The Civil War
... • After he was removed from office, he left Austin and went to Galveston for awhile. • Then he went to Huntsville to his “steamboat house” (see p. 307) He died there on July 3, 1863 (70 yrs old) ...
... • After he was removed from office, he left Austin and went to Galveston for awhile. • Then he went to Huntsville to his “steamboat house” (see p. 307) He died there on July 3, 1863 (70 yrs old) ...
The American Civil War
... Lincoln claimed it was within Congresses power to institute a draft Some judges allowed drafted men to avoid service, but Lincoln threatened to arrest any judge that interfered with the draft How to avoid getting drafted ...
... Lincoln claimed it was within Congresses power to institute a draft Some judges allowed drafted men to avoid service, but Lincoln threatened to arrest any judge that interfered with the draft How to avoid getting drafted ...
Chapter 13 Life in the State of Texas
... – Also, they thought each state should have right to withdraw from Union if citizens voted to – Northern states disagreed and said that federal laws applied to all states and states could not legally separate from Union – These topics were strongly debated in Presidential Election of 1860 ...
... – Also, they thought each state should have right to withdraw from Union if citizens voted to – Northern states disagreed and said that federal laws applied to all states and states could not legally separate from Union – These topics were strongly debated in Presidential Election of 1860 ...
The Civil War: 1861-1865
... a. 4 hour battle with neither side winning; Monitor withdrew after Captain wounded; both sides claimed victory. b. Virginia never again a serious threat and eventually blown up at Norfolk by Confederates when ship in danger of falling into Union hands IV. The War in the Eastern Theater: 1862 A. The ...
... a. 4 hour battle with neither side winning; Monitor withdrew after Captain wounded; both sides claimed victory. b. Virginia never again a serious threat and eventually blown up at Norfolk by Confederates when ship in danger of falling into Union hands IV. The War in the Eastern Theater: 1862 A. The ...
Dr. Chris Fonvielle
... Cape Fear River. On December 24, 1864, Union forces under Benjamin F. Butler launched a twoday attack. This attack by joint army-navy Union force on Fort Fisher, fizzled when Gen. Benjamin F. Butler lost his nerve, pulled out his troops, and returned to Hampton Roads, Va. To Adm. David D. Porter, th ...
... Cape Fear River. On December 24, 1864, Union forces under Benjamin F. Butler launched a twoday attack. This attack by joint army-navy Union force on Fort Fisher, fizzled when Gen. Benjamin F. Butler lost his nerve, pulled out his troops, and returned to Hampton Roads, Va. To Adm. David D. Porter, th ...
Reconstruction - Buncombe County Schools System
... • Republicans in Congress opposed the policies of President Johnson • Radical Republicans wanted to punish the former Confederate states. • The Joint Committee on Reconstruction wanted to replace Johnson’s plan for Reconstruction. • The Reconstruction act of 1867 returned former confederate states t ...
... • Republicans in Congress opposed the policies of President Johnson • Radical Republicans wanted to punish the former Confederate states. • The Joint Committee on Reconstruction wanted to replace Johnson’s plan for Reconstruction. • The Reconstruction act of 1867 returned former confederate states t ...
SIOP Lesson Plan
... desperately close the Union forces at the top were to losing and what caused them to win, how bravely both sides fought. Using these clues, have students individually write five observations gained from this part of the viewing. Encourage them to use the clues, but to also comment on anything that o ...
... desperately close the Union forces at the top were to losing and what caused them to win, how bravely both sides fought. Using these clues, have students individually write five observations gained from this part of the viewing. Encourage them to use the clues, but to also comment on anything that o ...
The Road to Revolution – Ch
... establishing freedom as an important Union cause. Previously, Lincoln and the U.S. goal was simply to preserve the union; Lincoln had said at his inauguration that he had no intention to freeing slaves in the states where slavery already existed Pressure of abolitionists, Republicans, Congress, and ...
... establishing freedom as an important Union cause. Previously, Lincoln and the U.S. goal was simply to preserve the union; Lincoln had said at his inauguration that he had no intention to freeing slaves in the states where slavery already existed Pressure of abolitionists, Republicans, Congress, and ...
