Civil War Homework Questions
... 1. Examine and explain why Lincoln changed his mind and ended up writing the Emancipation Proclamation. 2. Why didn’t Lincoln free the slaves earlier? 3. What effect did the Emancipation Proclamation have on the war? 4. What effect did the Emancipation Proclamation have on slavery? Section 4: 1. Fro ...
... 1. Examine and explain why Lincoln changed his mind and ended up writing the Emancipation Proclamation. 2. Why didn’t Lincoln free the slaves earlier? 3. What effect did the Emancipation Proclamation have on the war? 4. What effect did the Emancipation Proclamation have on slavery? Section 4: 1. Fro ...
AP Chapter 20 Review Packet
... Lincoln’s plan for the besieged federal forces in Fort Sumter was to a. order the soldiers there to open fire on the surrounding Confederate army. ...
... Lincoln’s plan for the besieged federal forces in Fort Sumter was to a. order the soldiers there to open fire on the surrounding Confederate army. ...
Radical Reconstruction_0
... The right of citizens of the United States to vote shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by any state on account of race, color, or previous condition of servitude. The Congress shall have power to enforce ...
... The right of citizens of the United States to vote shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by any state on account of race, color, or previous condition of servitude. The Congress shall have power to enforce ...
The Civil War Affects Life at Home The Civil War Affects Life at Home
... criminals or takes control without authority to do so ...
... criminals or takes control without authority to do so ...
The Civil War - Ms Brooks` Website
... 2.To obtain Britain and France as allies. 3. To move North and attack northern cities especially Washington, D.C. ...
... 2.To obtain Britain and France as allies. 3. To move North and attack northern cities especially Washington, D.C. ...
STATES - SchoolRack
... of the war but chose not to fight against Virginia Opposed secession, but did not believe the union should be held together by force Urged Southerners to accept defeat at the end of the war and reunite as Americans when some wanted to continue fighting. ...
... of the war but chose not to fight against Virginia Opposed secession, but did not believe the union should be held together by force Urged Southerners to accept defeat at the end of the war and reunite as Americans when some wanted to continue fighting. ...
Civil War Test (30 pts.) 1. John C. Calhoun applied the theory of
... The above quote from Lincoln’s Second Inaugural Address demonstrated he A. remained neutral on the issue of slavery. B. was now a supporter of states’ rights. was now an abolitionist on the issue of C. ...
... The above quote from Lincoln’s Second Inaugural Address demonstrated he A. remained neutral on the issue of slavery. B. was now a supporter of states’ rights. was now an abolitionist on the issue of C. ...
Bellwork 1/6/14 - Hartsville Middle School
... Factories and businesses were bringing wealth to the North while the South depended on an economy based on plantations farmed by slaves In the North most people wanted to stop the spread of slavery Abolitionist wanted to end it all together In the South, slaveholders and small farmers feared ...
... Factories and businesses were bringing wealth to the North while the South depended on an economy based on plantations farmed by slaves In the North most people wanted to stop the spread of slavery Abolitionist wanted to end it all together In the South, slaveholders and small farmers feared ...
Our Best Men: Patrick Ronayne Cleburne
... defenders stood, aiming their weapons through narrow “head ...
... defenders stood, aiming their weapons through narrow “head ...
Bloodiest day in American history: The battle of Antietam
... Road. There was a fence between the Northern and the Southern troops. This is a picture which is representative of the whole Civil War. It shows how many people died in it. This is just a small part of the battlefield of Antietam Creek and so you can imagine how many people died in Antietam and in t ...
... Road. There was a fence between the Northern and the Southern troops. This is a picture which is representative of the whole Civil War. It shows how many people died in it. This is just a small part of the battlefield of Antietam Creek and so you can imagine how many people died in Antietam and in t ...
US History Final Exam Review
... 79) What was the BIGGEST threat to those who traveled west in Wagon trains – illnesses such as cholera. 80) What final incident caused President Polk to declare war on Mexico – US & Mexican troops clashed at the border. 81) What did most Forty-Niners end up doing in California – became farmers or fo ...
... 79) What was the BIGGEST threat to those who traveled west in Wagon trains – illnesses such as cholera. 80) What final incident caused President Polk to declare war on Mexico – US & Mexican troops clashed at the border. 81) What did most Forty-Niners end up doing in California – became farmers or fo ...
