Social Studies Chapter 6 Review
... -Presidential order signed January 1, 1863, by Abraham Lincoln, that freed enslaved people in the Confederate states. It did not free slaves in the border states. The Emancipation Proclamation made the war about ending slavery in the South and took away the chance that Great Britain and France might ...
... -Presidential order signed January 1, 1863, by Abraham Lincoln, that freed enslaved people in the Confederate states. It did not free slaves in the border states. The Emancipation Proclamation made the war about ending slavery in the South and took away the chance that Great Britain and France might ...
End of the Civil War
... Day 2 – _______ attacks Union flank (edge), hoping to break the line. Union defends at _________________________, stopping Confed. assault. Day 3 – Lee attacks the Center of the Union line on _______________. Has 12,500 men march ¾ of a mile into the Union lines over open fields. Known as __________ ...
... Day 2 – _______ attacks Union flank (edge), hoping to break the line. Union defends at _________________________, stopping Confed. assault. Day 3 – Lee attacks the Center of the Union line on _______________. Has 12,500 men march ¾ of a mile into the Union lines over open fields. Known as __________ ...
Name______________________________ Desk
... 22. One of the major strengths of the Union during the war was its _____________ and a large merchant fleet. 23. One of the major strengths of the Confederate army during the war was that it used the _____________ in the South as cover against invading forces. 24. Having a larger population and grea ...
... 22. One of the major strengths of the Union during the war was its _____________ and a large merchant fleet. 23. One of the major strengths of the Confederate army during the war was that it used the _____________ in the South as cover against invading forces. 24. Having a larger population and grea ...
The Cultural Landscape of the Colony of Virginia
... The fort had been cut off from its supply line, and surrendered next day. The Second Battle of Fort Sumter (8 September 1863) was a failed attempt by the Union to re-take the fort. Although the fort was reduced to rubble, it remained in Confederate hands until it was evacuated. ...
... The fort had been cut off from its supply line, and surrendered next day. The Second Battle of Fort Sumter (8 September 1863) was a failed attempt by the Union to re-take the fort. Although the fort was reduced to rubble, it remained in Confederate hands until it was evacuated. ...
Chapter 15 Study Guide
... 2. All of these happened to Unionists who did not join the Confederate Army (p. 349) Arrested, forced into the army, killed while fleeing to MX 3. Most delegates to the Texas convention after the 1860 election (p. 344-345) Favored Secession 4. Most Southerners in the 1850s believed that the rise of ...
... 2. All of these happened to Unionists who did not join the Confederate Army (p. 349) Arrested, forced into the army, killed while fleeing to MX 3. Most delegates to the Texas convention after the 1860 election (p. 344-345) Favored Secession 4. Most Southerners in the 1850s believed that the rise of ...
History Lecture 6a Civil War
... – More specific and precise – Emphasize that CSA was an insurrection, not a legitimate state with legitimate military ...
... – More specific and precise – Emphasize that CSA was an insurrection, not a legitimate state with legitimate military ...
The Civil War 1861-1865
... Union Armies in the West • Lincoln asks for 1,000,000 men to serve for 3 years…instead of 3 months • Gen. George McClellan was to lead this army • Leadership of Gen. Ulysses S. Grant… – (February 1862) In 11 days he captured two strategic forts…Fort Henry and Fort Donelson ...
... Union Armies in the West • Lincoln asks for 1,000,000 men to serve for 3 years…instead of 3 months • Gen. George McClellan was to lead this army • Leadership of Gen. Ulysses S. Grant… – (February 1862) In 11 days he captured two strategic forts…Fort Henry and Fort Donelson ...
Chapter 16 - Humble ISD
... IV. The Confederate and Union Strategy A. The South took a defensive position hoping the Union would tire of fighting B. South depended on “King Cotton”, a necessity for textile mills in Europe, to gain foreign support C. South held back cotton crops hoping to force England and France into supportin ...
... IV. The Confederate and Union Strategy A. The South took a defensive position hoping the Union would tire of fighting B. South depended on “King Cotton”, a necessity for textile mills in Europe, to gain foreign support C. South held back cotton crops hoping to force England and France into supportin ...
Name - cloudfront.net
... 26. Lincoln signed the ______________________________________________________ on _______________ declaring that slaves in Confederate states were from now on free. 27. It applied only to the ______________________ and therefore _______________________. 28. In ____________, the ________ amendment was ...
