Untitled - Association of Surgical Technologists
... line of wounded made their way back to Washington. Although the morning had started out as glorious for the United States, it had quickly turned into a military debacle. Almost 2,700 Union soldiers had been killed or wounded in a battle fought near a meandering stream known as Bull Run. The generals ...
... line of wounded made their way back to Washington. Although the morning had started out as glorious for the United States, it had quickly turned into a military debacle. Almost 2,700 Union soldiers had been killed or wounded in a battle fought near a meandering stream known as Bull Run. The generals ...
Panic on the Palisades Madden GSL13
... attacks. New Jerseyans were familiar with stories of British coastal raids during the War for Independence and the naval blockade with occasional enemy forays ashore in the state during the War of 1812, when the British also burned Washington, D.C. and attacked Baltimore’s Fort McHenry. Although the ...
... attacks. New Jerseyans were familiar with stories of British coastal raids during the War for Independence and the naval blockade with occasional enemy forays ashore in the state during the War of 1812, when the British also burned Washington, D.C. and attacked Baltimore’s Fort McHenry. Although the ...
Turning Points of the American Civil War
... with Lee's defeat at Gettysburg. The Confederacy compiles enough victories to force a stalemate from July 1863 to November 1863. The South wins at Chickamauga, but the Federals are successful at Chattanooga. Then in September 1864, Sherman's Atlanta (Jonesborough) and Sheridan's Valley (Opequon) cam ...
... with Lee's defeat at Gettysburg. The Confederacy compiles enough victories to force a stalemate from July 1863 to November 1863. The South wins at Chickamauga, but the Federals are successful at Chattanooga. Then in September 1864, Sherman's Atlanta (Jonesborough) and Sheridan's Valley (Opequon) cam ...
The Battle of Hoover`s Gap
... with their repeaters. They were the first of the western armies to be equipped with the modern weapons. A member of the brigade wrote his wife: "Our men adore them as the heathen do their idols." The Confederates, who outnumbered Wilder's men many times over, thought they were facing a "vastly super ...
... with their repeaters. They were the first of the western armies to be equipped with the modern weapons. A member of the brigade wrote his wife: "Our men adore them as the heathen do their idols." The Confederates, who outnumbered Wilder's men many times over, thought they were facing a "vastly super ...
Chapter 22 Power point - Tipp City Exempted Village Schools
... Codes made many abolitionists wonder if the price of the Civil War was worth it, since Blacks were hardly better after the war than before the war. They were not “slaves” on paper, but in reality, their lives were little different. The master-slave relationship had been reintroduced even though slav ...
... Codes made many abolitionists wonder if the price of the Civil War was worth it, since Blacks were hardly better after the war than before the war. They were not “slaves” on paper, but in reality, their lives were little different. The master-slave relationship had been reintroduced even though slav ...
Full Reconstruction Powerpoint
... Wade-Davis Bill (1864) Required 50% of the number of 1860 voters to take an “iron clad” oath of allegiance ...
... Wade-Davis Bill (1864) Required 50% of the number of 1860 voters to take an “iron clad” oath of allegiance ...
5th Grade Social Studies Checkpoint 1
... Read the following statements and answer question 12 Howell Cobb, a general in the Confederate army and a Georgia politician, said, “If slaves will make good soldiers, then our whole theory of slavery is wrong.” Joseph Holt from Pennsylvania wrote in 1863: “The tenacious and brilliant valor displaye ...
... Read the following statements and answer question 12 Howell Cobb, a general in the Confederate army and a Georgia politician, said, “If slaves will make good soldiers, then our whole theory of slavery is wrong.” Joseph Holt from Pennsylvania wrote in 1863: “The tenacious and brilliant valor displaye ...
The Road to Civil War - Doral Academy Preparatory
... Vice Prez: Millard Fillmore: supporter of ...
... Vice Prez: Millard Fillmore: supporter of ...
Sample Responses Q1 - AP Central
... Perhaps half of all freedpeople begin searching for long-lost relatives who had been sold away from them. Blacks build schools and churches, organize mutual-aid societies, and meet in conventions throughout the South to demand full rights of citizenship. ...
... Perhaps half of all freedpeople begin searching for long-lost relatives who had been sold away from them. Blacks build schools and churches, organize mutual-aid societies, and meet in conventions throughout the South to demand full rights of citizenship. ...
Reconstruction - Rosholt School District
... quick restoration with no protection for the freed slaves beyond prohibition of slavery • Radicals wanted loyal men to replace Confederates in elite positions and blacks would receive basic rights of citizenships ...
... quick restoration with no protection for the freed slaves beyond prohibition of slavery • Radicals wanted loyal men to replace Confederates in elite positions and blacks would receive basic rights of citizenships ...
chapter 11 - Roadmap to Last Best Hope
... Americans needed to address key issues, including how to treat Confederate leaders who had brought on and fought the war, and how to bring the four million freedmen into the larger society. But in addition to these monumental domestic concerns, foreign policy issues also required the nation’s attent ...
... Americans needed to address key issues, including how to treat Confederate leaders who had brought on and fought the war, and how to bring the four million freedmen into the larger society. But in addition to these monumental domestic concerns, foreign policy issues also required the nation’s attent ...
Freedmen`s Bureau - Anderson School District Five
... regional and ideological differences led to the Civil War & an understanding of the impact of the Civil War and Reconstruction on democracy in America. USHC-3.4: Summarize the end of Reconstruction, including the role of anti– African American factions & competing national interests in undermining s ...