Ch. 21
... Cold Harbor—6/64. Union attacks fortified Confederate position. 7,000 Union Casualties in about 7 min. In one month, Grant looses 50,000 (Wilderness to Cold Harbor; ½ as many as lost by that army in the prior 3 years) Grant drives Lee back to Petersburg. Lee builds trenches and fortifications. ...
... Cold Harbor—6/64. Union attacks fortified Confederate position. 7,000 Union Casualties in about 7 min. In one month, Grant looses 50,000 (Wilderness to Cold Harbor; ½ as many as lost by that army in the prior 3 years) Grant drives Lee back to Petersburg. Lee builds trenches and fortifications. ...
File
... Each of these battles was hard fought in searing heat with appalling casualties on both sides. At the final engagement - Malvern Hill - General Lee ordered his Confederate infantry to assault the entrenched Union troops. In reply, well-placed Union artillery cut the advancing Southern forces to shre ...
... Each of these battles was hard fought in searing heat with appalling casualties on both sides. At the final engagement - Malvern Hill - General Lee ordered his Confederate infantry to assault the entrenched Union troops. In reply, well-placed Union artillery cut the advancing Southern forces to shre ...
The Knapsack - Raleigh Civil War Round Table
... 7:00 pm, at the N.C. Museum of History (located at 5 Edenton Street, across from the State Capitol). Members and guests are encouraged to meet for supper at K&W Cafeteria, 511 Woodburn Rd., in Cameron Village before the meeting, at 5:15 pm. Annual membership dues are $30 (individual and family) and ...
... 7:00 pm, at the N.C. Museum of History (located at 5 Edenton Street, across from the State Capitol). Members and guests are encouraged to meet for supper at K&W Cafeteria, 511 Woodburn Rd., in Cameron Village before the meeting, at 5:15 pm. Annual membership dues are $30 (individual and family) and ...
The Civil War Review
... sending troops to put down the rebellion, Virginia, North Carolina, Tennessee, and Arkansas voted to _________ from the Union and join the _____________. Mounting __________ tensions throughout the 1850s and a failure of __________ will led to the Civil War. The Standards of Learning for Virginia an ...
... sending troops to put down the rebellion, Virginia, North Carolina, Tennessee, and Arkansas voted to _________ from the Union and join the _____________. Mounting __________ tensions throughout the 1850s and a failure of __________ will led to the Civil War. The Standards of Learning for Virginia an ...
THE ELECTION OF 1860
... c. It made it seem as though Britain and France supported having slaves if they continued to support the Confederates. d. It made free slaves in the North officially free. The Emancipation Proclamation was considered a strategic political move for Lincoln=he gained support from more Northerners, Eur ...
... c. It made it seem as though Britain and France supported having slaves if they continued to support the Confederates. d. It made free slaves in the North officially free. The Emancipation Proclamation was considered a strategic political move for Lincoln=he gained support from more Northerners, Eur ...
Road to the Civil War
... strategy of “total war” or bring the civilian population into the war, destroy the South and free the slaves. ...
... strategy of “total war” or bring the civilian population into the war, destroy the South and free the slaves. ...
Chapter 14
... January 1, 1863: issued Emancipation Proclamation “I do order and declare that all persons held as slaves within said designated States and parts of States are, and henceforward shall be, free; and that the Executive Government of the United States, including the military and naval authorities the ...
... January 1, 1863: issued Emancipation Proclamation “I do order and declare that all persons held as slaves within said designated States and parts of States are, and henceforward shall be, free; and that the Executive Government of the United States, including the military and naval authorities the ...
Name - karyanAHS
... and realized how horrible slavery was. 5. Presidents during the 1850s were not good leaders and could not keep the country together. 6. The compromises over slavery in the territories failed. 7. President Lincoln sent federal troops to Fort Sumter in 1861 and angered the South. Major Events When A ...
... and realized how horrible slavery was. 5. Presidents during the 1850s were not good leaders and could not keep the country together. 6. The compromises over slavery in the territories failed. 7. President Lincoln sent federal troops to Fort Sumter in 1861 and angered the South. Major Events When A ...
