Chapter 11: The Civil War Section 1 The Civil War Begins What
... What was the stated aim and the effects of the Emancipation Proclamation? Congress raised money to pay for the war by What was the position of Great Britain and other European countries to the American Civil War? Which of the following was NOT an important advantage of ironclad ships (Merrimac and M ...
... What was the stated aim and the effects of the Emancipation Proclamation? Congress raised money to pay for the war by What was the position of Great Britain and other European countries to the American Civil War? Which of the following was NOT an important advantage of ironclad ships (Merrimac and M ...
Rousseau`s Raid In July of 1864, Union commander General
... sent cavalry under Major General Lovell H. Rousseau into Alabama with the mission to cut the one remaining rail link to Confederate forces defending Atlanta. The West Point and Montgomery Railroad was the vital supply line for munitions from Selma and war materiel stored at Montgomery for the Confed ...
... sent cavalry under Major General Lovell H. Rousseau into Alabama with the mission to cut the one remaining rail link to Confederate forces defending Atlanta. The West Point and Montgomery Railroad was the vital supply line for munitions from Selma and war materiel stored at Montgomery for the Confed ...
glory - Jack Nilan
... c. Everyone should have slaves. d. You could have more than one wife. 11. The Emancipation Proclamation, freeing some of the slaves, was issued in a. 1776 b. 1640 c. 1863 d. 1917 12. The Emancipation Proclamation freed a. All slaves b. slaves in the Northern states c. slaves in the territories d. sl ...
... c. Everyone should have slaves. d. You could have more than one wife. 11. The Emancipation Proclamation, freeing some of the slaves, was issued in a. 1776 b. 1640 c. 1863 d. 1917 12. The Emancipation Proclamation freed a. All slaves b. slaves in the Northern states c. slaves in the territories d. sl ...
Civil War Cheat Sheet
... system by freeing its slaves. The Emancipation Proclamation also strengthened the moral cause of the Union as it re-cast the purpose of the war. At the outset of the war, the North’s advantages included population, industry, railroad trackage, naval supremacy, and dominance in foreign trade. The Nor ...
... system by freeing its slaves. The Emancipation Proclamation also strengthened the moral cause of the Union as it re-cast the purpose of the war. At the outset of the war, the North’s advantages included population, industry, railroad trackage, naval supremacy, and dominance in foreign trade. The Nor ...
Section 4: Antietam
... River. In April, Union admiral David Farragut led 46 ships up the Mississippi River to New Orleans. This was the largest American fleet ever assembled. In the face of such overwhelming force, the city surrendered without firing a shot. Meanwhile, Union forces headed by General Ulysses S. Grant began ...
... River. In April, Union admiral David Farragut led 46 ships up the Mississippi River to New Orleans. This was the largest American fleet ever assembled. In the face of such overwhelming force, the city surrendered without firing a shot. Meanwhile, Union forces headed by General Ulysses S. Grant began ...
Teaching Resources - Jefferson Forest High School
... Richmond and Petersburg; the enormous casualties and military stalemate threatened Lincoln with defeat in the November 1864 election. 9. To punish farmers who provided a base for Jubal Early and food for Lee’s army, Grant ordered General Philip H. Sheridan to turn the region into a “barren waste.” 1 ...
... Richmond and Petersburg; the enormous casualties and military stalemate threatened Lincoln with defeat in the November 1864 election. 9. To punish farmers who provided a base for Jubal Early and food for Lee’s army, Grant ordered General Philip H. Sheridan to turn the region into a “barren waste.” 1 ...
US Hist A – U 4, Ch 11, the Civil War
... • Abraham Lincoln elected president • Lower South secedes and creates the Confederate States of America • The Confederacy attacks Fort Sumter ...
... • Abraham Lincoln elected president • Lower South secedes and creates the Confederate States of America • The Confederacy attacks Fort Sumter ...
Lecture S15 -- The Confederacy and the United States
... Fire Eaters who had done so much to make this possible, quickly found themselves sidelined by moderates, and even ex-Unionists like Alexander Stephens. This is because many of them were simply too radical, wishing to do things like re-opening the slave trade and making the nation less democratic. Pr ...
