Ch. 17.1-17.2: War Changes Society
... • Freeing Southern slaves weakened rebelling states in Confederacy, so it could be seen as a military tactic • As commander-in-chief Lincoln has this authority • Constitution did not give him power to free slaves in Union – however Lincoln asked Congress to abolish it gradually throughout land ...
... • Freeing Southern slaves weakened rebelling states in Confederacy, so it could be seen as a military tactic • As commander-in-chief Lincoln has this authority • Constitution did not give him power to free slaves in Union – however Lincoln asked Congress to abolish it gradually throughout land ...
The Civil War
... The North and South started a bloody Civil War The North and South fought in the most important battle in Gettysburg. The purpose was that the North and South disagreed that slaves should be allowed in new territories and states. ...
... The North and South started a bloody Civil War The North and South fought in the most important battle in Gettysburg. The purpose was that the North and South disagreed that slaves should be allowed in new territories and states. ...
Life During the Civil War Chapter 11 Section 3
... • It is estimated that half the eligible men in the Union (those between the ages of 20 and 45) fought in the Civil War. • Four men out of every five eligible men in the Confederacy fought. • Anger over the draft led to a riot in New York City that lasted four days. Mobs attacked both free African A ...
... • It is estimated that half the eligible men in the Union (those between the ages of 20 and 45) fought in the Civil War. • Four men out of every five eligible men in the Confederacy fought. • Anger over the draft led to a riot in New York City that lasted four days. Mobs attacked both free African A ...
Civil War Study Guide
... and reforming prisons, Dix became the Superintendent of Nurses for the Union Army. In addition, she organized many women to serve as military nurses. Sally Louisa Tompkins- Southern woman who opened a hospital for the south in Richmond Virginia. Her hospital’s survival rate was at ...
... and reforming prisons, Dix became the Superintendent of Nurses for the Union Army. In addition, she organized many women to serve as military nurses. Sally Louisa Tompkins- Southern woman who opened a hospital for the south in Richmond Virginia. Her hospital’s survival rate was at ...
How to Modify Content Classroom Assessments for ELL
... 13. At Vicksburg, the Union wanted to control the _____________ River. 14. The _____________surrendered at Vicksburg. 15. The _____________ won the Siege of Vicksburg. ...
... 13. At Vicksburg, the Union wanted to control the _____________ River. 14. The _____________surrendered at Vicksburg. 15. The _____________ won the Siege of Vicksburg. ...
The Civil War
... not permitted to serve as solders in the Union army. • The Union navy accepted African Americans. • African Americans who had escaped slavery often proved to be especially useful as guides and spies because of their knowledge of the South. • In 1862 Congress passed a law allowing African Americans t ...
... not permitted to serve as solders in the Union army. • The Union navy accepted African Americans. • African Americans who had escaped slavery often proved to be especially useful as guides and spies because of their knowledge of the South. • In 1862 Congress passed a law allowing African Americans t ...
footnotes - Foreign Policy Research Institute
... Black carpenters, chaplains, cooks, guards, laborers, steamboat pilots, surgeons, and teamsters also contributed to the war cause. Nearly eighty Blacks became commissioned officers. Black women could not formally join the Army but nonetheless served as nurses, spies, and scouts, the most famous bein ...
... Black carpenters, chaplains, cooks, guards, laborers, steamboat pilots, surgeons, and teamsters also contributed to the war cause. Nearly eighty Blacks became commissioned officers. Black women could not formally join the Army but nonetheless served as nurses, spies, and scouts, the most famous bein ...
Advantages of the North and South Read and highlight the handout
... The Union enjoyed a huge advantage in population. There were 22,000,000 people living in the North in 1861. The Confederacy could count only 9,000,000 and more than one-third of these were slaves. A steady flow of immigrants from Europe provided the Union with a tremendous amount of manpower to run ...
... The Union enjoyed a huge advantage in population. There were 22,000,000 people living in the North in 1861. The Confederacy could count only 9,000,000 and more than one-third of these were slaves. A steady flow of immigrants from Europe provided the Union with a tremendous amount of manpower to run ...
