Civil War and Reconstruction Study Guide
... 1. In the South, after the invention of the cotton gin a. Planters bought more land and fewer enslaved people. b. Planters bought some land and stopped enslaving people. c. Planters bought more land and more enslaved people. 2. Which of the following sentences is true? a. There were more factories ...
... 1. In the South, after the invention of the cotton gin a. Planters bought more land and fewer enslaved people. b. Planters bought some land and stopped enslaving people. c. Planters bought more land and more enslaved people. 2. Which of the following sentences is true? a. There were more factories ...
Chapter 11 Section 2
... South? Why? April 1861: Lincoln announces a blockade of all Southern ports Was successful by spring 1862 except for Charleston, SC and Wilmington, NC Point was to create economic pressure on the South ...
... South? Why? April 1861: Lincoln announces a blockade of all Southern ports Was successful by spring 1862 except for Charleston, SC and Wilmington, NC Point was to create economic pressure on the South ...
The Civil War: The North vs The South
... Like Lincoln, he was more interested in keeping the country together than ending slavery. “I never was an Abolitionist, not even would would be called anti-slavery” But later when he became president, he worked hard for the rights of freed African American He was a binge drinker, in fact, the ma ...
... Like Lincoln, he was more interested in keeping the country together than ending slavery. “I never was an Abolitionist, not even would would be called anti-slavery” But later when he became president, he worked hard for the rights of freed African American He was a binge drinker, in fact, the ma ...
Name: Period: Reconstruction Plans Lincoln`s Reconstruction
... - Military and Political leaders were not pardoned and were tried for treason (but many were actually pardoned) - 13th amendment which abolished slavery - Believed voting rights was an issue for the states - Appointed govt. officials that supported and passed Black Codes - Renewed the Freedman’s Bur ...
... - Military and Political leaders were not pardoned and were tried for treason (but many were actually pardoned) - 13th amendment which abolished slavery - Believed voting rights was an issue for the states - Appointed govt. officials that supported and passed Black Codes - Renewed the Freedman’s Bur ...
AFRICAN-AMERICAN SOLDIERS IN THE CIVIL WAR
... African American Soldiers • Emancipation Proclamation not only freed slaves, but allowed African Americans to enlist in U.S. Army • African American rushed to join the Army • By the end of the war, about 180,000 black soldiers fought for the Union • About 10% of the Union Army ...
... African American Soldiers • Emancipation Proclamation not only freed slaves, but allowed African Americans to enlist in U.S. Army • African American rushed to join the Army • By the end of the war, about 180,000 black soldiers fought for the Union • About 10% of the Union Army ...
UbD - Civil War - historymalden
... Role – Your role will be one of the following: Union general Union newspaper reporter Supreme Court Chief Justice Salmon P. Chase Confederate general Confederate newspaper reporter Confederate Vice President Alexander Stephens Audience – The American people, Congress, and the President S ...
... Role – Your role will be one of the following: Union general Union newspaper reporter Supreme Court Chief Justice Salmon P. Chase Confederate general Confederate newspaper reporter Confederate Vice President Alexander Stephens Audience – The American people, Congress, and the President S ...
CAPP Notes Chapter 13 and 14
... issues (Douglass broke up Clay’s huge resolution“omnibus bill”- into individual parts to be passed one by one through Congress) Millard Fillmore supported Compromise of 1850 Defused rising sectional tensions within the U.S. (only temporarily defused tensions) California admitted as free state with N ...
... issues (Douglass broke up Clay’s huge resolution“omnibus bill”- into individual parts to be passed one by one through Congress) Millard Fillmore supported Compromise of 1850 Defused rising sectional tensions within the U.S. (only temporarily defused tensions) California admitted as free state with N ...
Underlying Causes of the Civil War
... dedicated to restriction of slavery from the territories • The Slavery Issue divides the Democratic Party in 1860, resulting in a Republican victory. The South secedes with Lincoln’s election ...
... dedicated to restriction of slavery from the territories • The Slavery Issue divides the Democratic Party in 1860, resulting in a Republican victory. The South secedes with Lincoln’s election ...
