of which had already applied for readmittance under President Johnson, feel about this legislation? ...
The West Australian Discontent
... The omission from the Constitution of the United States of an express declaration of the permanence and indestructibility of the Union, led to the promulgation of the disastrous doctrines of nullification and secession, which were not finally abandoned until the Civil War of 1862-4 forever terminate ...
... The omission from the Constitution of the United States of an express declaration of the permanence and indestructibility of the Union, led to the promulgation of the disastrous doctrines of nullification and secession, which were not finally abandoned until the Civil War of 1862-4 forever terminate ...
Benchmark 2 Review - St. Louis Public Schools
... The years following the Civil War between 1865-1877 are known as Reconstruction. The reason historians use the term Reconstruction is because this was the period when the federal government restored the seceded states to the Union. This proved To be a difficult and contentious process. The federal g ...
... The years following the Civil War between 1865-1877 are known as Reconstruction. The reason historians use the term Reconstruction is because this was the period when the federal government restored the seceded states to the Union. This proved To be a difficult and contentious process. The federal g ...
Ch15S1GR
... constitutional convention Johnson named Andrew J. Hamilton as temporary governor of Texas - A Unionist who had left Texas when it seceded - Job was to begin Reconstruction in the state - named other Unionists to fill most government posts - Called for an election on January 8, 1866, to name delegate ...
... constitutional convention Johnson named Andrew J. Hamilton as temporary governor of Texas - A Unionist who had left Texas when it seceded - Job was to begin Reconstruction in the state - named other Unionists to fill most government posts - Called for an election on January 8, 1866, to name delegate ...
the ordeal of reconstruction
... • created in March 1865 by Congress; welfare agency • goal to provide food, clothing, medical care, and education to freedmen AND white refugees • successful in education and literacy • although authorized to redistribute Confederate lands to freed blacks, very little land was given ...
... • created in March 1865 by Congress; welfare agency • goal to provide food, clothing, medical care, and education to freedmen AND white refugees • successful in education and literacy • although authorized to redistribute Confederate lands to freed blacks, very little land was given ...
Untitled
... small but important first step in the effort by former slaves to secure civil rights and economic power. Re construction did not provide African Americans with either the legal protections or the material resources to assure them anything like real equality*. And when it came to an end, finally, in ...
... small but important first step in the effort by former slaves to secure civil rights and economic power. Re construction did not provide African Americans with either the legal protections or the material resources to assure them anything like real equality*. And when it came to an end, finally, in ...
Civil War reading materials
... A significant battle occurred on September 8, 1863, at Sabine Pass, a narrow channel along the Louisiana border. Union general Nathaniel P. Banks planned to move troops by ship through the pass. Then he would march north to cut of Texas’s railroad connection to Louisiana. However, Lieutenant Richard ...
... A significant battle occurred on September 8, 1863, at Sabine Pass, a narrow channel along the Louisiana border. Union general Nathaniel P. Banks planned to move troops by ship through the pass. Then he would march north to cut of Texas’s railroad connection to Louisiana. However, Lieutenant Richard ...
Chapter 15
... • Many new methods and weapons were used for the first time • Both sides used air balloons to gain a vantage point of the other side. The telegraph was also instrumental • New bullets were used by both sides that ...
... • Many new methods and weapons were used for the first time • Both sides used air balloons to gain a vantage point of the other side. The telegraph was also instrumental • New bullets were used by both sides that ...
Issues of the American Civil War
Issues of the American Civil War include questions about the name of the war, the tariff, states' rights and the nature of Abraham Lincoln's war goals. For more on naming, see Naming the American Civil War.The question of how important the tariff was in causing the war stems from the Nullification Crisis, which was South Carolina's attempt to nullify a tariff and lasted from 1828 to 1832. The tariff was low after 1846, and the tariff issue faded into the background by 1860 when secession began. States' rights was the justification for nullification and later secession. The most controversial right claimed by Southern states was the alleged right of Southerners to spread slavery into territories owned by the United States.As to the question of the relation of Lincoln's war goals to causes, goals evolved as the war progressed in response to political and military issues, and can't be used as a direct explanation of causes of the war. Lincoln needed to find an issue that would unite a large but divided North to save the Union, and then found that circumstances beyond his control made emancipation possible, which was in line with his ""personal wish that all men everywhere could be free"".