VUS.7
... Key leaders and their roles Abraham Lincoln: President of the United States during the Civil War, who insisted that the Union be held together, by force if necessary Jefferson Davis: U.S. Senator who became President of the Confederate States of America Ulysses S. Grant: Union military comman ...
... Key leaders and their roles Abraham Lincoln: President of the United States during the Civil War, who insisted that the Union be held together, by force if necessary Jefferson Davis: U.S. Senator who became President of the Confederate States of America Ulysses S. Grant: Union military comman ...
Title: “North VS. South: The Causes of the Civil War” Grade Level: 3
... The teacher will begin the day’s lesson by asking the students to listen to a short passage about the Civil War as an introduction. She will go into detail and start discussion about some things that caused the Civil War and supply the students with a basic map as a reference to which states belonge ...
... The teacher will begin the day’s lesson by asking the students to listen to a short passage about the Civil War as an introduction. She will go into detail and start discussion about some things that caused the Civil War and supply the students with a basic map as a reference to which states belonge ...
HOW ONE MAN ARRIVED AT GETTYSBURG (Wesley Culp`s life
... family loved all the times they got to play outside under the big sky and run up and down the surrounding hills without a care in the world. Wesley and John did grow up and eventually graduated from high school. The time now came when they had to choose what college to attend. After much thought, Jo ...
... family loved all the times they got to play outside under the big sky and run up and down the surrounding hills without a care in the world. Wesley and John did grow up and eventually graduated from high school. The time now came when they had to choose what college to attend. After much thought, Jo ...
The Civil War
... and devastated by the war. • Farms, railroads, and factories had been destroyed throughout the South, and the cities of Richmond and Atlanta lay in ruins. • The South would remain a backward, agricultural-based economy and the poorest section of the nation for many decades ...
... and devastated by the war. • Farms, railroads, and factories had been destroyed throughout the South, and the cities of Richmond and Atlanta lay in ruins. • The South would remain a backward, agricultural-based economy and the poorest section of the nation for many decades ...
Chapter 9 Part 1
... would rise up against their owners and in retaliation against the bondage in which they lived. The United States Government with whom they were allied appeared to have abandoned the people of Indian Territory. Most tribal agents were loyal to the confederate states. When the union appointed new agen ...
... would rise up against their owners and in retaliation against the bondage in which they lived. The United States Government with whom they were allied appeared to have abandoned the people of Indian Territory. Most tribal agents were loyal to the confederate states. When the union appointed new agen ...
The African-American Odyssey
... These African-American troops served as teamsters for the Union Army in Virginia. Most Northern white people—including political leaders—believed that black men lacked the courage and fortitude for combat. They expected black men would do little more as soldiers than haul freight, erect fortificatio ...
... These African-American troops served as teamsters for the Union Army in Virginia. Most Northern white people—including political leaders—believed that black men lacked the courage and fortitude for combat. They expected black men would do little more as soldiers than haul freight, erect fortificatio ...
Summary: Civil War Begins
... too strong. They said tariffs and laws to limit slavery threatened states’ rights. Some chose secession to protect their right to enslave people. ...
... too strong. They said tariffs and laws to limit slavery threatened states’ rights. Some chose secession to protect their right to enslave people. ...
File
... Many in the south felt this was unfair and argued (as John C. Calhoun did) that slavery was a good, not an evil. The novel sold 400,000 copies in a ...
... Many in the south felt this was unfair and argued (as John C. Calhoun did) that slavery was a good, not an evil. The novel sold 400,000 copies in a ...
US History - Mr. Martin`s History site
... Provided voting rights 61. Who were southerners who supported Reconstruction? Scalawags 62. Who were Northerners who came south to help in Reconstruction? Carpetbaggers 63. What hate group developed in the south? Ku Klux Klan 64. Who ran for President in the 1876 election? Rutherford B. Hayes 65. Ho ...
... Provided voting rights 61. Who were southerners who supported Reconstruction? Scalawags 62. Who were Northerners who came south to help in Reconstruction? Carpetbaggers 63. What hate group developed in the south? Ku Klux Klan 64. Who ran for President in the 1876 election? Rutherford B. Hayes 65. Ho ...
Name /40 A Little Skirmish The Confederacy 1. Before Lincoln
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2 - Lincoln Assassination
... Documentary: “The Lincoln Assassination” 1. On what date was Abraham Lincoln killed? April 14, 1865 ...
... Documentary: “The Lincoln Assassination” 1. On what date was Abraham Lincoln killed? April 14, 1865 ...
American Studies/Seemueller: Slavery and Civil War Test Study Guide
... What did the "free soil" movement in the North believe about slavery and the South? Why did support for slavery in the South grow stronger after 1830? Why did Southern apologists for slavery argue that slavery was good? Why did they say the southern way of life was better than life in the North? Why ...
... What did the "free soil" movement in the North believe about slavery and the South? Why did support for slavery in the South grow stronger after 1830? Why did Southern apologists for slavery argue that slavery was good? Why did they say the southern way of life was better than life in the North? Why ...
