![End of the Civil War](http://s1.studyres.com/store/data/000604013_1-d53c078639e0e16090142324f2d3b616-300x300.png)
End of the Civil War
... Confederacy surrender. Sherman’s March to the Sea destroyed much of the south as his armies moved from across the south to the Atlantic Ocean. Major cities like Richmond and Atlanta were burned, bridges were torn down, and roads and railroads destroyed. Plantations also suffered. Fields and crops we ...
... Confederacy surrender. Sherman’s March to the Sea destroyed much of the south as his armies moved from across the south to the Atlantic Ocean. Major cities like Richmond and Atlanta were burned, bridges were torn down, and roads and railroads destroyed. Plantations also suffered. Fields and crops we ...
Chapter 11 Section 1
... First Battle of Bull Run • 1st major battle of the Civil War • 35,000 soldiers involved • 2,900 union casualties • Confederates suffered fewer than 2,000 casualties • Confederate victory ...
... First Battle of Bull Run • 1st major battle of the Civil War • 35,000 soldiers involved • 2,900 union casualties • Confederates suffered fewer than 2,000 casualties • Confederate victory ...
Ch 5 Lesson 2
... • Sherman’s troops fought their way through Tennessee and into Georgia, where they began a “March to the Sea.” • Sherman’s army entered South Carolina in February 1865, where the destruction became even more brutal. ...
... • Sherman’s troops fought their way through Tennessee and into Georgia, where they began a “March to the Sea.” • Sherman’s army entered South Carolina in February 1865, where the destruction became even more brutal. ...
The American Civil War
... In North Carolina’s largest civil war battle, the Union Army with 60,000 soldiers under General Sherman defeated the Confederate Army of ...
... In North Carolina’s largest civil war battle, the Union Army with 60,000 soldiers under General Sherman defeated the Confederate Army of ...
Web Text - Secession Following Abe`s election, the state of South
... Abe’s road to the White House was not easy either. According to some accounts, he had to ride through Baltimore on a secret train in disguise to evade would-be assassins on his way to inauguration in Washington. After Abe’s inauguration, the Confederacy continued to mobilize. It elected Jefferson Da ...
... Abe’s road to the White House was not easy either. According to some accounts, he had to ride through Baltimore on a secret train in disguise to evade would-be assassins on his way to inauguration in Washington. After Abe’s inauguration, the Confederacy continued to mobilize. It elected Jefferson Da ...
America`s History Chapter 14
... ▪ March to the Sea – 300 mile march from Atlanta in which everything was destroyed by Sherman and his men ▪ Sherman set some land aside for freed slaves in GA ...
... ▪ March to the Sea – 300 mile march from Atlanta in which everything was destroyed by Sherman and his men ▪ Sherman set some land aside for freed slaves in GA ...
A Nation Divided
... Government claimed no right to do more than to restrict the territorial enlargement of it.” • “With malice toward none, with charity for all, with firmness in the right as God gives us to see the right, let us strive on to finish the work we are in, to bind up the nation's wounds, to care for him wh ...
... Government claimed no right to do more than to restrict the territorial enlargement of it.” • “With malice toward none, with charity for all, with firmness in the right as God gives us to see the right, let us strive on to finish the work we are in, to bind up the nation's wounds, to care for him wh ...
One of the most significant issues was the economic split between
... crops, and they farmed large areas of land in order to meet the demand for these goods. This system was profitable because of slave labor. Southern plantations used African-American slaves as a huge and cheap labor force. In the North, people began to regard slavery as wrong, and abolitionists, anti ...
... crops, and they farmed large areas of land in order to meet the demand for these goods. This system was profitable because of slave labor. Southern plantations used African-American slaves as a huge and cheap labor force. In the North, people began to regard slavery as wrong, and abolitionists, anti ...
Unit III A : Civil War 1861
... A. Many southerners equated the Republican Party with attempts to end slavery even though the Republican position of _____________________ would have left slavery where it existed in the South. Also, the _______________________________ decision by the Supreme Court protected slavery. B. The election ...
... A. Many southerners equated the Republican Party with attempts to end slavery even though the Republican position of _____________________ would have left slavery where it existed in the South. Also, the _______________________________ decision by the Supreme Court protected slavery. B. The election ...
Chapter 13 The Civil War
... Georgia in the War • Arsenals- facilities where weapons and ammunition are manufactured and stored. • Arsenals were built in Augusta, Atlanta, Savannah, Macon, and Columbus. • Georgia becomes one of the Confederacy’s most important sources of supplies and military equipment. • Growing corn and othe ...
... Georgia in the War • Arsenals- facilities where weapons and ammunition are manufactured and stored. • Arsenals were built in Augusta, Atlanta, Savannah, Macon, and Columbus. • Georgia becomes one of the Confederacy’s most important sources of supplies and military equipment. • Growing corn and othe ...
civil war gazette ii - Cajon Valley Union School District
... found this more difficult than originally planned. For example in the Battle of Bull Run, the Union was blocked by Confederate General Stonewall Jackson. Finally, on April 1, 1865 and many months of fighting Grant’s troops captured the Confederate capital The first step of the plan to surround the C ...
