SS5H1 – Civil War (what you need to know): There were several
... o The March to the Sea in 1864 was when General Sherman led soldiers on a destructive path from Atlanta to Savannah, and destroyed everything along the way. o The Civil War ended at the Appomattox Courthouse in 1865. The important leaders of the Civil War included: o Abraham Lincoln – President of ...
... o The March to the Sea in 1864 was when General Sherman led soldiers on a destructive path from Atlanta to Savannah, and destroyed everything along the way. o The Civil War ended at the Appomattox Courthouse in 1865. The important leaders of the Civil War included: o Abraham Lincoln – President of ...
2. From Resistance to Reconstruction
... of marines to Christiana, along with a group of 40 Philadelphia policemen. They arrested 38 suspects, 35 of whom were African-American. Canada refused to extradite the fugitives. The state began its case by charging one of the white Quakers, Castner Hanway, with treason, and bringing him to trial. T ...
... of marines to Christiana, along with a group of 40 Philadelphia policemen. They arrested 38 suspects, 35 of whom were African-American. Canada refused to extradite the fugitives. The state began its case by charging one of the white Quakers, Castner Hanway, with treason, and bringing him to trial. T ...
Reconstruction (1865-1876)
... • 16 elected to Congress Hiram Revels – was son of formers slaves, but born free (NC). He went to college in Illinois and became a Methodist minister and chaplain in the Union army. He is the 1st black man to serve in the U.S. Senate. He took the seat of held by Confederate President Jefferson Davis ...
... • 16 elected to Congress Hiram Revels – was son of formers slaves, but born free (NC). He went to college in Illinois and became a Methodist minister and chaplain in the Union army. He is the 1st black man to serve in the U.S. Senate. He took the seat of held by Confederate President Jefferson Davis ...
End of the War PowerPoint
... The Battle of Gettysburg Battle lasts three days 3) Union has a better position – higher ground Union victory Lee loses a 3rd of his army and retreats to Virginia General Meade – Commander of Union forces at Gettysburg Things start looking up for the North after this ...
... The Battle of Gettysburg Battle lasts three days 3) Union has a better position – higher ground Union victory Lee loses a 3rd of his army and retreats to Virginia General Meade – Commander of Union forces at Gettysburg Things start looking up for the North after this ...
The Ordeal of Reconstruction
... How would the liberated Blacks be converted to free citizens How would southern states be reintegrated into the Union Who would direct reconstruction, the President or Congress What to do with confederate leaders? ...
... How would the liberated Blacks be converted to free citizens How would southern states be reintegrated into the Union Who would direct reconstruction, the President or Congress What to do with confederate leaders? ...
Period 5 Powerpoint Presentation - The Webb Page
... to accusations that southerners wanted to annex areas in Latin America to expand slavery). Franklin Pierce also holds down the giant's beard as Stephen A. Douglas shoves a black man ...
... to accusations that southerners wanted to annex areas in Latin America to expand slavery). Franklin Pierce also holds down the giant's beard as Stephen A. Douglas shoves a black man ...
the 54th regiment - New Bedford Historical Society
... the union into a war against slavery. Black men previously had been barred from enlisting in the Army, although the Navy had many black sailors in its ranks. Frederick Douglass compared the North’s refusal to use black Army recruits to a man who was trying to fight with one hand tied behind his back ...
... the union into a war against slavery. Black men previously had been barred from enlisting in the Army, although the Navy had many black sailors in its ranks. Frederick Douglass compared the North’s refusal to use black Army recruits to a man who was trying to fight with one hand tied behind his back ...
Slide 1
... How would the liberated Blacks be converted to free citizens How would southern states be reintegrated into the Union Who would direct reconstruction, the President or Congress What to do with confederate leaders? ...
... How would the liberated Blacks be converted to free citizens How would southern states be reintegrated into the Union Who would direct reconstruction, the President or Congress What to do with confederate leaders? ...
The Road to Gettysburg
... Before Vicksburg fell in July 1863, nearly all the major battles of the Civil War had been fought in Virginia or Tennessee, leaving the Deep South untouched by war. ...
... Before Vicksburg fell in July 1863, nearly all the major battles of the Civil War had been fought in Virginia or Tennessee, leaving the Deep South untouched by war. ...
Chapter 18 Renewing the Sectional Struggle 1848
... 1861, when the southern states seceded from the Union. President Buchanan divided the powerful Democratic Party by enraging the Douglas Democrats of the North. He divided the only remaining national party and with it, the Union. "Bully" Brooks and His Bludgeon In 1856, abolitionist Senator Charles S ...
... 1861, when the southern states seceded from the Union. President Buchanan divided the powerful Democratic Party by enraging the Douglas Democrats of the North. He divided the only remaining national party and with it, the Union. "Bully" Brooks and His Bludgeon In 1856, abolitionist Senator Charles S ...
Mr - WordPress.com
... 30. Lincoln was in favor of the Crittenden Compromise but could not get it passed by Congress. True or false 31. The North had a population advantage over the South while the South had an economic advantage over the North. True or false 32. General Tecumseh Sherman believed in fighting a “total war. ...
... 30. Lincoln was in favor of the Crittenden Compromise but could not get it passed by Congress. True or false 31. The North had a population advantage over the South while the South had an economic advantage over the North. True or false 32. General Tecumseh Sherman believed in fighting a “total war. ...
Slide 1
... During Reconstruction • Robert Smalls of South Carolina took command of vessel and slave crew, surrendered it to Union Army; became hero to antislavery Northerners • Elected to Congress; made land available for blacks to own • Defeated by whites falsely claiming he was corrupt ...
