EpisodE 5: CiViL WAR
... America reached a crossroads as the Civil War intensified. Strict discipline and advances such as the minie ball bullet have welded General Robert E. Lee’s Confederate army into a formidable force. Lee’s victory at the Second Battle of Bull Run in August of 1862 leads him to within 20 miles of Washi ...
... America reached a crossroads as the Civil War intensified. Strict discipline and advances such as the minie ball bullet have welded General Robert E. Lee’s Confederate army into a formidable force. Lee’s victory at the Second Battle of Bull Run in August of 1862 leads him to within 20 miles of Washi ...
Webquest
... General Jackson receive the name Stonewall? What did this battle prove? ____________________________________________ _____________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________ ...
... General Jackson receive the name Stonewall? What did this battle prove? ____________________________________________ _____________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________ ...
Brief Summary Manifest Destiny, Slavery, and
... The Civil War caught both the North and South ill prepared. Both sides assumed that the war would be short. The war would drag on for five long, bloody years. Society transformed as slaves were freed and the South was destroyed economically. The process of rebuilding the South, called reconstruction ...
... The Civil War caught both the North and South ill prepared. Both sides assumed that the war would be short. The war would drag on for five long, bloody years. Society transformed as slaves were freed and the South was destroyed economically. The process of rebuilding the South, called reconstruction ...
Lesson Plan - Madame Tussauds
... criticized Lee for tactical errors. However, he developed an aggressive approach that enabled him to win battles and break down the defenses of the United States Army. His characteristics won him the loyalty of his officers, such as Thomas “Stonewall” Jackson, and great popularity among his soldiers ...
... criticized Lee for tactical errors. However, he developed an aggressive approach that enabled him to win battles and break down the defenses of the United States Army. His characteristics won him the loyalty of his officers, such as Thomas “Stonewall” Jackson, and great popularity among his soldiers ...
How President Lincoln Decided to Issue the
... slavery,is but a half-heartedbusiness.Warfor the destructionof liberty must be met with war for the destructionof slavery."More and more Republicans- eventually including Lincoln - came to agree with this idea as the war ground on. They took note of southernboasts that slavery was a "tower of streng ...
... slavery,is but a half-heartedbusiness.Warfor the destructionof liberty must be met with war for the destructionof slavery."More and more Republicans- eventually including Lincoln - came to agree with this idea as the war ground on. They took note of southernboasts that slavery was a "tower of streng ...
Robert E. Lee
... criticized Lee for tactical errors. However, he developed an aggressive approach that enabled him to win battles and break down the defenses of the United States Army. His characteristics won him the loyalty of his officers, such as Thomas “Stonewall” Jackson, and great popularity among his soldiers ...
... criticized Lee for tactical errors. However, he developed an aggressive approach that enabled him to win battles and break down the defenses of the United States Army. His characteristics won him the loyalty of his officers, such as Thomas “Stonewall” Jackson, and great popularity among his soldiers ...
B is for Battle Cry: A Civil War Alphabet
... on the line in front of the statement. If it is true only of Davis put a D on the line. If it is true about both men put a B on the line. ____ 1. Born in Kentucky ____ 2. Born in 1809 ____ 3. Grew up in Mississippi ____ 4. Attended the U.S.S Military Academy ____ 5. Shot by John Wilkes Booth ____6. ...
... on the line in front of the statement. If it is true only of Davis put a D on the line. If it is true about both men put a B on the line. ____ 1. Born in Kentucky ____ 2. Born in 1809 ____ 3. Grew up in Mississippi ____ 4. Attended the U.S.S Military Academy ____ 5. Shot by John Wilkes Booth ____6. ...
CVHRI Newsletter.wps
... gender all playing a role-it is nonetheless possible to get an idea of what many people earned by looking at a number of specific examples. Once the war began, inflation caused wages to increase more in the Confederacy than in the Union states, but Southerners actually tended to have less buying pow ...
... gender all playing a role-it is nonetheless possible to get an idea of what many people earned by looking at a number of specific examples. Once the war began, inflation caused wages to increase more in the Confederacy than in the Union states, but Southerners actually tended to have less buying pow ...
