Content: The Civil War (continued)
... help civilians understand what the war is like. Use CivilWarPhotos.net and other listed websites. Then, in writing, explain the context of each photo and how each is emblematic of the Civil War. And answer: how might civilians react to these photos? ...
... help civilians understand what the war is like. Use CivilWarPhotos.net and other listed websites. Then, in writing, explain the context of each photo and how each is emblematic of the Civil War. And answer: how might civilians react to these photos? ...
6_causes_of_civil_war
... The election of 1860 became a very hot topic across the nation. The Democrats met to choose the presidential candidate with the northern Democrats wanting Stephen Douglas, but southern Democrats wanting someone to protect slavery in the territories. The southern Democrats walked ...
... The election of 1860 became a very hot topic across the nation. The Democrats met to choose the presidential candidate with the northern Democrats wanting Stephen Douglas, but southern Democrats wanting someone to protect slavery in the territories. The southern Democrats walked ...
events and causes leading to the civil war.
... The election of 1860 became a very hot topic across the nation. The Democrats met to choose the presidential candidate with the northern Democrats wanting Stephen Douglas, but southern Democrats wanting someone to protect slavery in the territories. The southern Democrats walked ...
... The election of 1860 became a very hot topic across the nation. The Democrats met to choose the presidential candidate with the northern Democrats wanting Stephen Douglas, but southern Democrats wanting someone to protect slavery in the territories. The southern Democrats walked ...
Civil War Challenge Packet Final
... This list of battles DOES NOT include surprise attacks, which can come at anytime from Generals Landis and McFarland. BATTLE # 1 – Creating a State Game Piece/Monument (due on Thursday, 3/1) Your regiment or company must design a game piece. This piece must be no larger than 8 ½” x 11”, and 16” in h ...
... This list of battles DOES NOT include surprise attacks, which can come at anytime from Generals Landis and McFarland. BATTLE # 1 – Creating a State Game Piece/Monument (due on Thursday, 3/1) Your regiment or company must design a game piece. This piece must be no larger than 8 ½” x 11”, and 16” in h ...
Civil War - Teach Tennessee History
... * * * My distress is that our friends in East Tennessee are being hanged and driven to despair and even now I fear are thinking of taking rebel arms for the sake of personal protection. In this we lose the most valuable stake we have in the South. ...
... * * * My distress is that our friends in East Tennessee are being hanged and driven to despair and even now I fear are thinking of taking rebel arms for the sake of personal protection. In this we lose the most valuable stake we have in the South. ...
Underground Railroad and Civil War Review: Chapter 5
... Most people refused to help 5. Who was the Republican nominee for president in 1860? Abraham Lincoln 6. What happened after this leader (from question 5) was elected president in ...
... Most people refused to help 5. Who was the Republican nominee for president in 1860? Abraham Lincoln 6. What happened after this leader (from question 5) was elected president in ...
Jeopardy for Unit 4
... a difference between the Constitution of the Republic of Texas and the Constitution of 1845 written for the state of Texas? A. The republic’s constitution protected homesteads from being taken to pay debts B. The Republic’s constitution allowed settlers from other states to continue bringing slaves ...
... a difference between the Constitution of the Republic of Texas and the Constitution of 1845 written for the state of Texas? A. The republic’s constitution protected homesteads from being taken to pay debts B. The Republic’s constitution allowed settlers from other states to continue bringing slaves ...
Following two days of intensive battle in the hills and ridges south of
... For 150 years, historians have dissected GEN Lee’s rationale for remaining at Gettysburg a third day, when by his own admission he was far less optimistic for the army’s chances for success than the preceding day. Yet GEN Lee stayed to fight when he didn’t have to, even though LTG Longstreet had pre ...
... For 150 years, historians have dissected GEN Lee’s rationale for remaining at Gettysburg a third day, when by his own admission he was far less optimistic for the army’s chances for success than the preceding day. Yet GEN Lee stayed to fight when he didn’t have to, even though LTG Longstreet had pre ...
