Civil War Part I
... – 4 weeks of grueling battles here – Union loses more than 50,000 men The Siege of Petersburg begins – A mere matter of time and numbers – Lee – Avoid a direct conflict with Lee at Richmond and instead wear them down – Important supply, rail, and communications center (connected directly to Richmond ...
... – 4 weeks of grueling battles here – Union loses more than 50,000 men The Siege of Petersburg begins – A mere matter of time and numbers – Lee – Avoid a direct conflict with Lee at Richmond and instead wear them down – Important supply, rail, and communications center (connected directly to Richmond ...
Chapter 14
... • Snuck into Washington under disguise. • South Carolina was the first state to secede • 7 states total seceded before inauguration. • James Buchanan: indecisive predecessor • Felt states had no right to secede, but federal gov’t could not stop them. • Confederate States of America seized all federa ...
... • Snuck into Washington under disguise. • South Carolina was the first state to secede • 7 states total seceded before inauguration. • James Buchanan: indecisive predecessor • Felt states had no right to secede, but federal gov’t could not stop them. • Confederate States of America seized all federa ...
Battles of the Civil War
... • Invading Union armies destroyed crops so the people of the south often went hungry. ...
... • Invading Union armies destroyed crops so the people of the south often went hungry. ...
- Thomas C. Cario Middle School
... 8-4.5 Focus Question: What were the military strategies used by the Confederacy and Union during the Civil War? ...
... 8-4.5 Focus Question: What were the military strategies used by the Confederacy and Union during the Civil War? ...
Aim #39: What led southern states to secede
... d. Confederacy formed (February 4, 1861) 1. Jefferson Davis chosen as president of the provisional government d. President Buchanan did little to prevent southern secession 1. Believed Constitution didn’t give him authority to stop secession with force 2. Many of his advisors were prosouthern e. Lin ...
... d. Confederacy formed (February 4, 1861) 1. Jefferson Davis chosen as president of the provisional government d. President Buchanan did little to prevent southern secession 1. Believed Constitution didn’t give him authority to stop secession with force 2. Many of his advisors were prosouthern e. Lin ...
U.S. Civil War
... Rifles were more accurate, and new weapons such as exploding shells, flamethrowers and even machine guns were used. Observation balloons, camouflage, and the telegraph marked the Civil War as the last of the oldtime wars and the first of the modern ones. The Battle of Bull Run near Washington D.C. w ...
... Rifles were more accurate, and new weapons such as exploding shells, flamethrowers and even machine guns were used. Observation balloons, camouflage, and the telegraph marked the Civil War as the last of the oldtime wars and the first of the modern ones. The Battle of Bull Run near Washington D.C. w ...
The Civil War In Texas and Beyond
... • ______________________________________________ were part of this battle. Forty Unionists Hanged in Gainesville • Some _____________________ Unionists were killed trying to leave Texas. • Other Unionists were captured, arrested, and forced into the _________________ Battle of New Orleans • Union Ad ...
... • ______________________________________________ were part of this battle. Forty Unionists Hanged in Gainesville • Some _____________________ Unionists were killed trying to leave Texas. • Other Unionists were captured, arrested, and forced into the _________________ Battle of New Orleans • Union Ad ...
Major Events of the Civil War
... This march took place at the end of 1864. The march started in Atlanta, Georgia & stopped at the port town of Savannah, Georgia Sherman felt that the Civil War would end only if the Confederacy's strategic, economic, and psychological capacity for warfare were decisively broken. Sherman ther ...
... This march took place at the end of 1864. The march started in Atlanta, Georgia & stopped at the port town of Savannah, Georgia Sherman felt that the Civil War would end only if the Confederacy's strategic, economic, and psychological capacity for warfare were decisively broken. Sherman ther ...
Monday, November 9
... • Sherman believed in total war. The Union troops under his command destroyed everything the enemy might use to survive. • Sherman took Atlanta in time to help Lincoln’s reelection in 1864. • Sherman marched into Savannah, and completed his campaign in February 1865 by setting fire to Columbia, the ...
... • Sherman believed in total war. The Union troops under his command destroyed everything the enemy might use to survive. • Sherman took Atlanta in time to help Lincoln’s reelection in 1864. • Sherman marched into Savannah, and completed his campaign in February 1865 by setting fire to Columbia, the ...
The Civil War part 3
... The north mourned the loss of Lincoln and a massive manhunt began to hunt down his killer. Booth was killed days later. ...
... The north mourned the loss of Lincoln and a massive manhunt began to hunt down his killer. Booth was killed days later. ...
A.P. U.S. History Notes Chapter 16: The Civil War Summary: In 1860
... and The confederate President Jefferson Davis hoped for peace but this was not to be the case as war broke out following the attack on union troops bringing supplies to Ft. Sumter. Many new war tactics were first applied such as total war and fighting with ironclads. In January of 1863 President Lin ...
... and The confederate President Jefferson Davis hoped for peace but this was not to be the case as war broke out following the attack on union troops bringing supplies to Ft. Sumter. Many new war tactics were first applied such as total war and fighting with ironclads. In January of 1863 President Lin ...
LIFE DURING THE WAR
... UNIT 7: MILITARY CONFLICT LESSON 7.5: Part 4: Life During the War and Turning Points ...
... UNIT 7: MILITARY CONFLICT LESSON 7.5: Part 4: Life During the War and Turning Points ...
