Civil War: Opposing Sides and Early Battles
... Civil War: Opposing Sides and Early Battles Class Notes (4-4) ...
... Civil War: Opposing Sides and Early Battles Class Notes (4-4) ...
General U.S. Grant
... General William T. Sherman Union General He commanded the Union army that captured Atlanta and began the “ march to the sea”. Captured and burned Columbia, SC in February 1865. Most hated man in the South. He believed in waging hard war. ...
... General William T. Sherman Union General He commanded the Union army that captured Atlanta and began the “ march to the sea”. Captured and burned Columbia, SC in February 1865. Most hated man in the South. He believed in waging hard war. ...
The War in the West
... Kentucky and much of Tennessee Grant’s troops followed the Tennessee River toward Mississippi Halted just north of the border, near a creek and a church named Shiloh On April 6, 1862, the Confederates launched a ...
... Kentucky and much of Tennessee Grant’s troops followed the Tennessee River toward Mississippi Halted just north of the border, near a creek and a church named Shiloh On April 6, 1862, the Confederates launched a ...
The U.S. Civil War
... • Grant gave generous terms of surrender – Confederates could return home – Were allowed to take private possessions and ...
... • Grant gave generous terms of surrender – Confederates could return home – Were allowed to take private possessions and ...
THE CIVIL WAR
... 6. Outline the 11 Confederate states in RED. 7. Outline the four border states in GREEN. 8. Outline the Union states in BLUE. 9. Show Sherman’s March to the Sea with a heavy BLUE line. 10. Which t ...
... 6. Outline the 11 Confederate states in RED. 7. Outline the four border states in GREEN. 8. Outline the Union states in BLUE. 9. Show Sherman’s March to the Sea with a heavy BLUE line. 10. Which t ...
Chapter 17 Key Points
... The determination of General Grant helped the North to achieve success in the War. After President Lincoln was reelected, he announced that he wanted to work toward peace and unity; he wanted forgiveness to be a part of the peace process. General Grant’s use of total war, destroying anything that mi ...
... The determination of General Grant helped the North to achieve success in the War. After President Lincoln was reelected, he announced that he wanted to work toward peace and unity; he wanted forgiveness to be a part of the peace process. General Grant’s use of total war, destroying anything that mi ...
The Civil War Part 2
... Mississippi River. – Would cut off eastern part of Confederacy from food sources in West. – Union could use bases along the Mississippi to attack communication and transportation networks. • Grant’s Army of Tennessee captured Confederate forts on Tennessee and Cumberland rivers in February 1862. ...
... Mississippi River. – Would cut off eastern part of Confederacy from food sources in West. – Union could use bases along the Mississippi to attack communication and transportation networks. • Grant’s Army of Tennessee captured Confederate forts on Tennessee and Cumberland rivers in February 1862. ...
American Civil War • The Civil War took place from
... outcome persuaded Great Britain not to formally recognize the Confederacy. Five days after the battle, Lincoln issued his first Emancipation Proclamation, freeing enslaved Africans in Confederate territory. This order in effect committed the Union to ending slavery. • The three-day Battle of Gettysb ...
... outcome persuaded Great Britain not to formally recognize the Confederacy. Five days after the battle, Lincoln issued his first Emancipation Proclamation, freeing enslaved Africans in Confederate territory. This order in effect committed the Union to ending slavery. • The three-day Battle of Gettysb ...
Map The Civil War - Reading Community Schools
... Free and Slave States Rivers : Ohio, Mississippi, Battles: New Orleans, Vicksburg, Shiloh, Atlanta, Gettysburg, Antietam, Bull Run, Chancellorsville, Valverde, Glorieta Pass For territories just label the Rocky/Great Plains region (the areas without established states) as Territories ...
... Free and Slave States Rivers : Ohio, Mississippi, Battles: New Orleans, Vicksburg, Shiloh, Atlanta, Gettysburg, Antietam, Bull Run, Chancellorsville, Valverde, Glorieta Pass For territories just label the Rocky/Great Plains region (the areas without established states) as Territories ...
The Important People of the Civil War
... Content Objective: Students will learn about the key leaders on and off the Battle Field Language Objective: Students will create a foldable of important Civil War Leaders. ...
... Content Objective: Students will learn about the key leaders on and off the Battle Field Language Objective: Students will create a foldable of important Civil War Leaders. ...
The Civil War Begins
... Confederates defeated a largely untrained Union army just west of Washington D.C. . Both sides need more training The war was not going to be short or painless ...
... Confederates defeated a largely untrained Union army just west of Washington D.C. . Both sides need more training The war was not going to be short or painless ...
Chapter 11 Vocab Words
... • Stonewall Jackson: Confederate General that was accidentally shot by his own men and died a few days later. • Ulysses S. Grant: Commanding General of the Union Army during the Civil War, later becomes president of the U.S. • Robert E. Lee: Commander of the Confederate Army, surrendered at Appomat ...
