Later Stages of CW Ppt - Taylor County Schools
... Robert E. Lee sent a letter to Jefferson Davis after the Siege of Petersburg, saying that they would be better off abandoning the capital because it could no longer be defended. Taking immediate action Davis burned all Confederate documents about the war and went on the run. ...
... Robert E. Lee sent a letter to Jefferson Davis after the Siege of Petersburg, saying that they would be better off abandoning the capital because it could no longer be defended. Taking immediate action Davis burned all Confederate documents about the war and went on the run. ...
5.2 Sectionalism, 1850
... Secession & the Effects of Fort Sumter Civil War was not technically between slave states & free states (the “border states” of MO, KY, DE, MD did not secede) ...
... Secession & the Effects of Fort Sumter Civil War was not technically between slave states & free states (the “border states” of MO, KY, DE, MD did not secede) ...
History Standard
... Confederacy by General Robert E. Lee to Union General Ulysses S. Grant on April 9, 1865 at the Appomattox Courthouse in Virginia – Sherman’s tactic of Total War – The Confederacy’s inability to produce and transport supplies and food – Smaller Army with continuously diminishing numbers compared to t ...
... Confederacy by General Robert E. Lee to Union General Ulysses S. Grant on April 9, 1865 at the Appomattox Courthouse in Virginia – Sherman’s tactic of Total War – The Confederacy’s inability to produce and transport supplies and food – Smaller Army with continuously diminishing numbers compared to t ...
APUSH UNIT 6 Dr. I. Ibokette Unit 6: Civil War, Reconstruction and
... South Carolina from the United States of America. The secession of South Carolina was followed by the secession of six more states-Mississippi, Florida, Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana, and Texas. At a convention in Montgomery, Alabama, the seven seceding states created the Confederate Constitution and ...
... South Carolina from the United States of America. The secession of South Carolina was followed by the secession of six more states-Mississippi, Florida, Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana, and Texas. At a convention in Montgomery, Alabama, the seven seceding states created the Confederate Constitution and ...
Key Dates in US Slavery after 1840
... Taney, offers the Dred Scott decision, dictating that slaves and former slaves can never be citizens of the United States and that Congress has no power to prohibit slavery in federal territory. The Panic of 1857 takes the nation into recession, but the cotton market continues to boom, bolstering so ...
... Taney, offers the Dred Scott decision, dictating that slaves and former slaves can never be citizens of the United States and that Congress has no power to prohibit slavery in federal territory. The Panic of 1857 takes the nation into recession, but the cotton market continues to boom, bolstering so ...
United States History EOC Review
... Abraham Lincoln; Lincoln received only 40% of the popular vote but his electoral vote was a landslide with 180 votes; seven southern states decided to secede because Lincoln won without winning a single southern state - Lincoln- Sixteenth President of the United States (1861-1865); known for his eff ...
... Abraham Lincoln; Lincoln received only 40% of the popular vote but his electoral vote was a landslide with 180 votes; seven southern states decided to secede because Lincoln won without winning a single southern state - Lincoln- Sixteenth President of the United States (1861-1865); known for his eff ...
Civil war - Galena Park ISD
... was forced to accompany his master from Missouri to a free territory Scott sued for his freedom in the new territory ...
... was forced to accompany his master from Missouri to a free territory Scott sued for his freedom in the new territory ...
Civil War - eagleslover18
... Sumter, located off the coast of South Carolina. Fort Sumter was one of the few forts in the South that was still controlled by the Union. Union troops were forced to surrender the fort to the Confederates. Virginians celebrated this Confederate victory but President Lincoln viewed the attack as an ...
... Sumter, located off the coast of South Carolina. Fort Sumter was one of the few forts in the South that was still controlled by the Union. Union troops were forced to surrender the fort to the Confederates. Virginians celebrated this Confederate victory but President Lincoln viewed the attack as an ...
Gettysburg to Appomattox Presentation
... was all over in 30 minutes with a Confederate retreat back to their hill. • This was the bloodiest battle of the Civil War…Union (23,000) and the Confederates (28,000). • The Confederates made their retreat back to Virginia the very next day. ...
... was all over in 30 minutes with a Confederate retreat back to their hill. • This was the bloodiest battle of the Civil War…Union (23,000) and the Confederates (28,000). • The Confederates made their retreat back to Virginia the very next day. ...
NEWSLETTER - Colonel EW Taylor Camp #1777
... John enlisted in 1863 and served the Confederacy as a private in Co. B, 37th Tennessee Infantry. He took part in most of the actions in which the Army of Tennessee fought after that. He was paroled in 1865. John died in 1895 and was buried not far from his home in a small hilltop family cemetery sta ...
... John enlisted in 1863 and served the Confederacy as a private in Co. B, 37th Tennessee Infantry. He took part in most of the actions in which the Army of Tennessee fought after that. He was paroled in 1865. John died in 1895 and was buried not far from his home in a small hilltop family cemetery sta ...
7044347_20_Civil War
... states in the Lower South (Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Why did Union troops try to capture Richmond? Louisiana, Mississippi, South Carolina, and Why did the North lose the Battle of Bull Run? Texas) seceded What did Ulysses S. Grant from the Union. do in 1862? They formed the new Confederate vocabula ...
... states in the Lower South (Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Why did Union troops try to capture Richmond? Louisiana, Mississippi, South Carolina, and Why did the North lose the Battle of Bull Run? Texas) seceded What did Ulysses S. Grant from the Union. do in 1862? They formed the new Confederate vocabula ...
The Civil War
... Fredericksburg because of their strong defensive position • Robert E Lee gained increased confidence in his army because of the victory • Lincoln replaced Burnside as commander because he lost the battle. ...