500 - Lebanon City Schools
... By 1850 the North and the South were deeply divided over the issue of ________. ...
... By 1850 the North and the South were deeply divided over the issue of ________. ...
Chapter 3 Notes Reconstruction and the New South Section 1
... The First Reconstruction Act set up military commanders to govern 10 Southern states until new state governments were created. The Second Reconstruction Act required the military commanders to register voters and prepare for state ...
... The First Reconstruction Act set up military commanders to govern 10 Southern states until new state governments were created. The Second Reconstruction Act required the military commanders to register voters and prepare for state ...
USA Studies Weekly
... • They also felt that they should be able to be in Congress in the South. • Some came for good reasons – to actually help the South and the newly freed blacks. • The carpetbag, however, was a symbol of opportunists who were filling their “bags” at the expense of the South. ...
... • They also felt that they should be able to be in Congress in the South. • Some came for good reasons – to actually help the South and the newly freed blacks. • The carpetbag, however, was a symbol of opportunists who were filling their “bags” at the expense of the South. ...
Fort Sumter
... to surrender the fort to the Confederacy. Lincoln’s goal was to keep Fort Sumter under Union control. ...
... to surrender the fort to the Confederacy. Lincoln’s goal was to keep Fort Sumter under Union control. ...
Chapters 13 and 14 Chapter 13 The Old South
... The planter autocracy often occupied more influential positions beyond their formal power and far beyond that of yeoman farmers. The South’s white, non-slaveholding yeoman often resented slavery and planter leadership ...
... The planter autocracy often occupied more influential positions beyond their formal power and far beyond that of yeoman farmers. The South’s white, non-slaveholding yeoman often resented slavery and planter leadership ...
Untitled
... 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 the late 1870s—as a re sult of an economic crisis, a la ...
... 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 the late 1870s—as a re sult of an economic crisis, a la ...
September 2016 Wig Wag - Camp #158
... During the past two months, three universities have continued their efforts to expunge Confederate heritage from their campuses. Besides the continued attempt to remove the Confederate Memorial monument at the University of Louisville in Kentucky, Vanderbilt University, the University of Texas and t ...
... During the past two months, three universities have continued their efforts to expunge Confederate heritage from their campuses. Besides the continued attempt to remove the Confederate Memorial monument at the University of Louisville in Kentucky, Vanderbilt University, the University of Texas and t ...
LvG Map Side - Civil War Traveler
... • Rochelle (Jack’s Shop) – J.E.B. Stuart was almost campaigns in 1862-1864. here daily on a “cornstalk and beanpole” bridge. ...
... • Rochelle (Jack’s Shop) – J.E.B. Stuart was almost campaigns in 1862-1864. here daily on a “cornstalk and beanpole” bridge. ...
APUSH Review: Period 5 In 10 minutes!
... about by one of the Reconstruction amendments B. Briefly explain one way Southern societies sought to limit the power of the amendment chosen in part a C. Briefly explain why Southern societies were or were not successful in limiting the amendment, using ...
... about by one of the Reconstruction amendments B. Briefly explain one way Southern societies sought to limit the power of the amendment chosen in part a C. Briefly explain why Southern societies were or were not successful in limiting the amendment, using ...
Battle - People Server at UNCW
... Significance (Why Important): The bitterest and bloodiest day of the war. Gave the North a great diplomatic advantage. Enabled President Lincoln to issue the Emancipation Proclamation. Convinced Britain and France not to actively take the side of the Confederacy ...
... Significance (Why Important): The bitterest and bloodiest day of the war. Gave the North a great diplomatic advantage. Enabled President Lincoln to issue the Emancipation Proclamation. Convinced Britain and France not to actively take the side of the Confederacy ...
Bulletin Vol 54 - Essex County Museum
... of a kind of loyalty to their former masters, most, understandably, did not. With little income, many owners offered their ex-slaves shares in their farms in lieu of salaries, thus the emergence of the term ‘sharecropper’, a system that did not work, largely because white owners were loath, or unabl ...
