Advantages of the North and South Read and highlight the handout
... Advantages of the North and South Read and highlight the handout, fill out the Chart, and answer the question. If you were to list the advantages of the North side by side with those of the South, you might wonder how the Civil War continued for four long years. In sheer numbers the North had more o ...
... Advantages of the North and South Read and highlight the handout, fill out the Chart, and answer the question. If you were to list the advantages of the North side by side with those of the South, you might wonder how the Civil War continued for four long years. In sheer numbers the North had more o ...
Terms, Names, and Battles
... 9. Mosquito gunboats: small, fast gunboats that intercepted Union trading ships and took their cargo. 10. subjugation : forced control by others Names Identify role in war and the side they took (Confederacy, Union or Neutral) -Robert E. Lee: General that commanded Confederate troops -Matthew Brady: ...
... 9. Mosquito gunboats: small, fast gunboats that intercepted Union trading ships and took their cargo. 10. subjugation : forced control by others Names Identify role in war and the side they took (Confederacy, Union or Neutral) -Robert E. Lee: General that commanded Confederate troops -Matthew Brady: ...
Study Guide Sheet – Day 1 (Part I) of Final Exam
... - The Compromise of 1850 stated that _______________________ would join the Union as a free state It also stated that the Fugitive Slave Law would be strengthened. This law required federal agents and regular people to help capture escaped slaves and return them to a state of _______________________ ...
... - The Compromise of 1850 stated that _______________________ would join the Union as a free state It also stated that the Fugitive Slave Law would be strengthened. This law required federal agents and regular people to help capture escaped slaves and return them to a state of _______________________ ...
Chapter 16 in PDF format
... Battle of Bull Run was fought in Virginia on July of 1861. Troops were accompanied by the press, politicians, and onlookers. Significant because it showed both sides that a fast victory was very unlikely. ...
... Battle of Bull Run was fought in Virginia on July of 1861. Troops were accompanied by the press, politicians, and onlookers. Significant because it showed both sides that a fast victory was very unlikely. ...
Road to Civil War, Civil War and Reconstruction
... V. Kansas-Nebraska Act 1. Republican Party—Opposed to the expansion of slavery & KS/NE Act. ...
... V. Kansas-Nebraska Act 1. Republican Party—Opposed to the expansion of slavery & KS/NE Act. ...
Chapter 10 Notes
... A. Grant believed to win he needed to use total war 1. this means destroying anything that is useful to civilians or the army. 2. The people of South would suffer along with the army 3. Grant thought this would end the war completely B. Union General William Sherman marched his troops to Atlanta, GA ...
... A. Grant believed to win he needed to use total war 1. this means destroying anything that is useful to civilians or the army. 2. The people of South would suffer along with the army 3. Grant thought this would end the war completely B. Union General William Sherman marched his troops to Atlanta, GA ...
CivilWarTimeline
... After Grant had captured several forts in Tennessee his armies moved south toward Mississippi. The Confederate Army lead by General Albert Sidney Johnston, met Grant at Shiloh, Tennessee. Grant had not expected the attack which started while the Yankee soldiers were cooking their breakfast. At first ...
... After Grant had captured several forts in Tennessee his armies moved south toward Mississippi. The Confederate Army lead by General Albert Sidney Johnston, met Grant at Shiloh, Tennessee. Grant had not expected the attack which started while the Yankee soldiers were cooking their breakfast. At first ...
The Civil War - Social Circle City Schools
... On his return from a patrol, Confederate guards mistook Stonewall Jackson for a Yankee and shot him in the arm. A surgeon amputated his arm but he caught pneumonia and died on May 10. ...
... On his return from a patrol, Confederate guards mistook Stonewall Jackson for a Yankee and shot him in the arm. A surgeon amputated his arm but he caught pneumonia and died on May 10. ...
Lincoln and the Civil War
... I hold that, in contemplation of universal law and of the Constitution, the Union of these States is perpetual.... There needs to be no bloodshed or violence; and there shall be none, unless it be forced upon the national authority. …there will be no invasion, no using of force against or among the ...
... I hold that, in contemplation of universal law and of the Constitution, the Union of these States is perpetual.... There needs to be no bloodshed or violence; and there shall be none, unless it be forced upon the national authority. …there will be no invasion, no using of force against or among the ...
