Paper
... Union precisely because they feared that Lincoln’s election pointed to the end of slavery in the United States. But a number of modern works by influential scholars continue to deny that this was the concern of the four states of the upper South -- Arkansas, Tennessee, North Carolina, and Virginia – ...
... Union precisely because they feared that Lincoln’s election pointed to the end of slavery in the United States. But a number of modern works by influential scholars continue to deny that this was the concern of the four states of the upper South -- Arkansas, Tennessee, North Carolina, and Virginia – ...
Button Text
... enlisting for a steady income. However, when it was apparent that it would take more than 90 days to put down the insurrectionists, the Federal Government began to offer bounties to volunteers and instituted a draft. There were many people living in the Border States who opposed secession and suppor ...
... enlisting for a steady income. However, when it was apparent that it would take more than 90 days to put down the insurrectionists, the Federal Government began to offer bounties to volunteers and instituted a draft. There were many people living in the Border States who opposed secession and suppor ...
History 202: Class Notes - Linn
... possibility of carving another slave state out of Texas --Fugitive Slave Code of 1850: This was the part of the Compromise which would cause increasingly strained relations between North and South over the next decade. It not only prohibited Northern citizens from helping or hiding runaway slaves, b ...
... possibility of carving another slave state out of Texas --Fugitive Slave Code of 1850: This was the part of the Compromise which would cause increasingly strained relations between North and South over the next decade. It not only prohibited Northern citizens from helping or hiding runaway slaves, b ...
Main Idea 1 - St. Mary of Gostyn
... Border states—Delaware, Kentucky, Maryland, and Missouri— were slave states that did not join the Confederacy, but people were divided on the war. Western Virginia supported the Union and set up its own state government as West Virginia in 1863. ...
... Border states—Delaware, Kentucky, Maryland, and Missouri— were slave states that did not join the Confederacy, but people were divided on the war. Western Virginia supported the Union and set up its own state government as West Virginia in 1863. ...
No Slide Title
... Women Aid the War Effort • Many women run farms, take over “men’s” work in factories, offices • Work for soldier relief agencies and as nurses • In North, Dorothea Dix is leader of about 3,000 nurses • Women serve as spies, including: - Harriet Tubman for North - Belle Boyd for South ...
... Women Aid the War Effort • Many women run farms, take over “men’s” work in factories, offices • Work for soldier relief agencies and as nurses • In North, Dorothea Dix is leader of about 3,000 nurses • Women serve as spies, including: - Harriet Tubman for North - Belle Boyd for South ...
Compromise of 1850 Missouri Compromise Nationalism Sectionalism
... Someone who is competing in an election ...
... Someone who is competing in an election ...
Reconstruction
... What were 3 advantages for the North during the Civil War? What were 2 disadvantages for the North during the C.W.? What were 3 advantages for the South during the C.W.? What were 2 disadvantages for the South during the C.W.? ...
... What were 3 advantages for the North during the Civil War? What were 2 disadvantages for the North during the C.W.? What were 3 advantages for the South during the C.W.? What were 2 disadvantages for the South during the C.W.? ...
Civil War to Gettyburg - Sign in to Westminster School
... The British are generally perplexed by the Civil War; they see both sides as losers… ...
... The British are generally perplexed by the Civil War; they see both sides as losers… ...
8th Grade SS Brainstorming Power Standards Updated
... Won Elections in Georgia for the First Time. Klu Klux Klan - The Rise of Secret Hate Groups ...
... Won Elections in Georgia for the First Time. Klu Klux Klan - The Rise of Secret Hate Groups ...
Chapter 16 Powerpoint
... Border states—Delaware, Kentucky, Maryland, and Missouri— were slave states that did not join the Confederacy, but people were divided on the war. Western Virginia supported the Union and set up its own state government as West Virginia in 1863. ...
... Border states—Delaware, Kentucky, Maryland, and Missouri— were slave states that did not join the Confederacy, but people were divided on the war. Western Virginia supported the Union and set up its own state government as West Virginia in 1863. ...
Advantage & Disadvantage
... Battle of Fredericksburg On November 14, Burnside, now in command of the Army of the Potomac, sent a corps to occupy the vicinity of Falmouth near Fredericksburg. The rest of the army soon followed. Lee reacted by entrenching his army on the heights behind the town. On December 11, Union engineers ...
... Battle of Fredericksburg On November 14, Burnside, now in command of the Army of the Potomac, sent a corps to occupy the vicinity of Falmouth near Fredericksburg. The rest of the army soon followed. Lee reacted by entrenching his army on the heights behind the town. On December 11, Union engineers ...
- Toolbox Pro
... Border states—Delaware, Kentucky, Maryland, and Missouri— were slave states that did not join the Confederacy, but people were divided on the war. Western Virginia supported the Union and set up its own state government as West Virginia in 1863. ...
... Border states—Delaware, Kentucky, Maryland, and Missouri— were slave states that did not join the Confederacy, but people were divided on the war. Western Virginia supported the Union and set up its own state government as West Virginia in 1863. ...
the civil war
... • Conflict over Slavery in territories • Economic differences b/w North and South – Tariffs of 1816, 1828, ...
