File - Mr. Davis South Rowan High School American
... 3. Use the passage to answer the question. Illinois during the Civil War The Civil War affected more than the soldiers who fought. In Illinois, farmers were no longer able to send their grain down the Mississippi River to be sold to people in the South. Because they had fewer customers, they had to ...
... 3. Use the passage to answer the question. Illinois during the Civil War The Civil War affected more than the soldiers who fought. In Illinois, farmers were no longer able to send their grain down the Mississippi River to be sold to people in the South. Because they had fewer customers, they had to ...
What were Lincoln`s aims for Reconstruction?
... In July 1862, Lincoln presented the Emancipation Proclamation to his cabinet. They said it needed to wait until after some military successes. Lincoln agreed. ...
... In July 1862, Lincoln presented the Emancipation Proclamation to his cabinet. They said it needed to wait until after some military successes. Lincoln agreed. ...
The Ten —Percent Plan The Freedmen`s Bureau Reconstruction
... swore an oath of allegiance to the Union. Voters cucild then elect delegates to draft revised state constitutions and establish new state governments. All southerners except for high-ranking Confederate army officers and government officials would be granted a full pardon. Lincoln guaranteed souther ...
... swore an oath of allegiance to the Union. Voters cucild then elect delegates to draft revised state constitutions and establish new state governments. All southerners except for high-ranking Confederate army officers and government officials would be granted a full pardon. Lincoln guaranteed souther ...
Untitled - Grand Hotel Marriott Resort
... statement “Damn the torpedoes, full speed ahead.” Over the next three weeks Farragut’s vessels and the Union Army finally forced the defenders of Fort Morgan to surrender. The Port of Mobile was then closed to blockade runners, but the City of Mobile remained in Confederate hands until 1865. ...
... statement “Damn the torpedoes, full speed ahead.” Over the next three weeks Farragut’s vessels and the Union Army finally forced the defenders of Fort Morgan to surrender. The Port of Mobile was then closed to blockade runners, but the City of Mobile remained in Confederate hands until 1865. ...
Civil War Battles
... Significance: the prolonged nature of the siege made it clear that the war was not going to be won in Virginia in the summer of 1864; this fact had the potential to have significant political implications – the presidential election was coming up; Confederate forces dwindled throughout the siege due ...
... Significance: the prolonged nature of the siege made it clear that the war was not going to be won in Virginia in the summer of 1864; this fact had the potential to have significant political implications – the presidential election was coming up; Confederate forces dwindled throughout the siege due ...
Kentucky`s Civil War
... And one of the war’s climactic battles took place in the state, at Perryville. Along with the battle of Antietam in Maryland two weeks earlier, Perryville represented the failure of the Confederacy’s two-pronged effort to gain the support of these important border states and to persuade European pow ...
... And one of the war’s climactic battles took place in the state, at Perryville. Along with the battle of Antietam in Maryland two weeks earlier, Perryville represented the failure of the Confederacy’s two-pronged effort to gain the support of these important border states and to persuade European pow ...
Animated Map Activity Go to the animated map of
... Using the distance you measured on your map of Fredericksburg, about how long do you think it took a message to get from Marye’s Heights to Slaughter Pen Farm? _Approximately half an hour.___________________________________________ What do you think happened because of this? _I think that messages w ...
... Using the distance you measured on your map of Fredericksburg, about how long do you think it took a message to get from Marye’s Heights to Slaughter Pen Farm? _Approximately half an hour.___________________________________________ What do you think happened because of this? _I think that messages w ...
Reconstruction
... How could the Southern States Re-enter the Union? 1. Each Southern State had to draw up a new state constitution, when they met the criteria: a. 10% of 1860 Voters took the Oath b. Each of the persons taking the oath had to have been a qualified Voter in 1860. ...
... How could the Southern States Re-enter the Union? 1. Each Southern State had to draw up a new state constitution, when they met the criteria: a. 10% of 1860 Voters took the Oath b. Each of the persons taking the oath had to have been a qualified Voter in 1860. ...
Election of 1860
... examined a plan to save the Union. Senator John J. Crittenden of Kentucky proposed a series of constitutional amendments that he believed would satisfy the South by protecting slavery. Crittenden hoped the country could avoid secession and a civil war. Lincoln disagreed with some of Crittenden’s pl ...
