5th Grade Unit 4 Civil War
... Thomas “Stonewall” Jackson • Was one of General Lee’s most important ...
... Thomas “Stonewall” Jackson • Was one of General Lee’s most important ...
Civil_War_Battles_ppt - Doral Academy Preparatory
... Hooker ordered the forces of Sedgwick to attack from the south and on the morning they successfully stormed the Marye Heights, defended this time only by Early's division, which was forced back. Sedgwick was ordered to advance and attack Lee's main body from his rear. Unfortunately for Sedgwick the ...
... Hooker ordered the forces of Sedgwick to attack from the south and on the morning they successfully stormed the Marye Heights, defended this time only by Early's division, which was forced back. Sedgwick was ordered to advance and attack Lee's main body from his rear. Unfortunately for Sedgwick the ...
5th Grade Unit 4 Civil War
... Thomas “Stonewall” Jackson • Was one of General Lee’s most important ...
... Thomas “Stonewall” Jackson • Was one of General Lee’s most important ...
Chapter 16 Civil War Study Guide
... What were the Border States and know who they were loyal too and why? What were the major strategies of the Union and Confederate armies? What side did the Native Americans support? Why? What were the major difficulties that the Union had to over come? What were the major difficulties that the Confe ...
... What were the Border States and know who they were loyal too and why? What were the major strategies of the Union and Confederate armies? What side did the Native Americans support? Why? What were the major difficulties that the Union had to over come? What were the major difficulties that the Confe ...
PresentationExpress - Cathedral High School
... Left the nation without a strong, steady hand guiding the Union. ...
... Left the nation without a strong, steady hand guiding the Union. ...
The American Civil War
... Some of the most famous battles of the Civil War took place in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania; Bull Run, Virginia; and Antietam, Maryland. Although one side or the other was technically victorious after these battles, each battle (and the war in general) could be considered a pyrrhic victory: there were s ...
... Some of the most famous battles of the Civil War took place in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania; Bull Run, Virginia; and Antietam, Maryland. Although one side or the other was technically victorious after these battles, each battle (and the war in general) could be considered a pyrrhic victory: there were s ...
10.4 Secession and the Coming of War
... issue of civil war. The government will not assail you. You can have no conflict without yourselves being the aggressors. You have not oath registered in heaven to destroy the government, while I have the most solemn one to ‘preserve, protect, and defend’ it.” Maintains the Union is indispensible. ...
... issue of civil war. The government will not assail you. You can have no conflict without yourselves being the aggressors. You have not oath registered in heaven to destroy the government, while I have the most solemn one to ‘preserve, protect, and defend’ it.” Maintains the Union is indispensible. ...
Civil_War_Battles_ppt - Doral Academy Preparatory
... Shiloh was a decisive battle in the war. The South needed a win to make up for land lost in Kentucky and Ohio. It also needed to save the Mississippi Valley. Memphis and Vicksburg were now vulnerable to Union attack, and after Corinth there is now doubt that those cities would be the next targets. ...
... Shiloh was a decisive battle in the war. The South needed a win to make up for land lost in Kentucky and Ohio. It also needed to save the Mississippi Valley. Memphis and Vicksburg were now vulnerable to Union attack, and after Corinth there is now doubt that those cities would be the next targets. ...
Print this PDF
... reinforcements led by Kirby Smith and Jubal Early crushed a Union brigade and caused the collapse of McDowell’s Union Army. Union forces began a disorderly and poorly managed retreat, accompanied by screaming spectators who clogged the retreat path. Confederate forces, also in a state of disarray, c ...
... reinforcements led by Kirby Smith and Jubal Early crushed a Union brigade and caused the collapse of McDowell’s Union Army. Union forces began a disorderly and poorly managed retreat, accompanied by screaming spectators who clogged the retreat path. Confederate forces, also in a state of disarray, c ...
chapter 8 powerpoint - Polk School District
... keep fighting and slaves would be forever free • Deadline was January 1, 1863 • The Confederate leaders continued the war and the slaves were declared free by the United States government in 1863 ...
... keep fighting and slaves would be forever free • Deadline was January 1, 1863 • The Confederate leaders continued the war and the slaves were declared free by the United States government in 1863 ...
final exam review.xlsx
... successful Union general who eventually became the leader of the Union army tragic battle in Tennessee that shocked both North and South by the horrors of the war 1st battle between ironclad ships the bloodiest battle in a single day of the Civil War freed all enslaved people living in the states of ...
... successful Union general who eventually became the leader of the Union army tragic battle in Tennessee that shocked both North and South by the horrors of the war 1st battle between ironclad ships the bloodiest battle in a single day of the Civil War freed all enslaved people living in the states of ...
Life During Wartime
... was to improve hygienic conditions of army camps and to recruit and train nurses. Dorothea Dix became the first superintendent of women nurses and began recruitment. One nurse, Clara Barton, of the Union was considered the “angel of the battlefield” after her courage in Antietam. ...