Reconstruction
... Reconstruction to attack blacks who tried to vote or challenge white supremacy ...
... Reconstruction to attack blacks who tried to vote or challenge white supremacy ...
U.S. History Final Study Guide
... In 1836, Steven E. Austin and other Texan leaders, claimed Texas and declared independence from Mexico. To stop them, Santa Anna March the Mexican army to Texas. Santa Anna attacked a small group of Texan rebels at a Ford called the Alamo. After 13 days of battle, Santa Anna's army captured the Al ...
... In 1836, Steven E. Austin and other Texan leaders, claimed Texas and declared independence from Mexico. To stop them, Santa Anna March the Mexican army to Texas. Santa Anna attacked a small group of Texan rebels at a Ford called the Alamo. After 13 days of battle, Santa Anna's army captured the Al ...
The Reconstruction Ordeal
... How to deal with former Confederate leaders? (many Confed leaders will serve brief jail terms and later pardoned) ...
... How to deal with former Confederate leaders? (many Confed leaders will serve brief jail terms and later pardoned) ...
As You Read - McDougal Littell
... speeches and held antislavery conventions to push for freedom. In addition, black abolitionists wrote eloquently about the evils of slavery. By 1860 African Americans published more than a dozen antislavery newspapers in the United States. These papers included Douglass’s North Star and the Mystery, ...
... speeches and held antislavery conventions to push for freedom. In addition, black abolitionists wrote eloquently about the evils of slavery. By 1860 African Americans published more than a dozen antislavery newspapers in the United States. These papers included Douglass’s North Star and the Mystery, ...
The Classic Novel of the Civil War
... sections, the narrative alternates between the vantage points of Union and Rebel soldiers. Maps by Don Pitcher illustrate the strategic positions of the two armies throughout the days of the encounter. Monday, June 29, 1863 Harrison, a spy for the Army of Northern Virginia, reports to its commander, ...
... sections, the narrative alternates between the vantage points of Union and Rebel soldiers. Maps by Don Pitcher illustrate the strategic positions of the two armies throughout the days of the encounter. Monday, June 29, 1863 Harrison, a spy for the Army of Northern Virginia, reports to its commander, ...
Supreme Court Cases
... keep fighting for long • Tried to hang on long enough to damage morale of north ...
... keep fighting for long • Tried to hang on long enough to damage morale of north ...
12_ss070801e_the-civil-war-and
... • The war ended in April 1865, but because of Texas’s location, the news of the war ending did not reach Texas until June 19, 1865. Why did it take so long for Texans to hear this news? • The last Civil War battle was in Brownsville, Texas May 12 -13. • The North, or Union forces, had already won th ...
... • The war ended in April 1865, but because of Texas’s location, the news of the war ending did not reach Texas until June 19, 1865. Why did it take so long for Texans to hear this news? • The last Civil War battle was in Brownsville, Texas May 12 -13. • The North, or Union forces, had already won th ...
Plans for Reconstruction
... Although only 100 miles apart physically, Richmond, Virginia, and Washington were separated by vast distances politically in 1865. Richmond had been under siege for months before falling to Union troops on April 3, 1865. The next day, President Lincoln visited the ravaged city, taking in the burned- ...
... Although only 100 miles apart physically, Richmond, Virginia, and Washington were separated by vast distances politically in 1865. Richmond had been under siege for months before falling to Union troops on April 3, 1865. The next day, President Lincoln visited the ravaged city, taking in the burned- ...
American Studies/Seemueller: Slavery and Civil War Test Study Guide
... Lincoln to do? What was the Emancipation Proclamation? What did it do and what didn't it do? What was its significance? What are the statistics regarding African Americans serving in the Union army? What did General George McClellan accomplish? Why was Lincoln so frustrated with him? What role did G ...
... Lincoln to do? What was the Emancipation Proclamation? What did it do and what didn't it do? What was its significance? What are the statistics regarding African Americans serving in the Union army? What did General George McClellan accomplish? Why was Lincoln so frustrated with him? What role did G ...
