Chapter 15 Powerpoint
... Filled with loyalty and patriotism for their respective sides, neither soldiers nor politicians foresaw the long, bloody war ahead As the Civil War dragged on and on both the Union and Confederate govts. were forced to impose the draft and ...
... Filled with loyalty and patriotism for their respective sides, neither soldiers nor politicians foresaw the long, bloody war ahead As the Civil War dragged on and on both the Union and Confederate govts. were forced to impose the draft and ...
No Slide Title
... • A majority of voters in each southern state had to pledge loyalty to the Union. • Each state had to ratify the Thirteenth Amendment, which banned slavery throughout the nation. The southern states quickly met Johnson’s conditions. The President approved their new state governments in late 1865. So ...
... • A majority of voters in each southern state had to pledge loyalty to the Union. • Each state had to ratify the Thirteenth Amendment, which banned slavery throughout the nation. The southern states quickly met Johnson’s conditions. The President approved their new state governments in late 1865. So ...
CH 18 Slides - Doral Academy Preparatory
... • A majority of voters in each southern state had to pledge loyalty to the Union. • Each state had to ratify the Thirteenth Amendment, which banned slavery throughout the nation. The southern states quickly met Johnson’s conditions. The President approved their new state governments in late 1865. So ...
... • A majority of voters in each southern state had to pledge loyalty to the Union. • Each state had to ratify the Thirteenth Amendment, which banned slavery throughout the nation. The southern states quickly met Johnson’s conditions. The President approved their new state governments in late 1865. So ...
WORD - Teach Tennessee History
... unionists. They agreed with Governor Harris when he said that “Tennessee will not furnish a single man for the purposes of coercion, but fifty thousand, if necessary for defense of our rights.” When a second vote on secession was held on June 8, 1861, 69 percent of voters favored secession. Tennesse ...
... unionists. They agreed with Governor Harris when he said that “Tennessee will not furnish a single man for the purposes of coercion, but fifty thousand, if necessary for defense of our rights.” When a second vote on secession was held on June 8, 1861, 69 percent of voters favored secession. Tennesse ...
chapter 17 - apel slice
... enslaved persons, or freedmen. Called the Freedmen's Bureau, this agency was actually part of the war department. In the years following the war, the Freedmen's Bureau played an important role in helping African Americans make the transition to freedom. The agency distributed food and clothing, and ...
... enslaved persons, or freedmen. Called the Freedmen's Bureau, this agency was actually part of the war department. In the years following the war, the Freedmen's Bureau played an important role in helping African Americans make the transition to freedom. The agency distributed food and clothing, and ...
1 Civil War Lithograph Of The First Refreshment Saloon
... unknown before his role in Ken Burns’ [documentary film] The Civil War made him a cultural icon. Since that event, Foote has become widely viewed as an authority on the Civil War, and more generally, as a representative of an era and region whose place continues to be central to our country’s unders ...
... unknown before his role in Ken Burns’ [documentary film] The Civil War made him a cultural icon. Since that event, Foote has become widely viewed as an authority on the Civil War, and more generally, as a representative of an era and region whose place continues to be central to our country’s unders ...
The Emancipation Proclamation
... Constitution to abolish slavery where it already existed. B. He did not want to anger the four slave states that remained in the Union. C. He knew that most Northern Democrats, and many Republicans, opposed emancipation. D. He was concerned about the effects of emancipation on the national economy. ...
... Constitution to abolish slavery where it already existed. B. He did not want to anger the four slave states that remained in the Union. C. He knew that most Northern Democrats, and many Republicans, opposed emancipation. D. He was concerned about the effects of emancipation on the national economy. ...
Document
... ill will toward southerners. He supported states’ rights and limits on government power. Johnson’s plan added to Lincoln’s list of exceptions. Wealthy southerners would have to apply for pardons, but there was no set percentage of loyal voters. It required a convention to be called to repeal secessi ...
... ill will toward southerners. He supported states’ rights and limits on government power. Johnson’s plan added to Lincoln’s list of exceptions. Wealthy southerners would have to apply for pardons, but there was no set percentage of loyal voters. It required a convention to be called to repeal secessi ...
Civil Liberties in the Confederacy - H-Net
... mostly at War Department sources, Chapter Three, “Lib- Northern-born “alien enemies”), arguing that “by the end erty and the Bar of the Confederacy,” argues that South- of the war the[ir] civil liberties … were definitely deteriern lawyers could have been much more zealous and vo- orating” (p. 150). ...