... Fire Eaters who had done so much to make this possible, quickly found themselves sidelined by moderates, and even ex-Unionists like Alexander Stephens. This is because many of them were simply too radical, wishing to do things like re-opening the slave trade and making the nation less democratic. Pr ...
THE END OF THE WAR IN THE WEST A. Vicksburg campaign
... 2. April 9, 1865 -- Lee surrendered the Army of Northern Virginia. a. War in Virginia officially over. b. Remaining Confederate armies surrendered within the next few weeks. 3. Terms of surrender were generous a. The 30,000 captured Confederates were paroled and allowed to go home so long as they vo ...
... 2. April 9, 1865 -- Lee surrendered the Army of Northern Virginia. a. War in Virginia officially over. b. Remaining Confederate armies surrendered within the next few weeks. 3. Terms of surrender were generous a. The 30,000 captured Confederates were paroled and allowed to go home so long as they vo ...
Study Guide for SS8H6 The student will analyze the impact of the
... getting supplies from Europe Anaconda Plan – capture the Miss. River 4. Name 2 main Confederate strategies for winning the war and how they operated: King Cotton Diplomacy – belief Europe would need Southern cotton and help break the blockade Wear down the enemy in battle & use blockade runners 5. H ...
... getting supplies from Europe Anaconda Plan – capture the Miss. River 4. Name 2 main Confederate strategies for winning the war and how they operated: King Cotton Diplomacy – belief Europe would need Southern cotton and help break the blockade Wear down the enemy in battle & use blockade runners 5. H ...
Civil War C
... States on December 20, 1860. On April 12, 1861 Confederate troops fired on Fort Sumter in Charleston, SC. After 33 hours of heavy firing, Union troops surrendered to the Confederates. Although no one was killed at Fort Sumter, it marked the beginning of the Civil War. The Confederate States of ...
... States on December 20, 1860. On April 12, 1861 Confederate troops fired on Fort Sumter in Charleston, SC. After 33 hours of heavy firing, Union troops surrendered to the Confederates. Although no one was killed at Fort Sumter, it marked the beginning of the Civil War. The Confederate States of ...
Battles of the End of the Civil War
... 3. Label and use different colors to show the paths of the following: A) Sherman’s “March to the sea” and on through South and North Carolina B) Grant’s pursuit of Lee through Virginia ...
... 3. Label and use different colors to show the paths of the following: A) Sherman’s “March to the sea” and on through South and North Carolina B) Grant’s pursuit of Lee through Virginia ...
Name
... 36. The capture of Vicksburg, Mississippi by Union general Ulysses S. Grant allowed the North to accomplish the Anaconda Plan. 37. Union victories at Gettysburg and Vicksburg were the turning point of the Civil War. 38. In March 1864, Lincoln placed Ulysses S. Grant in charge of all Union armies. 39 ...
... 36. The capture of Vicksburg, Mississippi by Union general Ulysses S. Grant allowed the North to accomplish the Anaconda Plan. 37. Union victories at Gettysburg and Vicksburg were the turning point of the Civil War. 38. In March 1864, Lincoln placed Ulysses S. Grant in charge of all Union armies. 39 ...
(CH 10-12) (1848
... completion of the Anaconda Plan. ____________________was the turning point battle in the Civil War and the last time that the head of the Confederate army invaded the North. The Battle of _______________occurred because this city was the center of trade in the Confederacy and where the center of its ...
... completion of the Anaconda Plan. ____________________was the turning point battle in the Civil War and the last time that the head of the Confederate army invaded the North. The Battle of _______________occurred because this city was the center of trade in the Confederacy and where the center of its ...
US Hist A – U 4, Ch 11, the Civil War
... • Abraham Lincoln elected president • Lower South secedes and creates the Confederate States of America • The Confederacy attacks Fort Sumter ...
... • Abraham Lincoln elected president • Lower South secedes and creates the Confederate States of America • The Confederacy attacks Fort Sumter ...