Chapter 6
... Antietam (deadliest day of war) in Maryland • Ulysses Grant-planned to capture Vicksburg, Miss (the last Confederate town) • Jefferson Davis-Pres of Confederates-started draft • Abraham Lincoln-Pres of Union-started draft too ...
... Antietam (deadliest day of war) in Maryland • Ulysses Grant-planned to capture Vicksburg, Miss (the last Confederate town) • Jefferson Davis-Pres of Confederates-started draft • Abraham Lincoln-Pres of Union-started draft too ...
Chapter 11-3 - Freeman Public Schools
... • How did the Emancipation Proclamation affect the Civil War? • How did African Americans contribute to the war effort? • What was life like in the military? • What similarities and differences existed on the home front in the North and South? ...
... • How did the Emancipation Proclamation affect the Civil War? • How did African Americans contribute to the war effort? • What was life like in the military? • What similarities and differences existed on the home front in the North and South? ...
document
... Their training was generally poor; their regiments were led by white officers; they were assigned disproportionately to heavy labor and fatigue duty; and they were often exploited, being given more dangerous assignments ...
... Their training was generally poor; their regiments were led by white officers; they were assigned disproportionately to heavy labor and fatigue duty; and they were often exploited, being given more dangerous assignments ...
Civil War Bingo - Troup County Schools
... 4. Who were the Southern sisters who were abolitionists and the daughters of a slave owner and encouraged women to fight slavery as their Christian duty? 5. What is the name of Harriet Beecher Stowe’s famous novel that inspired the rise of abolitionism? ...
... 4. Who were the Southern sisters who were abolitionists and the daughters of a slave owner and encouraged women to fight slavery as their Christian duty? 5. What is the name of Harriet Beecher Stowe’s famous novel that inspired the rise of abolitionism? ...
Civil War 1861- 1865
... 5. Houston was removed from office when he refused to take an oath of allegiance to the Confederacy. 6. Confederate Constitution – States were given more power and the Federal Government was given less. 7. Jefferson Davis – President of the Confederacy 8. Robert E. Lee –Commander of the Confederate ...
... 5. Houston was removed from office when he refused to take an oath of allegiance to the Confederacy. 6. Confederate Constitution – States were given more power and the Federal Government was given less. 7. Jefferson Davis – President of the Confederacy 8. Robert E. Lee –Commander of the Confederate ...
Civil War Study Guide
... • Lincoln felt that freeing slaves in Confederacy would give the North moral __________ • Many northerners did not support this – They wanted to restore the ______, not end slavery • Was it ____________? • What would the _______ states do? (KY, MO, DE, MD) • Had to wait for a Union Victory to issue ...
... • Lincoln felt that freeing slaves in Confederacy would give the North moral __________ • Many northerners did not support this – They wanted to restore the ______, not end slavery • Was it ____________? • What would the _______ states do? (KY, MO, DE, MD) • Had to wait for a Union Victory to issue ...
Civil War Review - Social Studies With A Smile
... certain strengths. The North had more __________________, factories, and railroads. The South had better ____________________ leaders, such as Robert E. __________________. The __________________ planned to wage a defensive war. They would also try to capture __________________, the Union’s capital. ...
... certain strengths. The North had more __________________, factories, and railroads. The South had better ____________________ leaders, such as Robert E. __________________. The __________________ planned to wage a defensive war. They would also try to capture __________________, the Union’s capital. ...
AA and civil war Kayla Seider and Judy Huh - Hamilton-Class-WIKI
... Joining The Union Army •Showed the bravery and courage that African Americans gave throughout the battles regardless of earlier discrimination and prejudice from whites •Depicted patriotism for their country and their will to fight •Made up 10% of the Union Army •179,000 served in the Army; 19,000 ...
... Joining The Union Army •Showed the bravery and courage that African Americans gave throughout the battles regardless of earlier discrimination and prejudice from whites •Depicted patriotism for their country and their will to fight •Made up 10% of the Union Army •179,000 served in the Army; 19,000 ...