... mostly at War Department sources, Chapter Three, “Lib- Northern-born “alien enemies”), arguing that “by the end erty and the Bar of the Confederacy,” argues that South- of the war the[ir] civil liberties … were definitely deteriern lawyers could have been much more zealous and vo- orating” (p. 150). ...
ECWC TOPIC Between the Lines Trading Essay
... Confederate states. Each character, though, exemplified this tawdry episode in American history: Rhett illegally ran the naval blockade; Benjamin was expected of profiting from legally trading with southerners. Americans had never been hesitant to trade with the enemy during wartime. Their attitude ...
... Confederate states. Each character, though, exemplified this tawdry episode in American history: Rhett illegally ran the naval blockade; Benjamin was expected of profiting from legally trading with southerners. Americans had never been hesitant to trade with the enemy during wartime. Their attitude ...
Due day 7 Final Project: Historical Timeline and Essay Final Project
... popular nickname “Bleeding Kansas” (Davidson, et. al. 2006). Kansas did not become a state while these pro and anti-slavery conflicts were occurring, but it was instead accepted into the union as a free state in 1861, just prior to the Civil War.(Davidson, et. al. 2006). John Brown's 1859 raid at Ha ...
... popular nickname “Bleeding Kansas” (Davidson, et. al. 2006). Kansas did not become a state while these pro and anti-slavery conflicts were occurring, but it was instead accepted into the union as a free state in 1861, just prior to the Civil War.(Davidson, et. al. 2006). John Brown's 1859 raid at Ha ...
Guidebook_chapter22
... 12. carpetbagger Disparaging term for a Northern politician who came south to exploit the unsettled conditions after the Civil War; hence, any politician who relocates for political advantage. “The carpet-baggers, on the other hand, were supposedly sleazy Northerners. . . .” (p. 495) 13. felony A ma ...
... 12. carpetbagger Disparaging term for a Northern politician who came south to exploit the unsettled conditions after the Civil War; hence, any politician who relocates for political advantage. “The carpet-baggers, on the other hand, were supposedly sleazy Northerners. . . .” (p. 495) 13. felony A ma ...
re-building the nation-state
... the United States after the election of James Buchanan and the ominous Supreme Court Decision in Dred Scott v. Sandford of 1857, led to the polarization of sectionalism. Progressively the two sides of the country began a process of identification with what was happening in the Atlantic space, but cl ...
... the United States after the election of James Buchanan and the ominous Supreme Court Decision in Dred Scott v. Sandford of 1857, led to the polarization of sectionalism. Progressively the two sides of the country began a process of identification with what was happening in the Atlantic space, but cl ...
The Fugitive Slave Act (cont.)
... • Popular sovereignty appealed to many members of Congress. • It removed the slavery issue from national politics. • It also seemed democratic. • Abolitionists, however, argued that it still denied African Americans their right not to be enslaved. ...
... • Popular sovereignty appealed to many members of Congress. • It removed the slavery issue from national politics. • It also seemed democratic. • Abolitionists, however, argued that it still denied African Americans their right not to be enslaved. ...
What was the 12-year period following the Civil War
... Many Congressmen bitterly opposed slavery and saw the war as a chance to use federal power to force major changes in the South and to protect African Americans. ...
... Many Congressmen bitterly opposed slavery and saw the war as a chance to use federal power to force major changes in the South and to protect African Americans. ...
confederate heritage - Tennessee Division, Sons of Confederate
... United States had not found a reasonable way of ending slavery (like England, where the government reimbursed the slave owners as part of ending slavery), and the United States was forcing the South to pay more than its “fair share” through tariffs, the Southern states felt threatened politically an ...
... United States had not found a reasonable way of ending slavery (like England, where the government reimbursed the slave owners as part of ending slavery), and the United States was forcing the South to pay more than its “fair share” through tariffs, the Southern states felt threatened politically an ...
United States presidential election, 1860
The United States presidential election of 1860 was the 19th quadrennial presidential election. The election was held on Tuesday, November 6, 1860, and served as the immediate impetus for the outbreak of the American Civil War. The United States had been divided during the 1850s on questions surrounding the expansion of slavery and the rights of slave owners. In 1860, these issues broke the Democratic Party into Northern and Southern factions, and a new Constitutional Union Party appeared. In the face of a divided opposition, the Republican Party, dominant in the North, secured a majority of the electoral votes, putting Abraham Lincoln in the White House with almost no support from the South. Before Lincoln's inauguration, seven Southern states declared their secession and formed the Confederacy.