The Civil War
... The issue of slavery still on the minds of loyal slave states: Kentucky, Maryland, Missouri, Virginia (secedes April 1861), Tennessee (secedes May 1861), and North Carolina (secedes May ...
... The issue of slavery still on the minds of loyal slave states: Kentucky, Maryland, Missouri, Virginia (secedes April 1861), Tennessee (secedes May 1861), and North Carolina (secedes May ...
First Battle of Bull Run
... River. Union wants Vicksburg to hold both ends of the Mississippi River. This would split the Confederacy in two! If they could take it, the Union could shell boats and supplies carried from New Orleans and Memphis. Early in 1863, Grant tries to isolate then siege the city. After 17 days, Grant is a ...
... River. Union wants Vicksburg to hold both ends of the Mississippi River. This would split the Confederacy in two! If they could take it, the Union could shell boats and supplies carried from New Orleans and Memphis. Early in 1863, Grant tries to isolate then siege the city. After 17 days, Grant is a ...
The Civil War - Lewis-Palmer School District 38
... making it the bloodiest battle with the highest death toll. Lee’s army was allowed to retreat without immediate chase (Meade), again extending the war. This was the last battle on Union soil. Gettysburg Address delivered after this battle. Lincoln came and dedicated this battleground as a National C ...
... making it the bloodiest battle with the highest death toll. Lee’s army was allowed to retreat without immediate chase (Meade), again extending the war. This was the last battle on Union soil. Gettysburg Address delivered after this battle. Lincoln came and dedicated this battleground as a National C ...
A - Humble ISD
... 3. A split U.S. also pleased the European countries, since the U.S. was the only major display of democracy in the Western Hemisphere, and with a split U.S. the Monroe Doctrine could be broken as well. South Carolina Assails Fort Sumter 1. Most of the forts in the South had relinquished their power ...
... 3. A split U.S. also pleased the European countries, since the U.S. was the only major display of democracy in the Western Hemisphere, and with a split U.S. the Monroe Doctrine could be broken as well. South Carolina Assails Fort Sumter 1. Most of the forts in the South had relinquished their power ...
File
... wooden ship called the Merrimac which had been rebuilt with iron all around the boat. The Merrimac had sunk several Union ships in the past months. The North decided to build an ironclad ship to fight it. The Northern ship was called the Monitor. ...
... wooden ship called the Merrimac which had been rebuilt with iron all around the boat. The Merrimac had sunk several Union ships in the past months. The North decided to build an ironclad ship to fight it. The Northern ship was called the Monitor. ...
The Anaconda Plan (Scott`s Great Snake)
... armies in Virginia, but his two invasions of Northern territory were unsuccessful. With Ulysses S. Grant, he found an opponent who would not give up regardless of setbacks and casualties, and Lee’s outnumbered forces were gradually reduced in number and forced into defensive positions that did not a ...
... armies in Virginia, but his two invasions of Northern territory were unsuccessful. With Ulysses S. Grant, he found an opponent who would not give up regardless of setbacks and casualties, and Lee’s outnumbered forces were gradually reduced in number and forced into defensive positions that did not a ...
Civil War Powerpoint
... •All officers and enlisted men in the Confederate army could go back to their homes. •All military equipment and weapons had to be given up to the Union. ...
... •All officers and enlisted men in the Confederate army could go back to their homes. •All military equipment and weapons had to be given up to the Union. ...
Battle of Gettysburg PPT
... General Lee’s Reasons for invading the Union: 1. His army needed supplies like weapons and clothing. 2. General Lee’s men were hungry and needed food. 3. General Lee hoped to take attention away from the Union victory at Fredericksburg. 4. The confederacy also thought that a victory over the Union ...
... General Lee’s Reasons for invading the Union: 1. His army needed supplies like weapons and clothing. 2. General Lee’s men were hungry and needed food. 3. General Lee hoped to take attention away from the Union victory at Fredericksburg. 4. The confederacy also thought that a victory over the Union ...
AP United States History
... horses and mules important waterways: the Ohio, Cumberland, and Tennessee Rivers buffer (particularly WV and MD) for Washington, D.C. 2. Lincoln's approach to the border states dispatch of soldiers to MD, WV, and MO to support Unionists public statements of war aims AVOIDS antislavery declarations: ...
