GHSGT Review - GeorgiaStandards.Org
... – Andrew Jackson’s Election in 1828 was helped by many states dropping property requirements for white male voters – He also insisted on opening up the Party Convention to avoid “Caucus Politics” -- He was first Presidential Candidate from the “west” --Insisted on Nationalism over state’s rights ide ...
... – Andrew Jackson’s Election in 1828 was helped by many states dropping property requirements for white male voters – He also insisted on opening up the Party Convention to avoid “Caucus Politics” -- He was first Presidential Candidate from the “west” --Insisted on Nationalism over state’s rights ide ...
BCPS Leadership Packet
... • The Confederacy relied on enslaved African Americans to raise crops and provide labor for the army. Many enslaved African Americans fled to the Union army as it approached and some fought for the Union. • Some free African Americans felt their limited rights could best be protected by supporting t ...
... • The Confederacy relied on enslaved African Americans to raise crops and provide labor for the army. Many enslaved African Americans fled to the Union army as it approached and some fought for the Union. • Some free African Americans felt their limited rights could best be protected by supporting t ...
Civil War Study Guide - with answers - Widmier 2016
... 10. The devastating march that destroyed much of Georgia and the Carolinas became known as… Sherman’s March to the Sea. It destroyed the plantation system, removing social and economic support for the Confederacy 11. Identify where Robert E. Lee surrendered to Ulysses S. Grant. 12. This was the busi ...
... 10. The devastating march that destroyed much of Georgia and the Carolinas became known as… Sherman’s March to the Sea. It destroyed the plantation system, removing social and economic support for the Confederacy 11. Identify where Robert E. Lee surrendered to Ulysses S. Grant. 12. This was the busi ...
Review Guide for Chapter 15 Civil War Test
... 10. The lead general for the South was General Robert E. Lee. Lee was from Virginia and, though he hated the idea of war, he could not be a part of the Union/U.S. Army because it meant that he would have to fight against his beloved state of Virginia. 11. Ulysses S. Grant ended up being the capable ...
... 10. The lead general for the South was General Robert E. Lee. Lee was from Virginia and, though he hated the idea of war, he could not be a part of the Union/U.S. Army because it meant that he would have to fight against his beloved state of Virginia. 11. Ulysses S. Grant ended up being the capable ...
Purple 3 • Sponsored by Henry Clay • Allowed Missouri to enter the
... returned to Virginia to serve with the Confederate forces In 1862, Lee was appointed to command the Army of Northern Virginia His battle strategies are admired to this day, but he was criticized for having a narrow strategy centered on his native Virginia He surrendered to Ulysses S. Grant at Appoma ...
... returned to Virginia to serve with the Confederate forces In 1862, Lee was appointed to command the Army of Northern Virginia His battle strategies are admired to this day, but he was criticized for having a narrow strategy centered on his native Virginia He surrendered to Ulysses S. Grant at Appoma ...
Unit 5 Vocab practice 4
... A state of unhappiness and hopelessness, usually aligned with a financial crisis in which people lose jobs, homes, and businesses Plan for Reconstruction which focused on creating a new social structure in the South and providing full citizenship and suffrage to freedmen Assured the South that he ha ...
... A state of unhappiness and hopelessness, usually aligned with a financial crisis in which people lose jobs, homes, and businesses Plan for Reconstruction which focused on creating a new social structure in the South and providing full citizenship and suffrage to freedmen Assured the South that he ha ...
Back in the U.S.A….
... population) = Southerners threaten to secede **secede – to withdraw formally from a group or the national government ...
... population) = Southerners threaten to secede **secede – to withdraw formally from a group or the national government ...
Grading of a sample essay
... At the root of all of the problems was the slavery. The abolishment was considered one of the most influential and south. The American Revolution had been fought to validate the idea that all men were created equal, but slavery was legal in all of the thirteen colonies. Eventually its existence came ...
... At the root of all of the problems was the slavery. The abolishment was considered one of the most influential and south. The American Revolution had been fought to validate the idea that all men were created equal, but slavery was legal in all of the thirteen colonies. Eventually its existence came ...
File
... boundaries. The paradox of white liberty that rested in part on a foundation of black slavery was thus imbedded in the origins of the United States. Debates over the expansion of slavery into federal territories, which were tied to the South’s effort to maintain an equal number of free and slave st ...
... boundaries. The paradox of white liberty that rested in part on a foundation of black slavery was thus imbedded in the origins of the United States. Debates over the expansion of slavery into federal territories, which were tied to the South’s effort to maintain an equal number of free and slave st ...
The Civil War Begins - LOUISVILLE
... • The Monitor sank off the coast of North Carolina • The Merrimac and the Monitor were the first ironclad ships to be used in battle ...
... • The Monitor sank off the coast of North Carolina • The Merrimac and the Monitor were the first ironclad ships to be used in battle ...
The Crucible of War 1861-1865
... firmness and conciliation toward the South - it also expressed his will to oppose secession and maintain unity of the Union • Lincoln’s strategy focused on (1) avoiding acts that might push the ‘Upper South’ [N. Carolina, Virginia, Maryland, Delaware, Arkansas] into seceding, and (2) reassuring the ...
... firmness and conciliation toward the South - it also expressed his will to oppose secession and maintain unity of the Union • Lincoln’s strategy focused on (1) avoiding acts that might push the ‘Upper South’ [N. Carolina, Virginia, Maryland, Delaware, Arkansas] into seceding, and (2) reassuring the ...
Conflicts Ooer
... At the root of the Civil War were differences between the Northern and Southern states over the issue of slavery. The question of whether to allow slavery in the territories had divided the North and the South for years. The Southern states, which depended on slave labor to produce cotton, wanted sl ...