... Fredericksburg because of their strong defensive position • Robert E Lee gained increased confidence in his army because of the victory • Lincoln replaced Burnside as commander because he lost the battle. ...
Chapter 11: The Civil War
... Buell's reinforcements finally arrived during the night as did forces under ________, strengthening the Union lines with 22,500 fresh troops. With the break of dawn, Grant attacked, pushing the exhausted Confederates steadily back until they finally began a retreat in the early afternoon that left t ...
... Buell's reinforcements finally arrived during the night as did forces under ________, strengthening the Union lines with 22,500 fresh troops. With the break of dawn, Grant attacked, pushing the exhausted Confederates steadily back until they finally began a retreat in the early afternoon that left t ...
CIVIL WAR
... Much of the South was devastated at the end of the war (e.g., burning of Atlanta and Richmond). Disease was a major killer. Combat -brutal and often man-to-man. Women were left to run businesses in the North and farms and plantations in the South. The collapse of the Confederacy made Confe ...
... Much of the South was devastated at the end of the war (e.g., burning of Atlanta and Richmond). Disease was a major killer. Combat -brutal and often man-to-man. Women were left to run businesses in the North and farms and plantations in the South. The collapse of the Confederacy made Confe ...
Civil War Study guide
... (North or South) is more important than the needs of the rest of the country. This was the REAL cause of the Civil War! • SUCCESSION – breaking away from something as the southern states did from the Union. South Carolina was the first to do this and soon the Confederate States of America was form ...
... (North or South) is more important than the needs of the rest of the country. This was the REAL cause of the Civil War! • SUCCESSION – breaking away from something as the southern states did from the Union. South Carolina was the first to do this and soon the Confederate States of America was form ...
Hayden and Mike - Virtual Museum
... commander during the Civil War and post-war Reconstruction periods. Under the command of Grant, the Union Army defeated the Confederate military and ended the Confederate States of America. His image as a war hero was tarnished by corruption scandals during his presidency. Grant began his life long ...
... commander during the Civil War and post-war Reconstruction periods. Under the command of Grant, the Union Army defeated the Confederate military and ended the Confederate States of America. His image as a war hero was tarnished by corruption scandals during his presidency. Grant began his life long ...
Divine / Breen / Fredrickson / Williams / Brands / Gross Textbook
... Inflation became a major problem in the South as the Confederate government was forced to print more paper currency than it could support with gold or other tangible assets. D. The inadequate railroad system of the South hindered movement of soldiers, supplies, and food from the places where they wh ...
... Inflation became a major problem in the South as the Confederate government was forced to print more paper currency than it could support with gold or other tangible assets. D. The inadequate railroad system of the South hindered movement of soldiers, supplies, and food from the places where they wh ...
The Civil War
... Sherman believed that striking at economic resources would help win the war. His troops slaughtered livestock, destroyed crops, and looted homes and businesses. Eventually Confederate leaders were forced out of Richmond, and Lee surrendered when he found his troops surrounded. Lee and Grant met to n ...
... Sherman believed that striking at economic resources would help win the war. His troops slaughtered livestock, destroyed crops, and looted homes and businesses. Eventually Confederate leaders were forced out of Richmond, and Lee surrendered when he found his troops surrounded. Lee and Grant met to n ...
The Civil War
... • large population food production & military service. • most of the nation’s factories. • strong navy and a large fleet of merchant ships. ...
... • large population food production & military service. • most of the nation’s factories. • strong navy and a large fleet of merchant ships. ...
Background Information on the Eve of the Civil
... Union (at first) Later the emancipation of slaves became a cause ...
... Union (at first) Later the emancipation of slaves became a cause ...
Lincoln`s Election and Fort Sumter PPT
... • If I send troops….Southerners WILL attack. • If I do nothing…the commander will have to surrender. ...
... • If I send troops….Southerners WILL attack. • If I do nothing…the commander will have to surrender. ...
File
... Confederate stronghold of Vicksburg, Mississippi, and settled in for a long siege. For six weeks, his troops shelled the city from one side, while Union gunboats battered it from the other. The Confederates dug caves into the hillsides and tried to ride it out. But eventually, they gave in. On July ...
... Confederate stronghold of Vicksburg, Mississippi, and settled in for a long siege. For six weeks, his troops shelled the city from one side, while Union gunboats battered it from the other. The Confederates dug caves into the hillsides and tried to ride it out. But eventually, they gave in. On July ...
Civil War Stations
... were not evenly matched. The North had many advantages including; 1. More people 2. More factories 3. More food production 4. More railroads 5. Better communication 6. A functioning navy ...
... were not evenly matched. The North had many advantages including; 1. More people 2. More factories 3. More food production 4. More railroads 5. Better communication 6. A functioning navy ...
Chapter 16.2 Vocabulary
... Irvin McDowell vs General Thomas “Stonewall” Jackson/first major battle of the Civil War/Also known as First Battle of Manassas ● Spectators gathered around to watch/kept Union from retreating together ● Confederate Victory ● Dashed Union hopes of winning the war quickly ...
... Irvin McDowell vs General Thomas “Stonewall” Jackson/first major battle of the Civil War/Also known as First Battle of Manassas ● Spectators gathered around to watch/kept Union from retreating together ● Confederate Victory ● Dashed Union hopes of winning the war quickly ...
The Civil War - Kenston Local Schools
... an established navy and merchant fleet to blockade southern ports and bring needed supplies to northern ports. ...
... an established navy and merchant fleet to blockade southern ports and bring needed supplies to northern ports. ...
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.