... was to improve hygienic conditions of army camps and to recruit and train nurses. Dorothea Dix became the first superintendent of women nurses and began recruitment. One nurse, Clara Barton, of the Union was considered the “angel of the battlefield” after her courage in Antietam. ...
Civil War Notes
... States voluntarily and could secede (leave) if they felt their rights were threatened. When Abraham Lincoln was elected President, Southerners thought their way of life was in danger. Six states chose to secede before Texas did. Texan leaders wanted Sam Houston (now the governor) to call a conventio ...
... States voluntarily and could secede (leave) if they felt their rights were threatened. When Abraham Lincoln was elected President, Southerners thought their way of life was in danger. Six states chose to secede before Texas did. Texan leaders wanted Sam Houston (now the governor) to call a conventio ...
File
... gunboats. The fighting lasted three days. Grant took 12,000 Confederate prisoners and 40 cannons from Fort Donelson. This cut off the Confederate supply line from the western territories. ...
... gunboats. The fighting lasted three days. Grant took 12,000 Confederate prisoners and 40 cannons from Fort Donelson. This cut off the Confederate supply line from the western territories. ...
Chapter 17 Section 1 “The Conflict Takes Shape”
... secede. Seven of the states that allowed slavery had already seceded, but there were eight left. Virginia, North Carolina, Tennessee and Arkansas all joined the Confederacy (the south). Kentucky, Missouri, Maryland and Delaware were southern states that sided with the union (the north). We call thes ...
... secede. Seven of the states that allowed slavery had already seceded, but there were eight left. Virginia, North Carolina, Tennessee and Arkansas all joined the Confederacy (the south). Kentucky, Missouri, Maryland and Delaware were southern states that sided with the union (the north). We call thes ...
C: Timeline from the Election of 1860 to Death in 1865
... On April 14, as President Lincoln was watching a performance of "Our American Cousin" at Ford's Theater in Washington, D.C., he was shot by John Wilkes Booth, an actor from Maryland obsessed with avenging the Confederate defeat. Lincoln died the next morning. Booth escaped to Virginia. Eleven days l ...
... On April 14, as President Lincoln was watching a performance of "Our American Cousin" at Ford's Theater in Washington, D.C., he was shot by John Wilkes Booth, an actor from Maryland obsessed with avenging the Confederate defeat. Lincoln died the next morning. Booth escaped to Virginia. Eleven days l ...
lesson 3: first year of the civil war
... D. fewer than thirty battles were fought during the four years of the war ...
... D. fewer than thirty battles were fought during the four years of the war ...
Age of Empresarios
... Before the election, Southern states vowed to secede if Lincoln won (believed that he was threatening the South’s way of life In addition to Lincoln, Douglas, and Breckinridge running for president, a four party candidate, John Bell, was nominated from the Constitutional Union Party ...
... Before the election, Southern states vowed to secede if Lincoln won (believed that he was threatening the South’s way of life In addition to Lincoln, Douglas, and Breckinridge running for president, a four party candidate, John Bell, was nominated from the Constitutional Union Party ...
the civil war - apush-xl
... 9. Briefly explain President Lincoln’s strategy regarding the bombardment of Fort Sumter. ...
... 9. Briefly explain President Lincoln’s strategy regarding the bombardment of Fort Sumter. ...
Unit 1 Test
... 2. Southerners favor secession rather than accept Abraham Lincoln as president because Lincoln wanted to stop the spread of slavery. 3. The Dred Scott decision made by the Supreme Court in 1857 declared that slaves were property, were not citizens, and had no constitutional rights. 4. The vice-presi ...
... 2. Southerners favor secession rather than accept Abraham Lincoln as president because Lincoln wanted to stop the spread of slavery. 3. The Dred Scott decision made by the Supreme Court in 1857 declared that slaves were property, were not citizens, and had no constitutional rights. 4. The vice-presi ...
Civil War Study Guide
... turned the tide of the war in favor of them. In Gettysburg, the battle lasted from July 1-3, 1863 between the Union forces under General George Meade and the Confederates under Lee. At the end, Lee again was defeated in the North. He lost 1/3 of his troops with over 28,000 casualties. Due to the los ...
... turned the tide of the war in favor of them. In Gettysburg, the battle lasted from July 1-3, 1863 between the Union forces under General George Meade and the Confederates under Lee. At the end, Lee again was defeated in the North. He lost 1/3 of his troops with over 28,000 casualties. Due to the los ...
Alabama in the American Civil War
The U.S. state of Alabama declared that it had seceded from the United States of America on January 11, 1861. It then quickly joined the Confederate States during the American Civil War. A slave state, Alabama provided a significant source of troops and leaders, military material, supplies, food, horses and mules. However, very little of the state's cotton crop could be sold, as the main port of Mobile was closed off by the U.S. Navy.