Natasha Harvey, History 1700, Section 72 Unit 3 Response
... going through what we call an “Age of Expansion.” This expansion was highlighted best in three different categories: economic, population growth and territorial expansion. The “Northwest Ordinance,” put in place by the Confederation Congress in 1787, established a land policy that was based on popul ...
... going through what we call an “Age of Expansion.” This expansion was highlighted best in three different categories: economic, population growth and territorial expansion. The “Northwest Ordinance,” put in place by the Confederation Congress in 1787, established a land policy that was based on popul ...
Drifting to Disunion
... nally proven to be the American political system’s one “undiexactly the poster child for “Union.” gestable lump.” In hindsight it was an odd collection of people playing It was the Republicans’ turn a few weeks later in Chicago. roles that April on what historian William W. Freehling called The long ...
... nally proven to be the American political system’s one “undiexactly the poster child for “Union.” gestable lump.” In hindsight it was an odd collection of people playing It was the Republicans’ turn a few weeks later in Chicago. roles that April on what historian William W. Freehling called The long ...
during the War
... areas controlled by the Confederacy. In fact, the proclamation had little immedi ate effect. It was impossible for the federal government to enforce the proclamation in the areas where it actually applied—the states in rebellion that were not under federal control. The proclamation did not stop slav ...
... areas controlled by the Confederacy. In fact, the proclamation had little immedi ate effect. It was impossible for the federal government to enforce the proclamation in the areas where it actually applied—the states in rebellion that were not under federal control. The proclamation did not stop slav ...
File
... 2. What caused the father, James D. Riley, to lose all of his money. (Use what you learned in class to answer this ...
... 2. What caused the father, James D. Riley, to lose all of his money. (Use what you learned in class to answer this ...
The Civil war and Reconstruction
... • The Civil Rights Act of 1866 granted citizenship to all persons born in the United States except for Native Americans. • Johnson vetoed the Civil Rights Act, arguing that it was unconstitutional and would cause discord among the races. • The radicals and moderates over-rode the veto and the Fourte ...
... • The Civil Rights Act of 1866 granted citizenship to all persons born in the United States except for Native Americans. • Johnson vetoed the Civil Rights Act, arguing that it was unconstitutional and would cause discord among the races. • The radicals and moderates over-rode the veto and the Fourte ...
Ch. 9 PowerPoint
... to retreat to the James River. • Lincoln ordered McClellan to bring his troops back to Washington; Lee decided to attack the retreating forces, forcing them to ...
... to retreat to the James River. • Lincoln ordered McClellan to bring his troops back to Washington; Lee decided to attack the retreating forces, forcing them to ...
Shiloh - Teach Tennessee History
... That night, as soldiers from both sides bent over their campfires tensely anticipating battle the next morning, the army bands entered into a contest of their own. Trying to outplay one another from across the front, the Union band’s version of “Yankee Doodle” was countered by a Confederate concert ...
... That night, as soldiers from both sides bent over their campfires tensely anticipating battle the next morning, the army bands entered into a contest of their own. Trying to outplay one another from across the front, the Union band’s version of “Yankee Doodle” was countered by a Confederate concert ...
Antislavery Soldiers from the Land of Ten Thousand Lakes - H-Net
... 1864 to the decisive victory of General George Thomas at Nashville that December. A number of its members became prisoners at Andersonville, and some of them escaped the abysmal conditions of the notorious prison camp by serving in the Confederate army. After the end of the war, the unit performed g ...
... 1864 to the decisive victory of General George Thomas at Nashville that December. A number of its members became prisoners at Andersonville, and some of them escaped the abysmal conditions of the notorious prison camp by serving in the Confederate army. After the end of the war, the unit performed g ...
1800`s Kentucky - Rowan County Schools
... • Many areas of seceding states had treasonous section in the mountains • Many of these pro-union areas talked of their own potential statehood ...
... • Many areas of seceding states had treasonous section in the mountains • Many of these pro-union areas talked of their own potential statehood ...
Virginia Studies Review - Henrico County Public Schools
... Confederacy, it sustained many attacks from Union forces. Retreating Confederate forces set fire to the arsenal to keep weapons out of Union hands. The fire spread out of control and destroyed half of the city of Richmond. ...
... Confederacy, it sustained many attacks from Union forces. Retreating Confederate forces set fire to the arsenal to keep weapons out of Union hands. The fire spread out of control and destroyed half of the city of Richmond. ...
Reconstruction
... a. This lasted from 1865 through 1877. 2. Refers to the process the federal government used to re-enter Confederate states back into the Union. 3. There were problems with Reconstruction. a. Lincoln, Johnson and Congress all had different ideas of how the Confederates reentry should be handled. i. L ...
... a. This lasted from 1865 through 1877. 2. Refers to the process the federal government used to re-enter Confederate states back into the Union. 3. There were problems with Reconstruction. a. Lincoln, Johnson and Congress all had different ideas of how the Confederates reentry should be handled. i. L ...
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.