Chapter 16 Study Guide - Liberty Hill Junior High
... market Rifles with minie balls – a change in military technology which most affected the average soldier and increased the casualty rate Washington, D.C. – it that would have been surrounded by the Confederacy if Maryland had seceded Ulysses S. Grant – he commanded Union forces at Shiloh, Tennessee, ...
... market Rifles with minie balls – a change in military technology which most affected the average soldier and increased the casualty rate Washington, D.C. – it that would have been surrounded by the Confederacy if Maryland had seceded Ulysses S. Grant – he commanded Union forces at Shiloh, Tennessee, ...
Civil War Review Guide
... The court ruled that slaves did not have the rights of citizens. The court also said that Dred Scott had no claim to freedom because he had been living in Missouri, a slave state, and that the Missouri Compromise was unconstitutional. 5. What is the term used to describe the idea what the people in ...
... The court ruled that slaves did not have the rights of citizens. The court also said that Dred Scott had no claim to freedom because he had been living in Missouri, a slave state, and that the Missouri Compromise was unconstitutional. 5. What is the term used to describe the idea what the people in ...
1) The nickname given to Confederate soldiers was .
... 3) The ________________________________ was the Union plan to “strangle” the South. 4) The new design of ships that were plated with armor was nicknamed the _____________. 5) ________________________ was the right of the people to be charged with a crime before being arrested, suspended by President ...
... 3) The ________________________________ was the Union plan to “strangle” the South. 4) The new design of ships that were plated with armor was nicknamed the _____________. 5) ________________________ was the right of the people to be charged with a crime before being arrested, suspended by President ...
law which required all 20- 45 year old men to put their names in a
... By 1863, the Union had a difficult time recruiting soldiers to fight in the Civil War, so they raised the enlistment bounty from $100 to $300. Congress passed a conscription (draft) law which required all 20- 45 year old men to put their names in a lottery and serve if their names were drawn. A wea ...
... By 1863, the Union had a difficult time recruiting soldiers to fight in the Civil War, so they raised the enlistment bounty from $100 to $300. Congress passed a conscription (draft) law which required all 20- 45 year old men to put their names in a lottery and serve if their names were drawn. A wea ...
Chapter 11 Section 3 Notes income tax –tax based on individual`s
... They were called Copperheads as seen in this cartoon where they were portrayed threatening the Union. ...
... They were called Copperheads as seen in this cartoon where they were portrayed threatening the Union. ...
Name - Humble ISD
... The following people are not located in the textbook, we will talk about these in class when we grade this assignment 19. _____________________________ Chilean immigrant and a member of the U.S. Navy on the USS Santiago de Cuba, he participated in the assault on Fort Fisher, a Confederate fort, he a ...
... The following people are not located in the textbook, we will talk about these in class when we grade this assignment 19. _____________________________ Chilean immigrant and a member of the U.S. Navy on the USS Santiago de Cuba, he participated in the assault on Fort Fisher, a Confederate fort, he a ...
Name - Schoolwires.net
... 3. What was the strategy that the Union generals devised to beat the Confederates called? A. Slash and Burn Plan C. Anaconda Plan B. Striker Plan D. McClellan Plan 4. Which of the following was NOT a strategy involved in this plan? A. Union navy would blockade southern ports B. Union army would kill ...
... 3. What was the strategy that the Union generals devised to beat the Confederates called? A. Slash and Burn Plan C. Anaconda Plan B. Striker Plan D. McClellan Plan 4. Which of the following was NOT a strategy involved in this plan? A. Union navy would blockade southern ports B. Union army would kill ...
glory - Jack Nilan
... a. Stratford, Connecticut b. New York, New York c. Boston, Massachussetts d. Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 3. Private Trip (Denzel) was flogged after being charged with deserting the regiment during its arduous training regime. Why had he left the camp? a. To meet his girlfriend b. To find more food c. T ...
... a. Stratford, Connecticut b. New York, New York c. Boston, Massachussetts d. Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 3. Private Trip (Denzel) was flogged after being charged with deserting the regiment during its arduous training regime. Why had he left the camp? a. To meet his girlfriend b. To find more food c. T ...
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.