... found this more difficult than originally planned. For example in the Battle of Bull Run, the Union was blocked by Confederate General Stonewall Jackson. Finally, on April 1, 1865 and many months of fighting Grant’s troops captured the Confederate capital The first step of the plan to surround the C ...
Election of 1860 Ppt - Taylor County Schools
... first state to secede (break away from Union) 1861- Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, and Texas also seceded. Formed a new nation, the Confederate States of America Jefferson Davis became their president. ...
... first state to secede (break away from Union) 1861- Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, and Texas also seceded. Formed a new nation, the Confederate States of America Jefferson Davis became their president. ...
over 23000 soldiers were killed that day. While the Battle of Antietam
... advancing divisions. The Union suffered more than 23,000 casualties, the South 28,000. The Battle of Gettysburg became the bloodiest battle of the Civil War. ...
... advancing divisions. The Union suffered more than 23,000 casualties, the South 28,000. The Battle of Gettysburg became the bloodiest battle of the Civil War. ...
File
... of memory, stretching from every battlefield and patriot grave to every living heart and hearthstone all over this broad land, will yet swell the chorus of the Union, when again touched, as surely they will be, by the better angels of our ...
... of memory, stretching from every battlefield and patriot grave to every living heart and hearthstone all over this broad land, will yet swell the chorus of the Union, when again touched, as surely they will be, by the better angels of our ...
Chapter 20 class notes
... 6) He would continue to “hold, occupy, and possess” federal property in the seceded states and collect duties” there. Like Andrew Jackson in the Nullification Crisis, Lincoln would use force to enforce federal law The choice was now up to the South: Return to the Union or face war II. Fort Sumter, c ...
... 6) He would continue to “hold, occupy, and possess” federal property in the seceded states and collect duties” there. Like Andrew Jackson in the Nullification Crisis, Lincoln would use force to enforce federal law The choice was now up to the South: Return to the Union or face war II. Fort Sumter, c ...
Chapter 21: Girding for War: The North and the South
... 1. Angered North and changed their view on the Southern secession a. Before, they had been willing to let them go w/out war b. After the South fired on the North, they had to defend their honor C. Lincoln retaliates 1. Called for 75,000 volunteers (April 15) 2. Declared weak blockade (April 19, 27) ...
... 1. Angered North and changed their view on the Southern secession a. Before, they had been willing to let them go w/out war b. After the South fired on the North, they had to defend their honor C. Lincoln retaliates 1. Called for 75,000 volunteers (April 15) 2. Declared weak blockade (April 19, 27) ...
the civil war - OCPS TeacherPress
... Southerners suffered more than northerners because of shortages, runaway slaves, limited man power North had an economic boom and war profiteers Both sides used paper $ and had high inflation ...
... Southerners suffered more than northerners because of shortages, runaway slaves, limited man power North had an economic boom and war profiteers Both sides used paper $ and had high inflation ...
File - Ms. Xiques` Classroom
... concession of any kind from the States with which we were lately confederated; all we ask is to be let alone; that those who never held power over us shall not now attempt our subjugation by arms. ...
... concession of any kind from the States with which we were lately confederated; all we ask is to be let alone; that those who never held power over us shall not now attempt our subjugation by arms. ...
Gettysburg Play Dough Assignment Directions: The Battle of
... day. At the same time, General Meade held a council of war with his Corp commanders and decided to remain in a defensive position for the battle anticipated the next day. Thus the decision made by both commanders would lead to one of the most famous days of the American Civil War. ...
... day. At the same time, General Meade held a council of war with his Corp commanders and decided to remain in a defensive position for the battle anticipated the next day. Thus the decision made by both commanders would lead to one of the most famous days of the American Civil War. ...
“The Siege of Petersburg Begins”
... of war, a fact that angered Ulysses until his death. Both sides seemed to realize that the war was now going to end here. The Confederates had been digging trenches and building elaborate breastworks for six months as Grant’s troops pushed south but now the Union forces also built great defensive fo ...
... of war, a fact that angered Ulysses until his death. Both sides seemed to realize that the war was now going to end here. The Confederates had been digging trenches and building elaborate breastworks for six months as Grant’s troops pushed south but now the Union forces also built great defensive fo ...
Cause and Effect of the Civil War
... Election of 1860 – several states seceded (withdrew) Confederate States of America was formed Lincoln refused to recognized their secession ...
... Election of 1860 – several states seceded (withdrew) Confederate States of America was formed Lincoln refused to recognized their secession ...
this short piece - Daniel Aaron Lazar
... aggressively assert these claims generally do so to buttress the argument that “most blacks supported the Confederacy” (2) – that, indeed, “the overwhelming majority of blacks ... supported and defended with armed resistance the cause of southern independence” (3). These claims rest on wishful thin ...
... aggressively assert these claims generally do so to buttress the argument that “most blacks supported the Confederacy” (2) – that, indeed, “the overwhelming majority of blacks ... supported and defended with armed resistance the cause of southern independence” (3). These claims rest on wishful thin ...
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.