... regional and ideological differences led to the Civil War & an understanding of the impact of the Civil War and Reconstruction on democracy in America. USHC-3.4: Summarize the end of Reconstruction, including the role of anti– African American factions & competing national interests in undermining s ...
The Civil War (USH)
... freedom. Prevented foreign intervention. Encouraged recruitment of black volunteers into Union army ...
... freedom. Prevented foreign intervention. Encouraged recruitment of black volunteers into Union army ...
Alabama Civil War Trail
... soldiers and sailors as well as items used on the home front. The new Museum of Alabama, now under development, will feature additional items from the collections. Those wishing to research Civil War history will have access to thousands of documents, photographs and ...
... soldiers and sailors as well as items used on the home front. The new Museum of Alabama, now under development, will feature additional items from the collections. Those wishing to research Civil War history will have access to thousands of documents, photographs and ...
Desertion in the Confederate Army: A Disease that Crippled Dixie
... intent to return; skulking – avoiding military service by fraud or other illegal actions; self-mutilation; malingering at the expiration of a furlough, during furloughs, or exemptions; and collusion with medical boards for exemption or with subordinate military officers for assignment to easy duties ...
... intent to return; skulking – avoiding military service by fraud or other illegal actions; self-mutilation; malingering at the expiration of a furlough, during furloughs, or exemptions; and collusion with medical boards for exemption or with subordinate military officers for assignment to easy duties ...
Quiz 4 - Civil War and Reconstruction
... 3. __________________________ First battle of the American Civil War, Southern troops capture fort in Charleston, South Carolina harbor in 1861. 4. _____________________ Belief that the United States was a permanent organization of states from which a state could not leave. 5. ______________________ ...
... 3. __________________________ First battle of the American Civil War, Southern troops capture fort in Charleston, South Carolina harbor in 1861. 4. _____________________ Belief that the United States was a permanent organization of states from which a state could not leave. 5. ______________________ ...
The Campaign Strategies
... "now held, or hereafter acquired," north of latitude 36 degrees 30 minutes. In territory south of this line, slavery was "hereby recognized" and could not be interfered with by Congress. Further, property in slaves was to be "protected by all the departments of the territorial government during its ...
... "now held, or hereafter acquired," north of latitude 36 degrees 30 minutes. In territory south of this line, slavery was "hereby recognized" and could not be interfered with by Congress. Further, property in slaves was to be "protected by all the departments of the territorial government during its ...
Exhibit A - Madison Public Schools
... repeating rifle to be successfully made was the Henry rifle. It could fire as many as 60 shots in a minute and soldiers often claimed it was “the gun you loaded on Sunday and shot all week.” Unfortunately it cost too much money to make and couldn’t be mass-produced effectively. But new and more affo ...
... repeating rifle to be successfully made was the Henry rifle. It could fire as many as 60 shots in a minute and soldiers often claimed it was “the gun you loaded on Sunday and shot all week.” Unfortunately it cost too much money to make and couldn’t be mass-produced effectively. But new and more affo ...
8th Grade History Standard: The student uses a working
... was drawn up behind Bull Run The Federal retreat rapidly deteriorated into a rout. Thomas J. Jackson (South) earned the name “Stonewall.” This battle convinced the Lincoln administration that the war would be a long and costly affair. ...
... was drawn up behind Bull Run The Federal retreat rapidly deteriorated into a rout. Thomas J. Jackson (South) earned the name “Stonewall.” This battle convinced the Lincoln administration that the war would be a long and costly affair. ...
Battle at Palmito Ranch File
... surrounded the Rebel outpost at White’s Ranch, but found no one there. Exhausted, having been up most of the night, Branson secreted his command in a thicket and among weeds on the banks of the Rio Grande and allowed his men to sleep. Around 8:30 am, people on the Mexican side of the river informed ...
... surrounded the Rebel outpost at White’s Ranch, but found no one there. Exhausted, having been up most of the night, Branson secreted his command in a thicket and among weeds on the banks of the Rio Grande and allowed his men to sleep. Around 8:30 am, people on the Mexican side of the river informed ...
Flashcard Packet Directions: 1. Use standard 3”x5” cards 2. Write
... 63. 1798 – Aimed at stopping immigrant support and votes for Republicans. Said they must live in U.S. for 14 years instead of 5 years in order to become a citizen and vote. *Alien Act 64. 1798 – Aimed at stopping Republican criticism of Federalists and John Adams. Said couldn’t print or say anything ...
... 63. 1798 – Aimed at stopping immigrant support and votes for Republicans. Said they must live in U.S. for 14 years instead of 5 years in order to become a citizen and vote. *Alien Act 64. 1798 – Aimed at stopping Republican criticism of Federalists and John Adams. Said couldn’t print or say anything ...
Ch 6 Lesson 2 Notes
... gave to Northern whites who moved to the South with plans to help the freedmen. These people often moved with all their belongings in a ...
... gave to Northern whites who moved to the South with plans to help the freedmen. These people often moved with all their belongings in a ...
Reconstruction - Farrell`s History HQ
... former masters (40 acres and a mule). Why? •It did not guarantee the Freedmen an education at Federal expense. By 1868, all but three Southern states were back in the Union and Federal troops had gone home. •The North didn’t think it needed to protect the Freedmen long-term. They figured “mission ac ...
... former masters (40 acres and a mule). Why? •It did not guarantee the Freedmen an education at Federal expense. By 1868, all but three Southern states were back in the Union and Federal troops had gone home. •The North didn’t think it needed to protect the Freedmen long-term. They figured “mission ac ...
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.