... • Conflict over Slavery in territories • Economic differences b/w North and South – Tariffs of 1816, 1828, ...
The Civil War
... • In 1865 Congress passed the Thirteenth Amendment, which truly freed enslaved Americans everywhere. ...
... • In 1865 Congress passed the Thirteenth Amendment, which truly freed enslaved Americans everywhere. ...
expansion of slavery
... Needs Southern votes to pass his plan South insists slavery be allowed in the territories that had been closed with the Missouri Compromise Douglas splits Kansas and Nebraska and agrees to extend popular sovereignty to these territories Victory for the South, but costly results ...
... Needs Southern votes to pass his plan South insists slavery be allowed in the territories that had been closed with the Missouri Compromise Douglas splits Kansas and Nebraska and agrees to extend popular sovereignty to these territories Victory for the South, but costly results ...
Chapter 6 - Lesson 1 - Filled in Notes
... Other than Spain, France, Britain and eventually the U.S. claimed land in this region. Many people wanted to live here because of the excellent farmland. (the following set of notes are the reasons why farming was so successful in this region.) 1. gently rolling or flat coastal plains 2. rich soil i ...
... Other than Spain, France, Britain and eventually the U.S. claimed land in this region. Many people wanted to live here because of the excellent farmland. (the following set of notes are the reasons why farming was so successful in this region.) 1. gently rolling or flat coastal plains 2. rich soil i ...
What should happen to former Confederate
... Democrats back in power, there is a revival of southern defiance and the creation of ...
... Democrats back in power, there is a revival of southern defiance and the creation of ...
The Battle of Gettysburg
... 12,000 Rebels formed an orderly line that stretched a mile from flank to flank. In deliberate silence and with military pageantry from days gone by, they slowly headed toward the Union Army a mile away on Cemetery Ridge as the Federals gazed in silent wonder at this spectacular sight. ...
... 12,000 Rebels formed an orderly line that stretched a mile from flank to flank. In deliberate silence and with military pageantry from days gone by, they slowly headed toward the Union Army a mile away on Cemetery Ridge as the Federals gazed in silent wonder at this spectacular sight. ...
1 - Cabarrus County Schools
... Designed to give the war a higher purpose and to keep Britain from entering the war. 99. Union General who led the march through the South in 1864 destroying several southern cities including Atlanta. “War is Hell” 100. Assassinated Abraham Lincoln. Was a Confederate sympathizer. 101. Became Preside ...
... Designed to give the war a higher purpose and to keep Britain from entering the war. 99. Union General who led the march through the South in 1864 destroying several southern cities including Atlanta. “War is Hell” 100. Assassinated Abraham Lincoln. Was a Confederate sympathizer. 101. Became Preside ...
Civil War and Reconstruction Timeline
... March 11, The Confederate States of America adopts a Constitution. The Confederacy presently 1861 includes only the seven states of the Deep South Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, South Carolina and Texas. April 12, South Carolina troops fire on the Federal arsenal at Fort Sumter. ...
... March 11, The Confederate States of America adopts a Constitution. The Confederacy presently 1861 includes only the seven states of the Deep South Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, South Carolina and Texas. April 12, South Carolina troops fire on the Federal arsenal at Fort Sumter. ...
The Civil War - middletonhsapush
... The north had a population of 22 million, with immigrants pouring in from Europe daily, while the south only had a population of 9 million, including 3.5 million slaves. The south was counting on foreign aid from Britain who relied on southern cotton for manufacturing, but the help did not come ...
... The north had a population of 22 million, with immigrants pouring in from Europe daily, while the south only had a population of 9 million, including 3.5 million slaves. The south was counting on foreign aid from Britain who relied on southern cotton for manufacturing, but the help did not come ...
Civil War Battle Map 2015-2016
... The Confederate States of America quickly seized nearly all federal property within its borders. Confederate President, Jefferson Davis, demanded that Northern troops abandon Fort Sumter in the harbor at Charleston, South Carolina. Sumter was one of only two forts that still remained in Union hands. ...
... The Confederate States of America quickly seized nearly all federal property within its borders. Confederate President, Jefferson Davis, demanded that Northern troops abandon Fort Sumter in the harbor at Charleston, South Carolina. Sumter was one of only two forts that still remained in Union hands. ...
The Civil War - Coronado High School
... • In early 1864 he brought Grant east to Virginia and made him commander of all the Union armies • Grant’s approach to ending the war was simply to outlast Lee by fighting a war of attrition • Grant cut off resources to Lee’s army, suffering heavier casualties than Lee’s forces in the battles of the ...
... • In early 1864 he brought Grant east to Virginia and made him commander of all the Union armies • Grant’s approach to ending the war was simply to outlast Lee by fighting a war of attrition • Grant cut off resources to Lee’s army, suffering heavier casualties than Lee’s forces in the battles of the ...
Chapter 21 Reading Guide
... 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.” ...
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.