... At the root of the Civil War were differences between the Northern and Southern states over the issue of slavery. The question of whether to allow slavery in the territories had divided the North and the South for years. The Southern states, which depended on slave labor to produce cotton, wanted sl ...
Fall 2015 Civil War and Reconstructing the Union(4).
... 1. Economic and Social Differences Between North and South 2. States versus Federal Rights ...
... 1. Economic and Social Differences Between North and South 2. States versus Federal Rights ...
Name_______________________________________DUE
... These victories meant that the Union was closer to its goal of splitting the South in two. It also represented a bright spot for the Union which had been losing most of the battles in the east. ...
... These victories meant that the Union was closer to its goal of splitting the South in two. It also represented a bright spot for the Union which had been losing most of the battles in the east. ...
File
... The battle raged through the day, with rebel soldiers still arriving. Finally, the weary Union forces gave out. They tried to make an orderly retreat back across the creek, but the roads were crowded with fancy carriages of panicked spectators. The union army scattered in the chaos. ...
... The battle raged through the day, with rebel soldiers still arriving. Finally, the weary Union forces gave out. They tried to make an orderly retreat back across the creek, but the roads were crowded with fancy carriages of panicked spectators. The union army scattered in the chaos. ...
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. ...
Civil War - Cherokee County Schools
... • Fort Sumter—Union outpost in Charleston harbor • Confederates demand surrender of Fort Sumter Lincoln’s Dilemma • Reinforcing fort by force would lead rest of slave states to secede • Evacuating fort would legitimize Confederacy, endanger Union • Lincoln does not reinforce or evacuate, just sends ...
... • Fort Sumter—Union outpost in Charleston harbor • Confederates demand surrender of Fort Sumter Lincoln’s Dilemma • Reinforcing fort by force would lead rest of slave states to secede • Evacuating fort would legitimize Confederacy, endanger Union • Lincoln does not reinforce or evacuate, just sends ...
CWRT News Letter February 2009
... At 5 a.m. of a cold morning the Confederate division of Gideon Pillow moved forward to assault the enclosing Federal lines at Fort Donelson. Pillow was aided by Buckner’s division and after a morning’s hot fighting the Federal line of McClernand on the right was broken and the way of escape to Nashv ...
... At 5 a.m. of a cold morning the Confederate division of Gideon Pillow moved forward to assault the enclosing Federal lines at Fort Donelson. Pillow was aided by Buckner’s division and after a morning’s hot fighting the Federal line of McClernand on the right was broken and the way of escape to Nashv ...
Lincoln`s Concept of Sustainability
... There were nearly as many casualties in the Civil War as in all of America's other ...
... There were nearly as many casualties in the Civil War as in all of America's other ...
Brinkley, Chapter 14 Notes 1
... September 17, 1862. Union Victory that could not have come soon enough. Single Bloodiest 1 Day Battle in US History. ...
... September 17, 1862. Union Victory that could not have come soon enough. Single Bloodiest 1 Day Battle in US History. ...
civil_war_highlights_student_notes
... confederacy. Lincoln’s position is that under his war powers he can legally free only those slaves in rebel held territory; it is up to Congress or the states to address the question of universal emancipation. ...
... confederacy. Lincoln’s position is that under his war powers he can legally free only those slaves in rebel held territory; it is up to Congress or the states to address the question of universal emancipation. ...
The Civil War
... Lincoln Elected President Lincoln won every free state except New Jersey. The election of Abraham Lincoln in 1860 was the final straw for many southerners. Eleven states seceded from the Union. Four of these (Virginia, Arkansas, North Carolina, and Tennessee) did not secede until after the Battl ...
... Lincoln Elected President Lincoln won every free state except New Jersey. The election of Abraham Lincoln in 1860 was the final straw for many southerners. Eleven states seceded from the Union. Four of these (Virginia, Arkansas, North Carolina, and Tennessee) did not secede until after the Battl ...
Key Battles Of The Civil War
... Originally called the Virginia later taken by the Confederacy and turned into their first Ironclad. Easily smashed through the Union blockade at Hampton Roads Virginia. (Wooden Ships) Later engaged in combat against the Union’s Monitor. ...
... Originally called the Virginia later taken by the Confederacy and turned into their first Ironclad. Easily smashed through the Union blockade at Hampton Roads Virginia. (Wooden Ships) Later engaged in combat against the Union’s Monitor. ...
Social Studies.Chapter 16.The Civil War Begins 16
... I. First Shots at Fort Sumter A. Lincoln had to resupply the fort; could provoke war 1. Lincoln resupplied and notified Confederate leaders a. they attacked the fort before supplies arrived b. 34 hours of shelling; 0 deaths; Anderson surrendered B. Lincoln Calls Out the Militia 1. Lincoln asks Union ...
... I. First Shots at Fort Sumter A. Lincoln had to resupply the fort; could provoke war 1. Lincoln resupplied and notified Confederate leaders a. they attacked the fort before supplies arrived b. 34 hours of shelling; 0 deaths; Anderson surrendered B. Lincoln Calls Out the Militia 1. Lincoln asks Union ...
The real Souljo Boi - MAT
... We were the “Cradle of Secession” We were the first to Secede He thought we were a small, but cocky state that had brought forth the 4 years of hardship on the nation called the American Civil War. South Carolina would have to pay and as General W.T. Sherman hoped the 1861 occupation of Fort Sumter ...
... We were the “Cradle of Secession” We were the first to Secede He thought we were a small, but cocky state that had brought forth the 4 years of hardship on the nation called the American Civil War. South Carolina would have to pay and as General W.T. Sherman hoped the 1861 occupation of Fort Sumter ...
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.