The Roll Call The Binghamton Civil War Historical Society and Round Table
... possible against General Sherman’s forces in and around Atlanta, Confederate General John B. Hood had decided to completely vacate the region and carry offensive actions to the precarious federal supply corridor along the route of the Western & Atlantic Railroad, that ran for nearly 140 miles betwee ...
... possible against General Sherman’s forces in and around Atlanta, Confederate General John B. Hood had decided to completely vacate the region and carry offensive actions to the precarious federal supply corridor along the route of the Western & Atlantic Railroad, that ran for nearly 140 miles betwee ...
TAKS Success Camp: Objective 1
... Angered Northerners because they would have been free states according to Missouri Compromise ...
... Angered Northerners because they would have been free states according to Missouri Compromise ...
black confederate soldiers?
... Britain, was not widespread. Slavery existed in Africa, and enslaved blacks there had been sold to white slavers who brought them to America. In his book, Black Confederates and Afro-Yankees in Civil War Virginia, Ervin I. Jordan, a black historian, says that in June 1861 Tennessee became the first ...
... Britain, was not widespread. Slavery existed in Africa, and enslaved blacks there had been sold to white slavers who brought them to America. In his book, Black Confederates and Afro-Yankees in Civil War Virginia, Ervin I. Jordan, a black historian, says that in June 1861 Tennessee became the first ...
No Slide Title - Campbell County Schools
... lenient because he didn’t want to do this to the South. ...
... lenient because he didn’t want to do this to the South. ...
Name: Date: ______ 1. Which of the following courses of action did
... A) it reopened the Mississippi River to Northern trade. B) coupled with the victory at Gettysburg, foreign help for the Confederacy was irretrievably lost. C) it helped to quell Northern peace agitation. D) it cut off the supply of cattle and other goods from Texas and Louisiana. E) all of the above ...
... A) it reopened the Mississippi River to Northern trade. B) coupled with the victory at Gettysburg, foreign help for the Confederacy was irretrievably lost. C) it helped to quell Northern peace agitation. D) it cut off the supply of cattle and other goods from Texas and Louisiana. E) all of the above ...
american history civil war politics
... Located at the mouth of Charleston Harbor, Ft. Sumter was one of two last remaining federal strongholds in the South (the other Ft. Pickering in Florida) 1. The day after inauguration, Lincoln notified by Major Robert Anderson that supplies to the fort would soon run out and he would be forced to su ...
... Located at the mouth of Charleston Harbor, Ft. Sumter was one of two last remaining federal strongholds in the South (the other Ft. Pickering in Florida) 1. The day after inauguration, Lincoln notified by Major Robert Anderson that supplies to the fort would soon run out and he would be forced to su ...
Topic 27 Why did the North win the Civil War
... "My paramount objective in this struggle is to save the union, and it is not either to save or destroy slavery. If I could save the Union without freeing any slave, I would do it; and if I could save it by freeing all the slaves, I would do it; if I could save it by freeing some and leaving others a ...
... "My paramount objective in this struggle is to save the union, and it is not either to save or destroy slavery. If I could save the Union without freeing any slave, I would do it; and if I could save it by freeing all the slaves, I would do it; if I could save it by freeing some and leaving others a ...
A Nation Divided 1861-1865
... the seven states held a convention in Montgomery, Alabama, and formed the Confederate States of America. Jefferson Davis of Mississippi was named the President. The South felt they had the right to secede. The Declaration of Independence stated that “it is the right of the people to alter or to abol ...
... the seven states held a convention in Montgomery, Alabama, and formed the Confederate States of America. Jefferson Davis of Mississippi was named the President. The South felt they had the right to secede. The Declaration of Independence stated that “it is the right of the people to alter or to abol ...
Civil War to WWI Study Guide
... 1. The first Union victory was at Fort Donelson. 2. Another battle won by the Union was Gettysburg. 3. Thomas “Stonewall” Jackson stood like a stone wall against the Union attacks in the first battle of Bull Run. 4. The Jim Crow Laws were Segregation Laws. 5. Slavery was replaced by sharecropping. 6 ...