Radical Reconstruction and Civil War Amendments
... • At first, the Presidents took charge of Reconstruction • Lincoln: 10% Plan offered a full pardon IF… • 10% of a state’s population swore an Oath of Loyalty • A state would agree that slavery was illegal ...
... • At first, the Presidents took charge of Reconstruction • Lincoln: 10% Plan offered a full pardon IF… • 10% of a state’s population swore an Oath of Loyalty • A state would agree that slavery was illegal ...
- GlobalZona.com
... North and south weren’t prepared for the war with a 16,000 army in the north and 1/3 resigned for the confederacy and the south had no army, navy and 2 small gunpowder factories Civil war armies were the largest in US history, 2mil. in north and 800,000 in south Recruitment offices were opened in ho ...
... North and south weren’t prepared for the war with a 16,000 army in the north and 1/3 resigned for the confederacy and the south had no army, navy and 2 small gunpowder factories Civil war armies were the largest in US history, 2mil. in north and 800,000 in south Recruitment offices were opened in ho ...
Civil War Timeline
... January 1, 1863 • President Lincoln issues the final Emancipation Proclamation freeing all slaves in territories held by Confederates and emphasizes the enlisting of black soldiers in the Union Army. The war to preserve the Union now becomes a revolutionary struggle for the abolition of slavery. ...
... January 1, 1863 • President Lincoln issues the final Emancipation Proclamation freeing all slaves in territories held by Confederates and emphasizes the enlisting of black soldiers in the Union Army. The war to preserve the Union now becomes a revolutionary struggle for the abolition of slavery. ...
A `White Man`s War?`
... Haskins, Jim. Black, Blue and Gray: African Americans in the Civil War. New York: Simon & Schuster, 1998. (1998) From “Introduction: A ‘White Man’s War?’” In 1775 the first shots were fired in the war between the thirteen American colonies and Great Britain that ended in a victory for the colonis ...
... Haskins, Jim. Black, Blue and Gray: African Americans in the Civil War. New York: Simon & Schuster, 1998. (1998) From “Introduction: A ‘White Man’s War?’” In 1775 the first shots were fired in the war between the thirteen American colonies and Great Britain that ended in a victory for the colonis ...
War Erupts
... roughly 9 million, of whom about 3.5 million were slaves. About 85 percent of the nation’s factories were located in the North. The North had more than double the railroad mileage of the South. Almost all the naval power and shipyards belonged to the North. The Unions greatest asset, however, was Pr ...
... roughly 9 million, of whom about 3.5 million were slaves. About 85 percent of the nation’s factories were located in the North. The North had more than double the railroad mileage of the South. Almost all the naval power and shipyards belonged to the North. The Unions greatest asset, however, was Pr ...
Secession and Resistance
... • December 20, 1860- At a special convention called by the state legislature, South Carolina declared its secession from the United States. By February 1, 1861, six other states had seceded: Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia, Florida, Louisiana, and Texas. As the states seceded, they proceeded to seize ...
... • December 20, 1860- At a special convention called by the state legislature, South Carolina declared its secession from the United States. By February 1, 1861, six other states had seceded: Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia, Florida, Louisiana, and Texas. As the states seceded, they proceeded to seize ...
Battle of Antietam
... Emancipation Proclamation, the moral and feelings of America on both sides, and ultimately its devastating results. Add a prediction of what you think will happen now that southern states have refused to stop fighting. You must use at least 15 of the words in the ...
... Emancipation Proclamation, the moral and feelings of America on both sides, and ultimately its devastating results. Add a prediction of what you think will happen now that southern states have refused to stop fighting. You must use at least 15 of the words in the ...
KEY TERMS, IDEAS,
... invasion of the North; Pennsylvania; Union wins and the battle is known as the ___________ Point of the War __________ famous speech after three-day battle in Pennsylvania; The speech honored the 51,000 soldiers who died so the N__________ will endure. CSA General Pickett f_________ to take Cemetery ...
... invasion of the North; Pennsylvania; Union wins and the battle is known as the ___________ Point of the War __________ famous speech after three-day battle in Pennsylvania; The speech honored the 51,000 soldiers who died so the N__________ will endure. CSA General Pickett f_________ to take Cemetery ...
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.