... During Reconstruction • Robert Smalls of South Carolina took command of vessel and slave crew, surrendered it to Union Army; became hero to antislavery Northerners • Elected to Congress; made land available for blacks to own • Defeated by whites falsely claiming he was corrupt ...
The Civil War, 1861-1865 - AP United States History
... figures who respectively created nation-states in Italy and Germany. But Lincoln’s America, unlike these nations, was based on universal ideas of political democracy, human liberty, and self-government; other nations were based on particular identities of ethnicity, culture, and language. In his Nov ...
... figures who respectively created nation-states in Italy and Germany. But Lincoln’s America, unlike these nations, was based on universal ideas of political democracy, human liberty, and self-government; other nations were based on particular identities of ethnicity, culture, and language. In his Nov ...
Chapter 9 Study Guide - Merrillville Community School
... Describe how each community, North and South, connected to its soldiers at war, including a comparison of the two communities. Outline the immediate outbreak of the war from Fort Sumter to Bull Run, including initial strategies and the relative strengths of both sides. Summarize the actions of Linco ...
... Describe how each community, North and South, connected to its soldiers at war, including a comparison of the two communities. Outline the immediate outbreak of the war from Fort Sumter to Bull Run, including initial strategies and the relative strengths of both sides. Summarize the actions of Linco ...
Reconstruction - Administration
... Wanted to keep South out of Union as long as possible; opposed the 10% plan. Radicals wanted to punish the South for causing the Civil War. ...
... Wanted to keep South out of Union as long as possible; opposed the 10% plan. Radicals wanted to punish the South for causing the Civil War. ...
American Civil War Civil War Reconstruction
... would be given a pardon. He also said that if 10% of the voters in a state supported the Union, then a state could be readmitted. Under Lincoln's plan, any state that was readmitted must make slavery illegal as part of their constitution. President Johnson President Lincoln was assassinated at the e ...
... would be given a pardon. He also said that if 10% of the voters in a state supported the Union, then a state could be readmitted. Under Lincoln's plan, any state that was readmitted must make slavery illegal as part of their constitution. President Johnson President Lincoln was assassinated at the e ...
The Civil War – Create A Living Timeline Overview Students will
... General Grant, promoted to commander of the Union armies, planned to engage Lee’s forces in Virginia until they were destroyed. North and South met and fought in an inconclusive three‐day battle in the Wilderness. Lee inflicted more casualties on the Union forces than his own army incurred, but ...
... General Grant, promoted to commander of the Union armies, planned to engage Lee’s forces in Virginia until they were destroyed. North and South met and fought in an inconclusive three‐day battle in the Wilderness. Lee inflicted more casualties on the Union forces than his own army incurred, but ...
Ch.11-sec-4-5-2
... • Had four children Robert (1843-1926), Edward (1846-1850), William (1850-1862), and Thomas (18531871). ...
... • Had four children Robert (1843-1926), Edward (1846-1850), William (1850-1862), and Thomas (18531871). ...
The Civil War 1861-1865
... War? Which do you think was the most important? Why? 2. How did the Dred Scott decision help bring the country closer to civil war? Do you think the decision made civil war inevitable? Why or why not? 3. While running for president, Abraham Lincoln said that he had no plans to abolish slavery. Why t ...
... War? Which do you think was the most important? Why? 2. How did the Dred Scott decision help bring the country closer to civil war? Do you think the decision made civil war inevitable? Why or why not? 3. While running for president, Abraham Lincoln said that he had no plans to abolish slavery. Why t ...
Did you know…these inconvenient facts? The Declaration of
... had accused him of supporting “negro equality.” In their fourth debate, at Charleston, Illinois, on September 18, 1858, Lincoln made his position clear. “I will say then that I am not, nor ever have been, in favor of bringing about in any way the social and political equality of the white and black ...
... had accused him of supporting “negro equality.” In their fourth debate, at Charleston, Illinois, on September 18, 1858, Lincoln made his position clear. “I will say then that I am not, nor ever have been, in favor of bringing about in any way the social and political equality of the white and black ...
Chapter 22: The Ordeal of Reconstruction
... The Ku Klux Klan was organized primarily because of white southerners’ resentment of growing interracial marriage and corruption among radical black state legislators. ...
... The Ku Klux Klan was organized primarily because of white southerners’ resentment of growing interracial marriage and corruption among radical black state legislators. ...
Reconstruction
... Life as a Freedmen After the Civil War, the thousands of freedmen (former slaves) faced even more challenges. They were now homeless and had little more than the clothes they were wearing. Many went from place to place looking for food, shelter, and work. Others searched for spouses, children ...
... Life as a Freedmen After the Civil War, the thousands of freedmen (former slaves) faced even more challenges. They were now homeless and had little more than the clothes they were wearing. Many went from place to place looking for food, shelter, and work. Others searched for spouses, children ...
18 powerpoint-Reconstruction
... overrides vetoes to make sure that the former Confederates are punished and rights are given to former slaves. ...
... overrides vetoes to make sure that the former Confederates are punished and rights are given to former slaves. ...
Civil-War-Student-PwrPt-Ch-15-AmStI-13 - gcalella
... Besieged the city and starved them out It was last spot on Mississippi River in which Confederates could send troops and supplies from west to east where most fighting occurred Lincoln makes Grant supreme commander of Union army ...
... Besieged the city and starved them out It was last spot on Mississippi River in which Confederates could send troops and supplies from west to east where most fighting occurred Lincoln makes Grant supreme commander of Union army ...
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.