Six notable men - Arkansas History Hub
... Lawyer, soldier and U.S. Congressman-Thomas Hindman was all three things before the Civil War ...
... Lawyer, soldier and U.S. Congressman-Thomas Hindman was all three things before the Civil War ...
File
... the success at Antietam, even telling him, "If you don't want to use the army, I should like to borrow it for a while." ...
... the success at Antietam, even telling him, "If you don't want to use the army, I should like to borrow it for a while." ...
Lesson 18.1b
... the United States, including former slaves and their descendants • By banning discrimination in public accommodations, such as hotels and restaurants • By granting all U.S. citizens the right to vote, regardless of race ...
... the United States, including former slaves and their descendants • By banning discrimination in public accommodations, such as hotels and restaurants • By granting all U.S. citizens the right to vote, regardless of race ...
Chapter 12 Test
... Describe why was the Battle of Gettysburg has been noted as a turning point in the Civil War. ...
... Describe why was the Battle of Gettysburg has been noted as a turning point in the Civil War. ...
black codes - Greenwood School District 50
... • The period during in which the U.S. began to rebuild after the Civil War • Also refers to the process the federal government used to readmit the defeated Confederate states to the Union. ...
... • The period during in which the U.S. began to rebuild after the Civil War • Also refers to the process the federal government used to readmit the defeated Confederate states to the Union. ...
No Slide Title
... • U.S. establishes the first income tax—a tax on earnings (1861) • U.S. issues new paper money, greenbacks, which: - ensures people have money to spend - helps Union pay for the war ...
... • U.S. establishes the first income tax—a tax on earnings (1861) • U.S. issues new paper money, greenbacks, which: - ensures people have money to spend - helps Union pay for the war ...
The battle was done, the buglers silent. Bone
... Democrat who had never been accepted by the Republicans, a president who had never been elected to the office, he was not at home in a Republican White House. Hotheaded, contentious, and stubborn, he was the wrong man in the wrong place at the wrong time. A Reconstruction policy devised by angels mi ...
... Democrat who had never been accepted by the Republicans, a president who had never been elected to the office, he was not at home in a Republican White House. Hotheaded, contentious, and stubborn, he was the wrong man in the wrong place at the wrong time. A Reconstruction policy devised by angels mi ...
Rival Plans for Reconstruction
... One Radical Republican plan did get presidential support. The Freedmen’s Bureau was created to provide food, clothing, healthcare, and education for both black and white refugees in the South. ...
... One Radical Republican plan did get presidential support. The Freedmen’s Bureau was created to provide food, clothing, healthcare, and education for both black and white refugees in the South. ...
Ch 6 Lesson 2 Notes
... • States needed to revise their constitutions to be readmitted to the Union. • Most white South Carolinians opposed this new constitution because it was written by freedmen, Northerners, and Southerners who supported freedmen. • Women gained the right to own property after marriage in this new const ...
... • States needed to revise their constitutions to be readmitted to the Union. • Most white South Carolinians opposed this new constitution because it was written by freedmen, Northerners, and Southerners who supported freedmen. • Women gained the right to own property after marriage in this new const ...
Civil War Turning Points
... The Union (blue) was located on high ground south of the town. Confederate (red) General George Pickett heroically led his men to roust the Union. They failed. Lee and his army retreated back to Virginia. ...
... The Union (blue) was located on high ground south of the town. Confederate (red) General George Pickett heroically led his men to roust the Union. They failed. Lee and his army retreated back to Virginia. ...
Georgia and the Civil War
... a. Farmland was over run, and rail lines were torn up by fighting b. Large portions of the South lay in ruins c. Essential goods were in shortage because of _port blockades ***ADDITIONAL NOTES: The End of the War March 1865- Lee’s forces were ½ the size of Grant’s as they continued to fight. Lee ask ...
... a. Farmland was over run, and rail lines were torn up by fighting b. Large portions of the South lay in ruins c. Essential goods were in shortage because of _port blockades ***ADDITIONAL NOTES: The End of the War March 1865- Lee’s forces were ½ the size of Grant’s as they continued to fight. Lee ask ...
RECONSTRUCTION ERA 1865-1877
... b. All Americans had to face the moral and legal questions of slavery. 2. The war’s end freed more than 4 million slaves a. The South’s wealth was in slaves and land and one is gone, the other devastated. b. The slave society was torn apart. c. Poor whites in the South gained land on which they coul ...
... b. All Americans had to face the moral and legal questions of slavery. 2. The war’s end freed more than 4 million slaves a. The South’s wealth was in slaves and land and one is gone, the other devastated. b. The slave society was torn apart. c. Poor whites in the South gained land on which they coul ...
Chapter 10 Section 2 - Early Years of War
... Louisiana was an important supply point for Confederate troops. The North captured New Orleans and took control of the southern Mississippi River valley. The Mississippi River could no longer be a supply route for the South. However, the North could not use the river safely either. The Union needed ...
