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Lesson 2: Primarily Primary Class Notes 2: Teacher Edition I. Union
Lesson 2: Primarily Primary Class Notes 2: Teacher Edition I. Union

... Soon after Ft. Sumter, the Union developed their military strategy against the Confederacy. They called it the Anaconda Plan . Why did they call it that? It was designed to strangle the life out of its victim, the Confederacy. It would cut off transportation of soldiers and necessary wartime supplie ...
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... List and describe the military technological improvements that came along during the Civil War Description and explanation of its ...
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... Before the Civil War began, more than ¼ of all Texans were against secession. After fighting began most people supported the Confederacy. More than 60,000 Texans joined the armed forces of the Confederacy. Some slaveholders brought along their slaves to serve as orderlies. Albert Sidney Johnston com ...
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... A significant battle occurred on September 8, 1863, at Sabine Pass, a narrow channel along the Louisiana border. Union general Nathaniel P. Banks planned to move troops by ship through the pass. Then he would march north to cut of Texas’s railroad connection to Louisiana. However, Lieutenant Richard ...
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Name: Date: Ms. Capalbo/Social Studies 7th Grade Social Studies

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heart of the Confederacy - Mrs. Byrd Georgia Studies
heart of the Confederacy - Mrs. Byrd Georgia Studies

... Lee and his men entered the little town of Gettysburg, Pa looking for supplies and ran into a Union cavalry unit of General George Meade’s Army of the Potomac. Lee decided to take on Meade’s unit although he was outnumbered 75,000 to Meade’s 97,000 men. The battle would prove to be the most importan ...
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... 4. How many states had seceded from the Union by the time Abe Lincoln was sworn into office? Name them. ...
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... • Major Robert Anderson was in charge of the fort •Fort Sumter is what some might say the beginning of the war • Confederate officials forced Union troops to leave their fort but they did not •Lincoln’s dilemma in this was that the troops in the fort only had a months worth of food left. •The way th ...
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SECESSION AND THE CIVIL WAR

... notU.S. view Some The Northerners thought Lincoln’s election a death sentence would be better off as if the South & did not secede immediately was allowed to peacefully secede SC seceded on The entire Deep South Dec 20,1860 seceded by Feb 1861 ...
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... • After destroying Atlanta (Nov.15-Dec. 21 1864) – Wanted to end war and punish South ...
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... In an effort to placate the slave-holding border states, Lincoln resisted the demands of radical Republicans for complete abolition. Yet some Union generals, such as General B. F. Butler, declared slaves escaping to their lines "contraband of war," not to be returned to their masters. Other generals ...
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... Emancipation Proclamation: issued after Battle of Antietam (MD) Gettysburg (PA): Turning point of the Civil War Appomattox (VA): Site of Lee’s surrender to Grant ...
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... have no oath registered in heaven to destroy the Government, while I shall have the most solemn one to "preserve, protect, and defend it.“… Lincoln’s 1st Inaugural Address (1861) ...
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... • Ft. Sumter (Charleston Harbor): Mar. 1861 Pres. Lincoln ordered supplies to be sent to the garrison stationed at Ft. Sumter. • April 12, 1861: Confederate forces led by PGT Beauregard opened fire on the fort. The war had begun. Union forces surrendered the fort on April 13. • Lincoln put out a cal ...
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... the sixteenth president of the United States. Several Southern states refused to accept Lincoln’s election as president, because they feared he would try to abolish or at least further restrict slavery. In late 1860 and early 1861 these southern states seceded or withdrew from the Union and formed a ...
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... 9. Among the advantages the Union possessed at the beginning of the Civil War was a. better preparation of its ordinary soldiers for military life. b. a continuing influx of immigrant manpower from Europe. c. more highly educated and experienced generals. d. the ability to fight a primarily defensiv ...
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... More Railroads – The North had 2.5 times the railroad mileage as the South U.S. Navy – Almost 90% of the U.S. ships stayed with the Union. ...
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... • Many Southerners believed that the South should secede, or break away from the US – South Carolina was the first state to secede – Alabama, Florida, Mississippi, Georgia, Louisiana, and Texas soon followed and formed the Confederacy ...
Worksheet by RJ Tarr at www.activehistory.co.uk / 1 ActiveHistory
Worksheet by RJ Tarr at www.activehistory.co.uk / 1 ActiveHistory

... ▪ President Davis struggled to decide on an overall policy and as a result his generals argued with each other and their overall effectiveness was undermined. For example, during the Battle of Gettysburg, General Longstreet was very slow to carry out the orders of General Lee and this contributed to ...
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Chapter 11 worksheet
Chapter 11 worksheet

... 2. Describe what happened on the early morning of April 12 and the result that took place on April 14, 1861. 3. Read the Faces of History: Abraham Lincoln. What tragedy made Lincoln’s presidency extremely difficult? ...
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Confederate privateer



The Confederate privateers were privately owned ships that were authorized by the government of the Confederate States of America to attack the shipping of the United States. Although the appeal was to profit by capturing merchant vessels and seizing their cargoes, the government was most interested in diverting the efforts of the Union Navy away from the blockade of Southern ports, and perhaps to encourage European intervention in the conflict.At the beginning of the American Civil War, the Confederate government sought to counter the United States Navy in part by appealing to private enterprise world-wide to engage in privateering against United States Shipping. [[]] Privateering was the practice of fitting ordinary private merchant vessels with modest armament, then sending them to sea to capture other merchant vessels in return for monetary reward. The captured vessels and cargo fell under customary prize rules at sea. Prizes would be taken to the jurisdiction of a competent court, which could be in the sponsoring country or theoretically in any neutral port. If the court found that the capture was legal, the ship and cargo would be forfeited and sold at a prize auction. The proceeds would be distributed among owners and crew according to a contractual arrangement. Privateers were also authorized to attack an enemy's navy warships and then apply to the sponsoring government for direct monetary reward, usually gold or gold specie (coins).In the early days of the war, enthusiasm for the Southern cause was high, and many ship owners responded to the appeal by applying for letters of marque. Not all of those who gained authorization actually went to sea, but the numbers of privateers were high enough to be a major concern for US Secretary of the Navy Gideon Welles. Many ships of the Union Navy were diverted from blockade duty in efforts to capture privateers. Most of the privateers managed to remain free, but enough were caught that the owners and crew had to consider the risk seriously. The capture of the privateers Savannah and Jefferson Davis resulted in important court cases that did much to define the nature of the Civil War itself.Initial enthusiasm could not be sustained. Privateers found it difficult to deliver their captures to Confederate courts, and as a result the expected profits were never realized. By the end of the first year of the war, the risks far exceeded the benefits in the minds of most owners and crews. The practice continued only sporadically through the rest of the war as the Confederate government turned its efforts against Northern commerce over to commissioned Confederate Navy commerce raiders such as the CSS Alabama and CSS Florida.The Civil War was the last time a belligerent power seriously resorted to privateering. The practice had already been outlawed among European countries by the Declaration of Paris (1856). Following the Civil War, the United States agreed to abide by the Declaration of Paris. More important than any international agreements, however, is the fact that the increased cost and sophistication of naval weaponry effectively removed any reasonable prospects for profit for private enterprise naval warfare.
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