Chapter 21
... • By war’s end some 180,000 blacks served in the Union army, most of them from the slave states, many more from the free-soil North • Blacks accounted for about 10% of the total enlistments in the Union forces on land and sea – Two Mass. Regiments were raised largely through the efforts of the ex-sl ...
... • By war’s end some 180,000 blacks served in the Union army, most of them from the slave states, many more from the free-soil North • Blacks accounted for about 10% of the total enlistments in the Union forces on land and sea – Two Mass. Regiments were raised largely through the efforts of the ex-sl ...
Carpetbaggers and Scalawags
... "You are scalawags!" they said. A scalawag is a person who can't be trusted. By helping bring back national rule, these Southerners seemed to be joining the enemy. Confederate General James Longstreet was one of Robert E. Lee's most trusted officers. Longstreet became a friend to Ulysses Grant after ...
... "You are scalawags!" they said. A scalawag is a person who can't be trusted. By helping bring back national rule, these Southerners seemed to be joining the enemy. Confederate General James Longstreet was one of Robert E. Lee's most trusted officers. Longstreet became a friend to Ulysses Grant after ...
NC State Brochure cover-side
... Sea” and captured Savannah, Georgia. He soon headed north through the Carolinas, planning ultimately to link his army with those that Union general-in-chief Ulysses S. Grant accompanied in Virginia. Sherman marched into South Carolina on February 1, 1865. Confederate Gen. Joseph E. Johnston concentr ...
... Sea” and captured Savannah, Georgia. He soon headed north through the Carolinas, planning ultimately to link his army with those that Union general-in-chief Ulysses S. Grant accompanied in Virginia. Sherman marched into South Carolina on February 1, 1865. Confederate Gen. Joseph E. Johnston concentr ...
Arkansas Historic Preservation Program Civil War Sites and
... Today we will talk about Civil War places and battlefields in Arkansas. The Civil War was fought in America during the 1860s. During the Civil War, eleven southern states seceded or left the United States of America to form their own country, the Confederate States of America. Although Arkansans vot ...
... Today we will talk about Civil War places and battlefields in Arkansas. The Civil War was fought in America during the 1860s. During the Civil War, eleven southern states seceded or left the United States of America to form their own country, the Confederate States of America. Although Arkansans vot ...
Civil War and Reconstruction Study Guide Emergence of Two
... Reconstruction Era: a. Objective and time period b. Dominant political party c. Issues faced following the Civil War d. Concept of Punishment or Pardon e. Johnson’s Reconstruction Plan and feelings towards the South f. Changes for Blacks (New freedoms, Black Codes, 13th/14th/15th Amendments, Jim Cro ...
... Reconstruction Era: a. Objective and time period b. Dominant political party c. Issues faced following the Civil War d. Concept of Punishment or Pardon e. Johnson’s Reconstruction Plan and feelings towards the South f. Changes for Blacks (New freedoms, Black Codes, 13th/14th/15th Amendments, Jim Cro ...
Review of War Stories: Suffering and Sacrifice in the Civil War North
... assumptions of wounded soldiers and medical workers that pain and death were meaningful when sustained in the service of a victorious Union; the insistence by civilian volunteers that their individual and communal efforts to aid soldiers contained a moral component; the North’s vigilance in confront ...
... assumptions of wounded soldiers and medical workers that pain and death were meaningful when sustained in the service of a victorious Union; the insistence by civilian volunteers that their individual and communal efforts to aid soldiers contained a moral component; the North’s vigilance in confront ...
Gettysburg (cont`d)
... Draws soldiers from Vicksburg under John Pemberton Union takes Jackson and S retreats Late May, Grant begins a siege of Vicksburg Shell it for a month Conf. soldiers begin eating horses, mules and dogs ...
... Draws soldiers from Vicksburg under John Pemberton Union takes Jackson and S retreats Late May, Grant begins a siege of Vicksburg Shell it for a month Conf. soldiers begin eating horses, mules and dogs ...
Advanced US History Ch. 15 Exam Review
... Many Southerners were pleased by this decision because it said ________________. “. . . Can the people of a territory in any lawful way, against the wishes of any citizen of the United States, exclude slavery from their limits prior to the formation of a state constitution? . . . [T]he people have t ...
... Many Southerners were pleased by this decision because it said ________________. “. . . Can the people of a territory in any lawful way, against the wishes of any citizen of the United States, exclude slavery from their limits prior to the formation of a state constitution? . . . [T]he people have t ...