... examined a plan to save the Union. Senator John J. Crittenden of Kentucky proposed a series of constitutional amendments that he believed would satisfy the South by protecting slavery. Crittenden hoped the country could avoid secession and a civil war. Lincoln disagreed with some of Crittenden’s pl ...
October - 7th Maryland
... It accounts their struggles with illness and the surprising accommodations that they were given. During their confinement they were able to obtain southern newspapers to read. They did receive correspondence from home but it wasn’t regular. Between the letters and the papers they realized that the s ...
... It accounts their struggles with illness and the surprising accommodations that they were given. During their confinement they were able to obtain southern newspapers to read. They did receive correspondence from home but it wasn’t regular. Between the letters and the papers they realized that the s ...
The Politics of Reconstruction
... Black codes had the effect of restoring many of the restrictions of slavery by prohibiting blacks from carrying weapons, serving on juries, testifying against whites, marrying whites, and traveling without permits. In some states, African Americans were forbidden to own land. Even worse, in many are ...
... Black codes had the effect of restoring many of the restrictions of slavery by prohibiting blacks from carrying weapons, serving on juries, testifying against whites, marrying whites, and traveling without permits. In some states, African Americans were forbidden to own land. Even worse, in many are ...
The Union Chapel Mine and its Surroundings: A History
... they was traveling through this area, and that typhoid fever or something must have hit. They died, and they buried them there. Of course they couldn't embalm them, they couldn't take them with them like on a wagon train, so they just had to bury them. I know about where they're at, but I couldn't ...
... they was traveling through this area, and that typhoid fever or something must have hit. They died, and they buried them there. Of course they couldn't embalm them, they couldn't take them with them like on a wagon train, so they just had to bury them. I know about where they're at, but I couldn't ...
Vermont at Bull Run - Vermont Historical Society
... coming on, but more slowly now, for the men were becoming exhausted from the heat and their long march. The Confederate commander, Gen. Beauregard, galloped up from the lower fords, accompanied by Gen. Johnson, most of whose army had arrived from the railway at Manassas Junction. Griffin and Rickett ...
... coming on, but more slowly now, for the men were becoming exhausted from the heat and their long march. The Confederate commander, Gen. Beauregard, galloped up from the lower fords, accompanied by Gen. Johnson, most of whose army had arrived from the railway at Manassas Junction. Griffin and Rickett ...
13_1
... Wade- Davis Bill Abolish Slavery Majority of each state’s white males take loyalty oath ...
... Wade- Davis Bill Abolish Slavery Majority of each state’s white males take loyalty oath ...
Civil War 150 — Battle and Proclamation
... • The Executive branch, including the military and naval authorities will recognize and maintain the freedom of these former slaves. 3. Limitations included in the Emancipation Proclamation include: • Emancipation only applies to the designated states and parts of states in rebellion. • Th ...
... • The Executive branch, including the military and naval authorities will recognize and maintain the freedom of these former slaves. 3. Limitations included in the Emancipation Proclamation include: • Emancipation only applies to the designated states and parts of states in rebellion. • Th ...
Document
... Union victory in the Civil War? The nation split in two with the election of Lincoln. From 1861 to 1865, a bloody Civil War was fought between the United States of America and the Confederate States of America. The future of slavery and of the Union was at stake. ...
... Union victory in the Civil War? The nation split in two with the election of Lincoln. From 1861 to 1865, a bloody Civil War was fought between the United States of America and the Confederate States of America. The future of slavery and of the Union was at stake. ...
Lesson Plan - Madame Tussauds
... Virginia in 1862 because General Joseph E. Johnston had been shot. The press and his soldiers criticized Lee for tactical errors. However, he developed an aggressive approach that enabled him to win battles and break down the defenses of the United States Army. His characteristics won him the loyalt ...
... Virginia in 1862 because General Joseph E. Johnston had been shot. The press and his soldiers criticized Lee for tactical errors. However, he developed an aggressive approach that enabled him to win battles and break down the defenses of the United States Army. His characteristics won him the loyalt ...