... • Stonewall Jackson: Confederate General that was accidentally shot by his own men and died a few days later. • Ulysses S. Grant: Commanding General of the Union Army during the Civil War, later becomes president of the U.S. • Robert E. Lee: Commander of the Confederate Army, surrendered at Appomat ...
CW Study Guide Ans.
... 4. The North believed that the nation was a Union and could not be divided. 5. The South was afraid that the North would take control of Congress and began to proclaim States Rights’ as self - protection. 6. Following Lincoln’s election, the southern states seceded from the union. ...
... 4. The North believed that the nation was a Union and could not be divided. 5. The South was afraid that the North would take control of Congress and began to proclaim States Rights’ as self - protection. 6. Following Lincoln’s election, the southern states seceded from the union. ...
Document
... States located between the United States and the Confederate States. They did not join the Confederacy. Border states ...
... States located between the United States and the Confederate States. They did not join the Confederacy. Border states ...
Civil Homework Practice - Lincoln Park High School
... 5. General Grant and his troops laid siege to the Mississippi River town of New Orleans for six weeks. 6. General Robert E. Lee surrendered to Grant on April 9, 1865, at Spotsylvania Courthouse. 7. After Grant's promotion to commander of all Union forces, his troops had their first encounter with Co ...
... 5. General Grant and his troops laid siege to the Mississippi River town of New Orleans for six weeks. 6. General Robert E. Lee surrendered to Grant on April 9, 1865, at Spotsylvania Courthouse. 7. After Grant's promotion to commander of all Union forces, his troops had their first encounter with Co ...
us history 4-2
... Union fort in the Harbor of Charleston, South Carolina – It was fired on by the Confederates indicating the start of the Civil War ...
... Union fort in the Harbor of Charleston, South Carolina – It was fired on by the Confederates indicating the start of the Civil War ...
Civil War Study Guide - Effingham County Schools
... took the place of slavery, and was where poor farmers used a landowner’s fields. ...
... took the place of slavery, and was where poor farmers used a landowner’s fields. ...
Major Battles of the Civil War
... Union was victorious General Lee (Confederate): The defeat forced Lee to withdraw his army toward Virginia Destroying Lee’s hope of carrying the fight further up ...
... Union was victorious General Lee (Confederate): The defeat forced Lee to withdraw his army toward Virginia Destroying Lee’s hope of carrying the fight further up ...
The War in the West
... army was hit hard, reinforcements arrived and the Confederates were defeated. Casualties were high on both sides. The Fall of New Orleans - U.S. Navy moved upriver to meet Grant, who was moving down the Mississippi. First obstacle was the port of New Orleans— largest Confederate city and gateway to ...
... army was hit hard, reinforcements arrived and the Confederates were defeated. Casualties were high on both sides. The Fall of New Orleans - U.S. Navy moved upriver to meet Grant, who was moving down the Mississippi. First obstacle was the port of New Orleans— largest Confederate city and gateway to ...
Civil War Review - Social Studies With A Smile
... Review: Civil War Many southern whites thought that ____________________ was necessary for the South’s economy. The Confederacy fought to maintain its __________________. Some Northerners fought because they hated slavery. Most Northerners wanted to preserve the ________________. Each side had certa ...
... Review: Civil War Many southern whites thought that ____________________ was necessary for the South’s economy. The Confederacy fought to maintain its __________________. Some Northerners fought because they hated slavery. Most Northerners wanted to preserve the ________________. Each side had certa ...
Civil War Review Guide
... 1. Blockade the Southern Coast to restrict imports/supplies; 2. Take control of the Mississippi River; 3. Divide the West from the South; 4. Take the Confederate States of America (CSA) capitol at Richmond, VA 10. Name the two ships that fought the Battle of the Ironclads (1892): CSS Virginia (Confe ...
... 1. Blockade the Southern Coast to restrict imports/supplies; 2. Take control of the Mississippi River; 3. Divide the West from the South; 4. Take the Confederate States of America (CSA) capitol at Richmond, VA 10. Name the two ships that fought the Battle of the Ironclads (1892): CSS Virginia (Confe ...
Mississippi in the American Civil War
Mississippi was the second southern U.S. state to declare its secession from the Union on January 9, 1861. With its Secession Ordinance, Mississippi joined with six other southern slave-holding states to form the Confederacy a month later, on February 4, 1861. Mississippi's location along the lengthy Mississippi River made it strategically important to both the Union and the Confederacy; dozens of battles were fought in the state as armies repeatedly clashed near key towns and cities.Mississippian troops fought in every major theater of the American Civil War, although most were concentrated in the Western Theater. The only Confederate president, Jefferson Davis, though born in Kentucky, spent his formative years in Mississippi. Prominent Mississippian generals during the war included William Barksdale, Carnot Posey, Wirt Adams, Earl Van Dorn, Robert Lowry and Benjamin G. Humphreys.