... of a kind of loyalty to their former masters, most, understandably, did not. With little income, many owners offered their ex-slaves shares in their farms in lieu of salaries, thus the emergence of the term ‘sharecropper’, a system that did not work, largely because white owners were loath, or unabl ...
now we are engaged in a great civil war
... the Civil War, long was a major field of American history. Even in our time, as the "new military history" (discussed in section 4 above) has established itself as a legitimate field of inquiry, there still remains good reason to understand the shape of the war as it evolved between Fort Sumter and ...
... the Civil War, long was a major field of American history. Even in our time, as the "new military history" (discussed in section 4 above) has established itself as a legitimate field of inquiry, there still remains good reason to understand the shape of the war as it evolved between Fort Sumter and ...
UNIT 3: THE CIVIL WAR AND RECONSTRUCTION
... First signs of War • Confederate President Jefferson Davis made good on his promise • As the Union ships entered Charleston, South Carolina, Davis ordered an attack • The Union responded in self defense • These became the first shots of the Civil War Free powerpoint template: www.brainybetty.com ...
... First signs of War • Confederate President Jefferson Davis made good on his promise • As the Union ships entered Charleston, South Carolina, Davis ordered an attack • The Union responded in self defense • These became the first shots of the Civil War Free powerpoint template: www.brainybetty.com ...
Gettysburg: Leadership During the Civil War
... For me one of the most interesting battles was the battle on Little Round Top. Joshua Chamberlain and the 20th Maine Regiment were instructed to “Hold this ground at all hazards” meaning that they were supposed to all be dead if any of the Confederate soldiers got through the line. This was the last ...
... For me one of the most interesting battles was the battle on Little Round Top. Joshua Chamberlain and the 20th Maine Regiment were instructed to “Hold this ground at all hazards” meaning that they were supposed to all be dead if any of the Confederate soldiers got through the line. This was the last ...
disunity in the South – skip two lines Copperheads – skip one
... Disagreements About the War • The Confederate states often fell into disagreement. • The same principle of states’ rights that led them to break with the Union kept them from coordinating their war effort. ...
... Disagreements About the War • The Confederate states often fell into disagreement. • The same principle of states’ rights that led them to break with the Union kept them from coordinating their war effort. ...
midterm study guide us history
... A “melting pot” is the blending of many people to create a single culture Skyscrapers are tall buildings with steel frames Elisha Otis is the inventor of the elevator Mass transportation is a public system for moving many people inexpensively Immigrants had always come to America for economic opport ...
... A “melting pot” is the blending of many people to create a single culture Skyscrapers are tall buildings with steel frames Elisha Otis is the inventor of the elevator Mass transportation is a public system for moving many people inexpensively Immigrants had always come to America for economic opport ...
AHON_ch15_S2
... How did both sides in the war try to gain an advantage over the other? After the First Battle of Bull Run, both the North and the South knew a difficult struggle ...
... How did both sides in the war try to gain an advantage over the other? After the First Battle of Bull Run, both the North and the South knew a difficult struggle ...
Military history of African Americans in the American Civil War
The history of African Americans in the American Civil War is marked by 186,097 (7,122 officers, 178,975 enlisted/soldiers & sailors) African Americans comprising 163 units who served in the United States Army, then nicknamed the ""Union Army"" during the Civil War. Later in the War many regiments were recruited and organized as the ""United States Colored Troops"", which reinforced the Northern side substantially in the last two years.Many more African Americans served in the United States Navy also known as the ""Union Navy"" and formed a large percentage of many ships' crews. Both free African Americans and runaway slaves joined the fight.On the Confederate/Southern side, both free and slave Blacks were used for manual labor, but the issue of whether to arm them, and under what terms, became a major source of debate within the Confederate Congress, the President's Cabinet, and C.S. War Department staff. They were authorized in the last month of the War in March 1865, to recruit, train and arm slaves, but no significant numbers were ever raised or recruited.