Robert E. Lee
... Virginia in 1862 because General Joseph E. Johnston had been shot. The press and his soldiers criticized Lee for tactical errors. However, he developed an aggressive approach that enabled him to win battles and break down the defenses of the United States Army. His characteristics won him the loyalt ...
... Virginia in 1862 because General Joseph E. Johnston had been shot. The press and his soldiers criticized Lee for tactical errors. However, he developed an aggressive approach that enabled him to win battles and break down the defenses of the United States Army. His characteristics won him the loyalt ...
US Chapter 8 Quick Notes
... flocked there. Missouri’s pro-slavery Senator David Atchison called on people from his home state to act, and in spring 1855 thousands of “border ruffians” stormed into Kansas to vote illegally. Separate governments were formed by March 1856. In May more border ruffians attacked the town of Lawrence ...
... flocked there. Missouri’s pro-slavery Senator David Atchison called on people from his home state to act, and in spring 1855 thousands of “border ruffians” stormed into Kansas to vote illegally. Separate governments were formed by March 1856. In May more border ruffians attacked the town of Lawrence ...
Reconstruction Notes
... Reconstruction came to end when northern troops left the South and gave the southern politicians the ability to make decisions on their own. Was Reconstruction successful? Consider the fact that all the states were back in the union, but had the economic and social opportunities for freed slaves rea ...
... Reconstruction came to end when northern troops left the South and gave the southern politicians the ability to make decisions on their own. Was Reconstruction successful? Consider the fact that all the states were back in the union, but had the economic and social opportunities for freed slaves rea ...
James L. Roark Michael P. Johnson Patricia Cline Cohen Sarah
... plan was in many ways a continuation of Lincoln’s plan; he stressed reconciliation between the Union and the defeated Confederacy, rapid restoration of civil government in the South, and the pardoning of most ex-rebels; plan differed from Lincoln’s in response to restoring the governments of the reb ...
... plan was in many ways a continuation of Lincoln’s plan; he stressed reconciliation between the Union and the defeated Confederacy, rapid restoration of civil government in the South, and the pardoning of most ex-rebels; plan differed from Lincoln’s in response to restoring the governments of the reb ...
Chapter 13 - Fall River Public Schools
... The five civilized tribes were the Cherokees, Creeks, Choctaws, Chickasaws, and Seminoles. President Jackson wanted to move the Indians so the white men could expand. In 1830, Congress passed the Indian Removal Act. It moved more than 100,000 Indians living east of the Mississippi to reservations we ...
... The five civilized tribes were the Cherokees, Creeks, Choctaws, Chickasaws, and Seminoles. President Jackson wanted to move the Indians so the white men could expand. In 1830, Congress passed the Indian Removal Act. It moved more than 100,000 Indians living east of the Mississippi to reservations we ...
From Reform to Revolution: The Transformation of Confederate
... argued that the Confederate project is best understood “as part of a broad reactionary movement among regional agrarian and slaveholding elites that formed a steady counterpoint to the age of revolution and emancipation.”1 From this perspective the southern republic is framed as a necessity of the p ...
... argued that the Confederate project is best understood “as part of a broad reactionary movement among regional agrarian and slaveholding elites that formed a steady counterpoint to the age of revolution and emancipation.”1 From this perspective the southern republic is framed as a necessity of the p ...
Unit 5: A Nation Divided and Rebuilt Pages
... The Union Strategy – Page 484 The North had a plan they called the (38) “__________________________________”, where they’d try to smother the Southern economy. This plan called for a (39)________________________________ of the South’s coastline. The plan also called for the Union to take control of ...
... The Union Strategy – Page 484 The North had a plan they called the (38) “__________________________________”, where they’d try to smother the Southern economy. This plan called for a (39)________________________________ of the South’s coastline. The plan also called for the Union to take control of ...
Effects of Reconstruction
... Just because blacks were now supposed to be equal to whites didn't mean that they were treated that way. Whites living in the South and the North did not see blacks as equals. Even though they were no longer slaves, blacks were still treated as if they were. While farming was good for the South, it ...
... Just because blacks were now supposed to be equal to whites didn't mean that they were treated that way. Whites living in the South and the North did not see blacks as equals. Even though they were no longer slaves, blacks were still treated as if they were. While farming was good for the South, it ...
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.