File
... a. It adopted words from Native American languages to mix with traditional European words. b. It removed British words from the vocabulary and replaced them all with “American” words. c. It modified the traditional British spelling, usage, and pronunciation of many words. d. It depicted life on the ...
... a. It adopted words from Native American languages to mix with traditional European words. b. It removed British words from the vocabulary and replaced them all with “American” words. c. It modified the traditional British spelling, usage, and pronunciation of many words. d. It depicted life on the ...
The Arsenal Newsletter Greater Pittsburgh Civil War Round Table
... engaging in any activities against the military was subject to be hanged. Conscription was another source of contention. Many Southerners, while loyal to their states, were opposed to the fact that they had to fight for slaveholders, who had military exemption. To deter desertion, Judah Benjamin imp ...
... engaging in any activities against the military was subject to be hanged. Conscription was another source of contention. Many Southerners, while loyal to their states, were opposed to the fact that they had to fight for slaveholders, who had military exemption. To deter desertion, Judah Benjamin imp ...
APUSH TEST 1 STUDY GUIDE
... Phillips, approaching socialism as an abolitionist, concluded that black labor could never be truly free until all labor was released from wage slavery a. He believed that labor should be protected everywhere b. He saw that money power was a menace to republican government c. He believed that the on ...
... Phillips, approaching socialism as an abolitionist, concluded that black labor could never be truly free until all labor was released from wage slavery a. He believed that labor should be protected everywhere b. He saw that money power was a menace to republican government c. He believed that the on ...
episode 5: civil war - APUSH-PMHS
... America reached a crossroads as the Civil War intensified. Strict discipline and advances such as the minie ball bullet have welded General Robert E. Lee’s Confederate army into a formidable force. Lee’s victory at the Second Battle of Bull Run in August of 1862 leads him to within 20 miles of Washi ...
... America reached a crossroads as the Civil War intensified. Strict discipline and advances such as the minie ball bullet have welded General Robert E. Lee’s Confederate army into a formidable force. Lee’s victory at the Second Battle of Bull Run in August of 1862 leads him to within 20 miles of Washi ...
The Civil War
... North and South. Northerners rejoiced that at last the Union had an important victory. Southerners worried that loss of the forts exposed much of the region to attack. Indeed Nashville soon fell to another Union army. Meanwhile, Grant and some 42,000 soldiers pushed farther south along the ‘frnnesse ...
... North and South. Northerners rejoiced that at last the Union had an important victory. Southerners worried that loss of the forts exposed much of the region to attack. Indeed Nashville soon fell to another Union army. Meanwhile, Grant and some 42,000 soldiers pushed farther south along the ‘frnnesse ...
The Role of Confederate Nationalism and Popular Will
... allowing individual states to determine how their troops would be used (57). Davis oversaw the construction of two railroads (an explicitly unconstitutional enterprise) and urged the passing of laws to "stimulate ... vital industries" such as mining and manufacturing of essentials. With the approval ...
... allowing individual states to determine how their troops would be used (57). Davis oversaw the construction of two railroads (an explicitly unconstitutional enterprise) and urged the passing of laws to "stimulate ... vital industries" such as mining and manufacturing of essentials. With the approval ...
To Laugh in One Hand, and Cry in the Other - B
... enslaved blacks during the war helped to sustain a black community that became even more threatened during such uncertain times. The antebellum black community in Floyd County was much more cohesive than has been previously acknowledged by historians. Nearly forgotten today, a large brick Methodist ...
... enslaved blacks during the war helped to sustain a black community that became even more threatened during such uncertain times. The antebellum black community in Floyd County was much more cohesive than has been previously acknowledged by historians. Nearly forgotten today, a large brick Methodist ...
File
... unawares. The older have learned to ever expect it. I am anxious to afford some alleviation of your present distress. Perfect relief is not possible, except with time. You can not now realize that you will ever feel better. Is not this so? And yet it is a mistake. You are sure to be happy again. To ...
... unawares. The older have learned to ever expect it. I am anxious to afford some alleviation of your present distress. Perfect relief is not possible, except with time. You can not now realize that you will ever feel better. Is not this so? And yet it is a mistake. You are sure to be happy again. To ...
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.