Chapter 16 Civil War Study Guide
... anything special about any of these leaders? For example were some asked to fight or lead one side but chose to fight or lead the other? How did the Union and Confederate armies get men to serve in the military? Did it change from the beginning of the war until the end? Know about the major battles ...
... anything special about any of these leaders? For example were some asked to fight or lead one side but chose to fight or lead the other? How did the Union and Confederate armies get men to serve in the military? Did it change from the beginning of the war until the end? Know about the major battles ...
Chapter 11-The Civil War (1861
... -The upper Southern states refused to fight against other southern states. April: Virginia would secede (western counties were anti-slavery so the Union let them in as West Virginia), May: Arkansas, Tennessee, and North Carolina followed. -There were 11 confederate states now. -The four remaining sl ...
... -The upper Southern states refused to fight against other southern states. April: Virginia would secede (western counties were anti-slavery so the Union let them in as West Virginia), May: Arkansas, Tennessee, and North Carolina followed. -There were 11 confederate states now. -The four remaining sl ...
Chapter 11-The Civil War
... -The upper Southern states refused to fight against other southern states. April: Virginia would secede (western counties were anti-slavery so the Union let them in as West Virginia), May: Arkansas, Tennessee, and North Carolina followed. -There were 11 confederate states now. -The four remaining sl ...
... -The upper Southern states refused to fight against other southern states. April: Virginia would secede (western counties were anti-slavery so the Union let them in as West Virginia), May: Arkansas, Tennessee, and North Carolina followed. -There were 11 confederate states now. -The four remaining sl ...
The Civil War
... Step One: Cripple the South by blockading Southern Ports. This would stop the South from shipping goods and getting more supplies. Step Two: Take control of the Mississippi River and cut the South in two Step Three: Take Richmond ...
... Step One: Cripple the South by blockading Southern Ports. This would stop the South from shipping goods and getting more supplies. Step Two: Take control of the Mississippi River and cut the South in two Step Three: Take Richmond ...
What was NC`s role in the Civil War efforts?
... nurses. They took care of homes and ran plantations. Some impersonated men in order to fight. They also ran factories and mills • Children as young as 9 served in the military • African-Americans served as cooks, spies, scouts, and drivers for supply wagons • By the end of the war 179,000 men of Afr ...
... nurses. They took care of homes and ran plantations. Some impersonated men in order to fight. They also ran factories and mills • Children as young as 9 served in the military • African-Americans served as cooks, spies, scouts, and drivers for supply wagons • By the end of the war 179,000 men of Afr ...
AP US History - DavidBAPNotebook
... The North was victorious because it had a larger pool of well trained and/or experienced military leaders and larger forces in general. Union forces had Ulysses S. Grant and Sherman. On the other hand the Confederacy only had Robert E. Lee. Grant and Sherman were really important because of their fe ...
... The North was victorious because it had a larger pool of well trained and/or experienced military leaders and larger forces in general. Union forces had Ulysses S. Grant and Sherman. On the other hand the Confederacy only had Robert E. Lee. Grant and Sherman were really important because of their fe ...
US History Name Unit 4: The Civil War and Reconstruction (1850
... 13. Clara Barton, who founded the ________________ after the war, was one of ______________ female nurses who tended the wounded during the war. 14. About how many photographs were taken during the war? ______________ 15. Many undertakers became millionaires during the war due to improvements in ___ ...
... 13. Clara Barton, who founded the ________________ after the war, was one of ______________ female nurses who tended the wounded during the war. 14. About how many photographs were taken during the war? ______________ 15. Many undertakers became millionaires during the war due to improvements in ___ ...
Fighting the Civil War Group Questions
... determined the majority of the activity west of the Appalachian Mountains. 3) A Union blockade of the southern port cities to prevent trade and the movement of troops and supplies by sea. The union also took over the barrier islands along the North and South Carolina coast and used them as Union nav ...
... determined the majority of the activity west of the Appalachian Mountains. 3) A Union blockade of the southern port cities to prevent trade and the movement of troops and supplies by sea. The union also took over the barrier islands along the North and South Carolina coast and used them as Union nav ...
Chapter 11: The Civil War
... • These forts were important water routes into the western Confed. • Feb. 6– Union gunboats pounded Ft Henry into surrender & a few days later Ft Donelson did too ...
... • These forts were important water routes into the western Confed. • Feb. 6– Union gunboats pounded Ft Henry into surrender & a few days later Ft Donelson did too ...
Chapter 5: Civil War Test Multiple Choice Identify the letter of the
... ____ 28. As president of the Confederate States, Jefferson Davis immediately asked for volunteers to join the Confederate Army. As the war went on, he was forced to pass a "conscription law," which meant that: a. soldiers had to have a certain degree of military training before going into battle. b ...
... ____ 28. As president of the Confederate States, Jefferson Davis immediately asked for volunteers to join the Confederate Army. As the war went on, he was forced to pass a "conscription law," which meant that: a. soldiers had to have a certain degree of military training before going into battle. b ...
The Civil War
... was going to last a lot longer then was originally thought • Most people thought the Civil War would only last a few months ...
... was going to last a lot longer then was originally thought • Most people thought the Civil War would only last a few months ...
The American Civil War
... Southerners felt their economic, property, and other rights were threatened ...
... Southerners felt their economic, property, and other rights were threatened ...
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.