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Chapter 12 Reconstruction
Chapter 12 Reconstruction

... I write to inform you of a most cowardly outrage that took place last Saturday night. Our teacher whom we have employed here was shot down by a crowd of Rebel Ruffians for no other cause than teaching school. General, this is the second teacher that has been assaulted. ...
File
File

... Lincoln did not originally believe he had the power to end slavery but he believed he should help save the Union. After the victory at Antietam he announce the Emancipation Proclamation. The order only freed the slaves in the rebelling states, not in the border states. Lincoln also wanted to prevent ...
File
File

... the Peninsula Campaign (cont.) • After a month to take Yorktown; McClelland came within sight of Richmond • But Lincoln diverted McClelland's reinforcements to chase Jackson, who was moving toward D.C • Stalled in front of Richmond, “Jeb” Stuart's Confederate cavalry rode completely around McClellan ...
Chapter 21 Civil War
Chapter 21 Civil War

... the Peninsula Campaign (cont.) • After a month to take Yorktown; McClelland came within sight of Richmond • But Lincoln diverted McClelland's reinforcements to chase Jackson, who was moving toward D.C • Stalled in front of Richmond, “Jeb” Stuart's Confederate cavalry rode completely around McClellan ...
Chapter 21
Chapter 21

... – Raw Yankee troops left Washington toward Bull Run on July 21, 1861: • At first the battle went well for the Yankees • But Thomas J. (“Stonewall”) Jackson and Confederate reinforcements arrived unexpectedly • The “military picnic” at Bull Run: – Though not decisive militarily, bore significant psyc ...
Document
Document

... How did General Sherman’s strategy of total war help the Union defeat the Confederacy? ...
The Unknown Legacy of the 13th Amendment
The Unknown Legacy of the 13th Amendment

... On January 31, 1865, Congress passed the 13th Amendment, declaring slavery illegal in the United States. Or so it seemed. The second line of the Amendment, and the most oft unknown, states that slavery can still be used as a form of punishment for crimes, and this practice became widely used as a pa ...
chapter 7 - apel slice
chapter 7 - apel slice

... South could torch, the Union to spend its resources until it became tired of the war and agreed to negotiate. Much like Lincoln in the North, however, President Davis felt pressure to strike for a quick victory. Many strategists of this era were influenced by Napoleon's battle strategy in his Europe ...
Unit VI Civil War Notes
Unit VI Civil War Notes

... Confederate victory but Black accomplishment Blacks 1% of population – by the end of war 1/10 of union army 85% of Black pop. signed into army Dedication of Gettysburg National cemetery (union) Nov. 19, 1863 Ed Everett – spoke for two hours – then Lincoln 269 words Lincoln – goal of the union “New b ...
annotated bibliography of recent Civil War era articles
annotated bibliography of recent Civil War era articles

... cultural preference for literary focus on the individual rather than on any organization or the war in general?” Donald R. Shaffer, “‘I do not suppose that Uncle Sam looks at the skin’: African Americans and the Civil War” Civil War History 46 (June 2000) To what extent did “poverty, limited knowled ...
UNIT 3: MISSISSIPPI IN TRANSITION
UNIT 3: MISSISSIPPI IN TRANSITION

... Stated, “all men are created equal” The decision at hand: Americans had to admit that men were not equal Americans had to abolish slavery ...
South Carolina senator John C. Calhoun was so sick that he had
South Carolina senator John C. Calhoun was so sick that he had

... bitterness. The question of California statehood topped the agenda. Of equal concern was the border dispute in which the slave state of Texas claimed the eastern half of New Mexico Territory, where the issue of slavery had not yet been settled. in the meantime, Northerners demanded the abolition of ...
This Month in Civil War History: February 2016
This Month in Civil War History: February 2016

... February 1864 also saw the first successful submarine attack of the Civil War. TheCSS Hunley, manned by seven confederate sailors, stuck a torpedo to the USS Housatonic in Charleston harbor. Both the Hunley and the Housatonic sank as a result of the explosion. I’m Jeff Lauck and this has been This M ...
Critical Book Review of Michael Shaara`s Civil War Novel The Killer
Critical Book Review of Michael Shaara`s Civil War Novel The Killer

... appalling, but even more than that was the horror of old Europe, the curse of nobility, which the South was transplanting to new soil. They were forming a new aristocracy, a new breed of glittering men, and Chamberlain had come to crush it.15 Statements such as this disprove Shaara’s critics who cla ...
Carl Schurz, Report on Conditions in the South (1865)
Carl Schurz, Report on Conditions in the South (1865)

... mind to legislate calmly and understandingly upon the subject of free negro labor. And this I reported to be the opinion of some of our most prominent military commanders and other observing men. It is, indeed, difficult to imagine circumstances more unfavorable for the development of a calm and unp ...
Bull Run - Central Magnet School
Bull Run - Central Magnet School