... Louisiana was an important supply point for Confederate troops. The North captured New Orleans and took control of the southern Mississippi River valley. The Mississippi River could no longer be a supply route for the South. However, the North could not use the river safely either. The Union needed ...
A MORAL ACCOUNTING OF THE UNION AND THE CONFEDERACY
... Insofar as Lincoln had any solution to the problem, it was threefold: (l) gradual emancipation accompanied by a period of apprenticeship, (2) compensation to slave owners, and (3) eventual deportation. Major American political leaders had long backed a policy of colonization of Africans, and the Ame ...
... Insofar as Lincoln had any solution to the problem, it was threefold: (l) gradual emancipation accompanied by a period of apprenticeship, (2) compensation to slave owners, and (3) eventual deportation. Major American political leaders had long backed a policy of colonization of Africans, and the Ame ...
© Erin Kathryn 2015
... 11. To help with the Reconstruction and to protect the rights of all people, three amendments were added to the US Constitution. What did the 13th Amendment outlaw? _____________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________. 12. The 14 ...
... 11. To help with the Reconstruction and to protect the rights of all people, three amendments were added to the US Constitution. What did the 13th Amendment outlaw? _____________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________. 12. The 14 ...
Abraham Lincoln and the Hampton Roads Peace Conference of 1865
... State, who had quietly gone ahead of him, neither his Cabinet nor his staff had been told that he was going. After nearly four years of war, Northern forces had taken much of the Confederacy’s territory, cornered its battered armies, and all but broken the rebellion, but no one knew when it would en ...
... State, who had quietly gone ahead of him, neither his Cabinet nor his staff had been told that he was going. After nearly four years of war, Northern forces had taken much of the Confederacy’s territory, cornered its battered armies, and all but broken the rebellion, but no one knew when it would en ...
No Slide Title
... •Slavery abolished, African Americans become citizens with the right to vote, but the equality of all men continues to be a struggle in our country today. ...
... •Slavery abolished, African Americans become citizens with the right to vote, but the equality of all men continues to be a struggle in our country today. ...
Civil War Notes
... Tn and New Orleans, LA which gave them control of the MS River Lincoln’s Goal - To keep the United States together Emancipation Proclamation - Freed all slaves in areas that were captured by Union. - This was enacted by President Abraham Lincoln. - No slaves actually gained their freedom until after ...
... Tn and New Orleans, LA which gave them control of the MS River Lincoln’s Goal - To keep the United States together Emancipation Proclamation - Freed all slaves in areas that were captured by Union. - This was enacted by President Abraham Lincoln. - No slaves actually gained their freedom until after ...
24aCW1861-1863 - Somerset Independent Schools
... •Slavery abolished, African Americans become citizens with the right to vote, but the equality of all men continues to be a struggle in our country today. ...
... •Slavery abolished, African Americans become citizens with the right to vote, but the equality of all men continues to be a struggle in our country today. ...
Crisis at Fort Sumter
... open to the threat of invasion. The governor refused to take sides, but the state sided with the Union after Confederate troops invaded in September 1861. These divided loyalties meant citizens fought on both sides. ...
... open to the threat of invasion. The governor refused to take sides, but the state sided with the Union after Confederate troops invaded in September 1861. These divided loyalties meant citizens fought on both sides. ...
The Reconstruction Era
... – Congress did not agree. They felt that the Union needed to: Extend the life of the freedmen’s Bureau Establish the Civil Rights Act of 1866 (gave full rights as a citizen to African Americans ...
... – Congress did not agree. They felt that the Union needed to: Extend the life of the freedmen’s Bureau Establish the Civil Rights Act of 1866 (gave full rights as a citizen to African Americans ...
Reconstruction and the Changing South, 1863–1896
... • a rival Republican plan - which Lincoln refused to sign. • A majority of white men in each southern state had to swear loyalty to the Union. • Anyone who had volunteered to fight for the Confederacy would be denied the right to vote or hold office. ...
... • a rival Republican plan - which Lincoln refused to sign. • A majority of white men in each southern state had to swear loyalty to the Union. • Anyone who had volunteered to fight for the Confederacy would be denied the right to vote or hold office. ...
Chapter 22: “The Ordeal of Reconstruction”
... South into five military zones Laid down guidelines for the readmission of states The 15th Amendment gave the blacks the right to vote in 1869 Ex Parte Milligan- a case in which the Supreme Court ruled that military tribunals could not try civilians if there were no civil courts ...
... South into five military zones Laid down guidelines for the readmission of states The 15th Amendment gave the blacks the right to vote in 1869 Ex Parte Milligan- a case in which the Supreme Court ruled that military tribunals could not try civilians if there were no civil courts ...
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"".