... 1. The first Union victory was at Fort Donelson. 2. Another battle won by the Union was Gettysburg. 3. Thomas “Stonewall” Jackson stood like a stone wall against the Union attacks in the first battle of Bull Run. 4. The Jim Crow Laws were Segregation Laws. 5. Slavery was replaced by sharecropping. 6 ...
End of the War between the States and Reconstruction
... To avoid being trapped in the city, Confederate General John B. Hood evacuated Atlanta on September 1. Sherman and his troops occupied Atlanta. His troops burned everything in the city of military value. The fires quickly spread and burned down more than one-third of Atlanta. ...
... To avoid being trapped in the city, Confederate General John B. Hood evacuated Atlanta on September 1. Sherman and his troops occupied Atlanta. His troops burned everything in the city of military value. The fires quickly spread and burned down more than one-third of Atlanta. ...
Chapter 17.1- Lecture Station - Waverly
... Families searched for members who had been sold away. Many moved from mostly white counties to places with more African Americans. ...
... Families searched for members who had been sold away. Many moved from mostly white counties to places with more African Americans. ...
The Civil War – Create A Living Timeline Overview Students will
... rechristened the C.S.S. Virginia. On March 9, in the first naval engagement between ironclad ships, the Monitor fought the Virginia to a draw, but not before the Virginia had sunk two wooden Union warships off Norfolk, Virginia. (Battle of the “Monitor” and the “Merrimac”) April 1862 ‐ The Battl ...
... rechristened the C.S.S. Virginia. On March 9, in the first naval engagement between ironclad ships, the Monitor fought the Virginia to a draw, but not before the Virginia had sunk two wooden Union warships off Norfolk, Virginia. (Battle of the “Monitor” and the “Merrimac”) April 1862 ‐ The Battl ...
Unit 7 and Unit 8 Review – Answer Key Cause: Annexation of TX
... New Boundaries and population increases Slavery will increase; cause war with Mexico; U.S. has to pay debt War between US & Mexico There would be more slave states and they would win if they fought for all states, Texas debt paid off, manifest destiny for US Texas debt gets paid off President Polk N ...
... New Boundaries and population increases Slavery will increase; cause war with Mexico; U.S. has to pay debt War between US & Mexico There would be more slave states and they would win if they fought for all states, Texas debt paid off, manifest destiny for US Texas debt gets paid off President Polk N ...
Divided Loyalties - Deer Creek High School
... [Pro-slavery] Stephen Douglas (center), Northern Democrat (30%) [Popular sovereignty] John Bell (right), Constitutional Union (10%) [Status quo] ...
... [Pro-slavery] Stephen Douglas (center), Northern Democrat (30%) [Popular sovereignty] John Bell (right), Constitutional Union (10%) [Status quo] ...
CHAPTER 3: THE GROWTH OF A YOUNG NATION
... election with less than half the popular vote and no Southern electoral votes • The Southern states were not happy ...
... election with less than half the popular vote and no Southern electoral votes • The Southern states were not happy ...
Chapter 22 Questions
... What effects did the union’s Sea Blockade have on the Confederacy? (P.466) What were Gen. Robert E. Lee’s reasons for marching into Maryland? (P.467) What was significant about the battle of Antietam Creek? (Think in terms of lives lost and international ramifications) (P.467-468) Why was the victor ...
... What effects did the union’s Sea Blockade have on the Confederacy? (P.466) What were Gen. Robert E. Lee’s reasons for marching into Maryland? (P.467) What was significant about the battle of Antietam Creek? (Think in terms of lives lost and international ramifications) (P.467-468) Why was the victor ...
Course: US History - Hayes - District 196 e
... 101. What was the chief killer of the Civil War, which killed 2 for every one who died in battle? NORTHERN LIGHTS 102. Before he could attack Fredricksburg, Gen. Burnside had to wait 17 days for ________. 103. By the time Burnside’s pontoon bridges arrived there were how many Confederate troops wait ...
... 101. What was the chief killer of the Civil War, which killed 2 for every one who died in battle? NORTHERN LIGHTS 102. Before he could attack Fredricksburg, Gen. Burnside had to wait 17 days for ________. 103. By the time Burnside’s pontoon bridges arrived there were how many Confederate troops wait ...
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.