... the Peninsula Campaign (cont.) • After a month to take Yorktown; McClelland came within sight of Richmond • But Lincoln diverted McClelland's reinforcements to chase Jackson, who was moving toward D.C • Stalled in front of Richmond, “Jeb” Stuart's Confederate cavalry rode completely around McClellan ...
PART I: Reviewing the Chapter
PART I: Reviewing the Chapter

... 12. The radical Reconstruction regimes in the Southern states a. took away white Southerners’ civil rights and voting rights. b. consisted almost entirely of blacks. ...
jlenz.file14.1432434014.2015
jlenz.file14.1432434014.2015

... a. African American soldiers were often killed or sold into slavery if captured by the Confederacy, while white soldiers were simply held as prisoners of war. b. African American soldiers were not experienced at war and did not know what to expect, while white soldiers had a lot of experience and tr ...
Document
Document

... Acts of violence—including lynching—against African Americans increased. putting to death a person by the illegal action of a mob ...
The Myth of the Lost Cause and Tennessee Textbooks, 1889
The Myth of the Lost Cause and Tennessee Textbooks, 1889

... outlet for Confederate veterans to rationalize their actions during the war. Perhaps more than any other groups, Confederate veterans needed the Lost Cause to justify their actions during the war. Veterans, along with Southerners who remained on the home front, refused to believe that they fought fo ...
7th Grade Social Studies First Semester Final Exam Study Guide
7th Grade Social Studies First Semester Final Exam Study Guide

... to appoint federal judges to impeach the President of Judicial Review to veto laws to declare war to make treaties Economics: matching vocabulary to the definition basic factors of production capital demand distribution entrepreneur supply land market price partnership shortage The Civil War: multip ...
Jomar Villagracia - San Francisco Civil War Round Table
Jomar Villagracia - San Francisco Civil War Round Table

... defeat the Union invaders, but as it was a state-driven Confederacy, a strong, central government was a very hard thing to obtain. The policies of the states and the Confederacy’s stubborn need to uphold them weakened the already weak powers of Davis. Davis also failed at being a good leader and rol ...
Reconstruction
Reconstruction

... permit in writing from his employer. Whoever shall violate this provision shall pay a fine of two dollars and fifty cents, or in default thereof shall be forced to work four days on the public road, or suffer corporeal punishment as ...
Reconstruction
Reconstruction

... eleven states that had “opted out” of the Union, and now had to be reannexed, as it were, back in. Which position one took on the big constitutional question would have a profound effect, as we’ll see in a bit, on how the South should be reorganized and reincorporated into the Union. But, regardless ...
Unit 5: A Crisis of Union part I (1840-1860) - AP US History
Unit 5: A Crisis of Union part I (1840-1860) - AP US History

...  What was the 'Peninsular Campaign'? What was its goal, and to what extent was it a success?  Following the Seven Days' Battles, how did the Union strategy change? How did the Union propose to defeat the Confederacy?  What made the Battles of Antietam (1862) and Gettysburg (1863) such pivotal poi ...
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Lost Cause of the Confederacy



The Lost Cause is a set of beliefs which endorsed the virtues of the ante-bellum South embodying a view of the American Civil War as an honorable struggle to maintain those virtues as widely espoused in popular culture especially in the South, while overlooking or downplaying the central role of slavery. Gallagher wrote:The architects of the Lost Cause acted from various motives. They collectively sought to justify their own actions and allow themselves and other former Confederates to find something positive in all-encompassing failure. They also wanted to provide their children and future generations of white Southerners with a 'correct' narrative of the war. The Lost Cause became a key part of the reconciliation process between North and South around 1900. The belief is a popular way that many White Southerners commemorate the war. The United Daughters of the Confederacy is a major organization that has propounded the Lost Cause for over a century. Historian Caroline Janney states:Providing a sense of relief to white Southerners who feared being dishonored by defeat, the Lost Cause was largely accepted in the years following the war by white Americans who found it to be a useful tool in reconciling North and South.The Lost Cause belief was founded upon several historically inaccurate elements. These include the claim that the Confederacy started the Civil War to defend state's rights rather than to preserve slavery, and the related claim that slavery was benevolent, rather than cruel. Historians, including Gaines Foster, generally agree that the Lost Cause narrative also ""helped preserve white supremacy. Most scholars who have studied the white South's memory of the Civil War or the Old South conclude that both portrayed a past society in which whites were in charge and blacks faithful and subservient."" Supporters typically portray the Confederacy's cause as noble and its leadership as exemplars of old-fashioned chivalry and honor, defeated by the Union armies through numerical and industrial force that overwhelmed the South's superior military skill and courage. Proponents of the Lost Cause movement also condemned the Reconstruction that followed the Civil War, claiming that it had been a deliberate attempt by Northern politicians and speculators to destroy the traditional Southern way of life. In recent decades Lost Cause themes have been widely promoted by the Neo-Confederate movement in books and op-eds, and especially in one of the movement's magazines, the Southern Partisan. The Lost Cause theme has been a major element in defining gender roles in the white South, in terms of honor, tradition, and family roles. The Lost Cause has been part of memorials and even religious attitudes.
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