... horses and mules important waterways: the Ohio, Cumberland, and Tennessee Rivers buffer (particularly WV and MD) for Washington, D.C. 2. Lincoln's approach to the border states dispatch of soldiers to MD, WV, and MO to support Unionists public statements of war aims AVOIDS antislavery declarations: ...
north-south
... leaders from the North and South during the Civil War. You will write a paragraph about one of the leaders and give 3 details about that person. ...
... leaders from the North and South during the Civil War. You will write a paragraph about one of the leaders and give 3 details about that person. ...
PREVIEW Roosevelt`s New Deal - mrsarro
... 4. The election of 1860 divided the Democratic Party into two factions, allowing the Republican candidate (Abraham Lincoln) to win the presidential election. Due to Lincoln winning the election the south decided to secede from the Union before Lincoln becomes president. The Confederate States would ...
... 4. The election of 1860 divided the Democratic Party into two factions, allowing the Republican candidate (Abraham Lincoln) to win the presidential election. Due to Lincoln winning the election the south decided to secede from the Union before Lincoln becomes president. The Confederate States would ...
Chapter 16 history notes
... ~Union troops could hear bells from Richmond ~Union failed Robert E. Lee Took command of all Conf. army Antietam The single bloodiest day of the Civil War ~Lee had invaded MD ~McClellan had Lee’s plans but acted slowly emancipate To set free Emancipation Document signed by Lincoln that freed all sla ...
... ~Union troops could hear bells from Richmond ~Union failed Robert E. Lee Took command of all Conf. army Antietam The single bloodiest day of the Civil War ~Lee had invaded MD ~McClellan had Lee’s plans but acted slowly emancipate To set free Emancipation Document signed by Lincoln that freed all sla ...
Secession Following Abe`s election, the state of South Carolina
... Managing the War As Union troops descended from Massachusetts to the nation’s capital, pro-secession residents of Baltimore, Maryland attacked Union soldiers and destroyed railroads linking Washington to the north. In response, President Lincoln suspended the Writ of Habeas Corpus in Maryland, allow ...
... Managing the War As Union troops descended from Massachusetts to the nation’s capital, pro-secession residents of Baltimore, Maryland attacked Union soldiers and destroyed railroads linking Washington to the north. In response, President Lincoln suspended the Writ of Habeas Corpus in Maryland, allow ...
Chapter 16 Notes
... 1. Southern states that had seceded took control of most federal forts in their borders, but some remained under federal control. 2. Fort Sumter, in South Carolina, was running out of supplies. 3. Fort Sumter: Union fort in the harbor of Charleston, South Carolina 4. Lincoln risked war by sending su ...
... 1. Southern states that had seceded took control of most federal forts in their borders, but some remained under federal control. 2. Fort Sumter, in South Carolina, was running out of supplies. 3. Fort Sumter: Union fort in the harbor of Charleston, South Carolina 4. Lincoln risked war by sending su ...
Virginia in the American Civil War
The Commonwealth of Virginia was a prominent part of the Confederate States of America during the American Civil War. A slave state, a convention was called to act for the state during the secession crisis opened on February 13, 1861, after seven seceding states had formed the Confederacy on February 4. Unionist delegates dominated the convention and defeated a motion to secede on April 4. The convention deliberated for several months, but on April 15 U.S. President Abraham Lincoln called for troops from all states still in the Union in response to the Confederate capture of Fort Sumter. On April 17, the Virginia convention voted to declare secession from the Union, pending ratification of the decision by the voters.With the entry of Virginia into the Confederacy, a decision was made in May to move the Confederate capital from Montgomery, Alabama, to Richmond, in part because the defense of Virginia's capital was deemed strategically vital to the Confederacy's survival regardless of its political status. Virginians ratified the articles of secession on May 23. The following day, the Union army moved into northern Virginia and captured Alexandria without a fight.Most of the battles in the Eastern Theater of the American Civil War took place in Virginia because the Confederacy had to defend its national capital at Richmond, and public opinion in the North demanded that the Union move ""On to Richmond!"" The remarkable success of Robert E. Lee in defending Richmond is a central theme of the military history of the war. The White House of the Confederacy, located a few blocks north of the State Capitol, was home to the family of Confederate President Jefferson Davis.