Robert Shaw Memorial - Humanities – Picturing America
... • Hagood informed a captured Union surgeon that "had he been in command of white troops, I should have given him an honorable burial; as it is, I shall bury him in the common trench with the negroes that fell with him." ...
... • Hagood informed a captured Union surgeon that "had he been in command of white troops, I should have given him an honorable burial; as it is, I shall bury him in the common trench with the negroes that fell with him." ...
APUSH Civil War
... A. control of the seas and a blockade B. European immigrants to swell the army C. a well established strong central government D. complete unity of purpose E. control of the vast wealth in banking and shipping 25. The North financed its war efforts primarily through A. borrowing through bonds B. iss ...
... A. control of the seas and a blockade B. European immigrants to swell the army C. a well established strong central government D. complete unity of purpose E. control of the vast wealth in banking and shipping 25. The North financed its war efforts primarily through A. borrowing through bonds B. iss ...
Ken Burns
... captured by Colonel Robert E. Lee. The Southern militia now becomes a viable instrument; it is the beginning of the Confederate army. 1.7 Chapter 7 - Secessionitis :32:44 - :47:10 In 1860 Abraham Lincoln is elected President. The South is horrified. Introduction to George Templeton Strong, New York ...
... captured by Colonel Robert E. Lee. The Southern militia now becomes a viable instrument; it is the beginning of the Confederate army. 1.7 Chapter 7 - Secessionitis :32:44 - :47:10 In 1860 Abraham Lincoln is elected President. The South is horrified. Introduction to George Templeton Strong, New York ...
The Wilderness Campaign and Beyond: The Civil War Letters of
... Samuel. died in 1849 en route to California during the gold rush. James also served in the Civil War. but on the Western front. By the time William Roszell was seventeen years old. the states were no longer united. It was 1861 and the unrest which had simmered for many years between the North and th ...
... Samuel. died in 1849 en route to California during the gold rush. James also served in the Civil War. but on the Western front. By the time William Roszell was seventeen years old. the states were no longer united. It was 1861 and the unrest which had simmered for many years between the North and th ...
Ch 22 Packet - Brunswick School Department
... 12. ______________ Derogatory term for Northerners who came to the South during Reconstruction and sometimes took part in Republican state governments 13. ______________ Constitutional amendment guaranteeing blacks the right to vote 14. ______________ White supremacist organization that created a re ...
... 12. ______________ Derogatory term for Northerners who came to the South during Reconstruction and sometimes took part in Republican state governments 13. ______________ Constitutional amendment guaranteeing blacks the right to vote 14. ______________ White supremacist organization that created a re ...
Reconstruction - New Smyrna Beach High School
... 1. Cotton fields now fields of weeds 2. Livestock gone after northern invasion 3. Agricultural output did not return to 1860 level until 1870; much from new Southwest D. Planter aristocrats devastated 1. Value in slaves disappeared 2. Many mansions destroyed or ruined V. African Americans in the imm ...
... 1. Cotton fields now fields of weeds 2. Livestock gone after northern invasion 3. Agricultural output did not return to 1860 level until 1870; much from new Southwest D. Planter aristocrats devastated 1. Value in slaves disappeared 2. Many mansions destroyed or ruined V. African Americans in the imm ...
Henry P. Moore Civil War Photograph Album
... plantations abandoned by William Seabrook, James Hopkinson, and Confederate General Thomas Drayton. When fifty of Moore’s photographs were published by the New Hampshire Historical Society in 2000, filmmaker Ken Burns and leading scholars recognized their artistic and historical importance for being ...
... plantations abandoned by William Seabrook, James Hopkinson, and Confederate General Thomas Drayton. When fifty of Moore’s photographs were published by the New Hampshire Historical Society in 2000, filmmaker Ken Burns and leading scholars recognized their artistic and historical importance for being ...
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.