... 26. Lincoln signed the ______________________________________________________ on _______________ declaring that slaves in Confederate states were from now on free. 27. It applied only to the ______________________ and therefore _______________________. 28. In ____________, the ________ amendment was ...
The “Civil War” is Underway!
... the war would be over once the Union silenced the Confederacy in one small-scale battle and the Confederate States would beg to rejoin the Union. ...
... the war would be over once the Union silenced the Confederacy in one small-scale battle and the Confederate States would beg to rejoin the Union. ...
CIVIL WAR UNIT STUDY GUIDE
... Slave State – state that allowed slavery Free State – state that did not allow slavery Border State – slave state that remained part of the Union, they did not secede Fugitive – a person who is running away Secession – when part of a country leaves or breaks off from the rest (the southern states le ...
... Slave State – state that allowed slavery Free State – state that did not allow slavery Border State – slave state that remained part of the Union, they did not secede Fugitive – a person who is running away Secession – when part of a country leaves or breaks off from the rest (the southern states le ...
Mobilization, North and South
... – As the war progressed, Southern soldiers had threadbare uniforms with many garments and arms taken from the Union. Their families suffered under similar conditions. – Many slaves stopped working and abandoned the plantations. – Cotton exports down ...
... – As the war progressed, Southern soldiers had threadbare uniforms with many garments and arms taken from the Union. Their families suffered under similar conditions. – Many slaves stopped working and abandoned the plantations. – Cotton exports down ...
Civil War Erupts Vocabulary Copy the vocabulary and the definitions
... • What the states that had seceded called themselves ...
... • What the states that had seceded called themselves ...
I know no north, no south, no east, no west.
... How did we feel about the war? • We thought the Union should win. • At first we did not realize there was a war. • We wanted the Union to win because then we probably would be freed, but the war was not really fought about slavery. ...
... How did we feel about the war? • We thought the Union should win. • At first we did not realize there was a war. • We wanted the Union to win because then we probably would be freed, but the war was not really fought about slavery. ...
Print › Chapter 20: Girding for War: The North and the South (1861
... organize the U.S. Sanitary commission to assist the Union armies in the field; commission work helped many women acquire the skills and self-confidence that would propel the women's rights movement after the war ...
... organize the U.S. Sanitary commission to assist the Union armies in the field; commission work helped many women acquire the skills and self-confidence that would propel the women's rights movement after the war ...
Chapter 8 Sec1Notes
... The Union must be maintained as he has sworn in his oath to “preserve, protect, and defend it.” Fort Sumter—The Start of the War Who? ...
... The Union must be maintained as he has sworn in his oath to “preserve, protect, and defend it.” Fort Sumter—The Start of the War Who? ...
The Civil War
... supplies of everything became scarce, and by the end of the war, the South claimed only 12% of the national wealth as opposed to 30% before the war, and it’s per capita income was now 2/5 that of Northerners, as opposed to 2/3 of Northerners before the war Capitalism lost out to industrial ...
... supplies of everything became scarce, and by the end of the war, the South claimed only 12% of the national wealth as opposed to 30% before the war, and it’s per capita income was now 2/5 that of Northerners, as opposed to 2/3 of Northerners before the war Capitalism lost out to industrial ...
The Civil War
... supplies of everything became scarce, and by the end of the war, the South claimed only 12% of the national wealth as opposed to 30% before the war, and it’s per capita income was now 2/5 that of Northerners, as opposed to 2/3 of Northerners before the war Capitalism lost out to industrial ...
... supplies of everything became scarce, and by the end of the war, the South claimed only 12% of the national wealth as opposed to 30% before the war, and it’s per capita income was now 2/5 that of Northerners, as opposed to 2/3 of Northerners before the war Capitalism lost out to industrial ...
Chapter 15 Section 4
... to inflation (general rise in prices). In the North, prices of goods increased about 80% during the war. *The South had more problems with expenses because the Union blockade prevented the South from raising money by selling cotton overseas. Shortages made goods more expensive and led to even more i ...
... to inflation (general rise in prices). In the North, prices of goods increased about 80% during the war. *The South had more problems with expenses because the Union blockade prevented the South from raising money by selling cotton overseas. Shortages made goods more expensive and led to even more i ...
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.