The Emancipation Proclamation stated
... 4. The Moderate Democrat South that said slavery is wrong, but we have to live with it – just have it be rare and few, and treat your slaves nice. 5. The Extreme Democrat South that said slavery is good – let’s expand it into new States and force Northerners who are morally opposed to slavery to par ...
... 4. The Moderate Democrat South that said slavery is wrong, but we have to live with it – just have it be rare and few, and treat your slaves nice. 5. The Extreme Democrat South that said slavery is good – let’s expand it into new States and force Northerners who are morally opposed to slavery to par ...
Civil War/Reconstruction - Hicksville Public Schools
... 17. Which inference is most clearly supported by the information in this table? (1) Slavery decreased throughout the South with the end of the African slave trade. (2) The enslaved population began to decline after 1840. (3) The transcontinental railroad spread slavery outside the South. (4) Slaver ...
... 17. Which inference is most clearly supported by the information in this table? (1) Slavery decreased throughout the South with the end of the African slave trade. (2) The enslaved population began to decline after 1840. (3) The transcontinental railroad spread slavery outside the South. (4) Slaver ...
File
... 1. How did the Union propose to finance the war? How successful was this? What was the effect on the economy? 2. How did the Union propose to raise troops? To what extent was it forced to use conscription? What was the reaction to this and why was it so varied? 3. What were the two factions trying t ...
... 1. How did the Union propose to finance the war? How successful was this? What was the effect on the economy? 2. How did the Union propose to raise troops? To what extent was it forced to use conscription? What was the reaction to this and why was it so varied? 3. What were the two factions trying t ...
View a brochure of the exhibit. - Academics
... In early 1863, the outlook for the Union cause looked bleak. The Army of the Potomac had suffered devastating losses at the battles of Fredericksburg and Chancellorsville. In the west, Union armies could still not break the Confederate hold on the Mississippi River. Two long years of war had sapped ...
... In early 1863, the outlook for the Union cause looked bleak. The Army of the Potomac had suffered devastating losses at the battles of Fredericksburg and Chancellorsville. In the west, Union armies could still not break the Confederate hold on the Mississippi River. Two long years of war had sapped ...
Chapter Themes: READ THIS—these are model thesis
... Lee thought of war in the old way as a conflict between armies and refused to view it for what it had become—a struggle between societies. To him, economic war was needless cruelty to civilians. Lee was the last of the great oldfashioned generals, Grant the first of the great moderns.” ...
... Lee thought of war in the old way as a conflict between armies and refused to view it for what it had become—a struggle between societies. To him, economic war was needless cruelty to civilians. Lee was the last of the great oldfashioned generals, Grant the first of the great moderns.” ...
Case Study: Battle of Atlanta Major General John Bell Hood, CSA
... of our present position.” On the night of July 17, Davis removed Johnston and placed the 33year-old Hood as the Army of Tennessee’s new commander. The vainglorious Hood was now the youngest Confederate general to command an entire army. He was also the Army of Tennessee’s fifth leader in three years ...
... of our present position.” On the night of July 17, Davis removed Johnston and placed the 33year-old Hood as the Army of Tennessee’s new commander. The vainglorious Hood was now the youngest Confederate general to command an entire army. He was also the Army of Tennessee’s fifth leader in three years ...
Georgia in the American Civil War
On January 19, 1861, Georgia, a slave state, declared that it had seceded from the United States and joined the newly formed Confederacy the next month, during the prelude to the American Civil War. During the war, Georgia sent nearly 100,000 men to battle for the Confederacy, mostly to the Virginian armies. Despite secession, many southerners in North Georgia remained loyal to the Union. Approximately 5,000 Georgians served in the Union army in units including the 1st Georgia Infantry Battalion, the 1st Alabama Cavalry Regiment, and a number of East Tennessean regiments. The state switched from cotton to food production, but severe transportation difficulties eventually restricted supplies. Early in the war, the state's 1,400 miles of railroad tracks provided a frequently used means of moving supplies and men but, by the middle of 1864, much of these lay in ruins or in Union hands.The Georgia legislature voted $100,000 to be sent to South Carolina for the relief of Charlestonians who suffered a disastrous fire in December 1861.Thinking the state was immune from invasion, the Confederates built several small munitions factories in Georgia, and housed tens of thousands of Union prisoners. Their largest prisoner of war camp was at Andersonville.