
Civil War PP
... Confederate general; second only to Robert E. Lee • May 1863 – Battle of Chancellorsville; Jackson is shot by “friendly fire” and dies from complications days ...
... Confederate general; second only to Robert E. Lee • May 1863 – Battle of Chancellorsville; Jackson is shot by “friendly fire” and dies from complications days ...
Bell Work 11/21
... You are a member of Congress at the end of the Civil War… How do you think the U.S. should approach Reconstruction? ...
... You are a member of Congress at the end of the Civil War… How do you think the U.S. should approach Reconstruction? ...
THE NATION BREAKING APART: Lincoln`s Election and Southern
... II. The Election of 1860 A. 1860 election turns into two races, one in the North, one in the South B. Lincoln defeats Douglas in North C. Breckinridge defeats bell in South D. Lincoln receives the most electoral and popular votes, wins the election E. Southerners view Republican victory as a threat ...
... II. The Election of 1860 A. 1860 election turns into two races, one in the North, one in the South B. Lincoln defeats Douglas in North C. Breckinridge defeats bell in South D. Lincoln receives the most electoral and popular votes, wins the election E. Southerners view Republican victory as a threat ...
Ppt
... states formed a new country. They called the new country the Confederate States of America. They elected Jefferson Davis as President. ...
... states formed a new country. They called the new country the Confederate States of America. They elected Jefferson Davis as President. ...
File
... escaped slaves and helped them get to the north. • Dred Scott Case (1857) – Slaves were nothing more than property and didn’t have northern rights even when they were living in the north. ...
... escaped slaves and helped them get to the north. • Dred Scott Case (1857) – Slaves were nothing more than property and didn’t have northern rights even when they were living in the north. ...
Chapter
... prompts preliminary Emancipation Proclamation Surrender in 100 days or lose slaves ...
... prompts preliminary Emancipation Proclamation Surrender in 100 days or lose slaves ...
Print › Chapter 20: Girding for War: The North and the South (1861
... Britain and John Slidell to France to lobby for recognition in 1861; Union ship captured both men and took them to Boston as prisoners; British were angry and Lincoln ordered their ...
... Britain and John Slidell to France to lobby for recognition in 1861; Union ship captured both men and took them to Boston as prisoners; British were angry and Lincoln ordered their ...
Mobilization, North and South
... back into Virginia. – Britain and France abandon plans to recognize the Confederacy – allowed Lincoln to announce the Emancipation Proclamation ...
... back into Virginia. – Britain and France abandon plans to recognize the Confederacy – allowed Lincoln to announce the Emancipation Proclamation ...
The Civil War
... state of Mississippi seceded Appointed then later elected President of the Confederate States of America Reluctantly accepted the office He was constantly at odds with the states which had seceded over States’ rights ...
... state of Mississippi seceded Appointed then later elected President of the Confederate States of America Reluctantly accepted the office He was constantly at odds with the states which had seceded over States’ rights ...
The Civil War
... state of Mississippi seceded Appointed then later elected President of the Confederate States of America Reluctantly accepted the office He was constantly at odds with the states which had seceded over States’ rights ...
... state of Mississippi seceded Appointed then later elected President of the Confederate States of America Reluctantly accepted the office He was constantly at odds with the states which had seceded over States’ rights ...
05 USH (06-09) (1848-1877) Period 5. Westward Growth
... Lincoln’s election: Abraham Lincoln (R) defeated Stephen Douglas (D) Final straw for South (1) C. South Carolina seceded in 1860 and formed the Confederate States of America (1) ...
... Lincoln’s election: Abraham Lincoln (R) defeated Stephen Douglas (D) Final straw for South (1) C. South Carolina seceded in 1860 and formed the Confederate States of America (1) ...
Chapter 22 Notes
... passed its first conscription law ever (the draft), one that angered the poor because rich men could hire a substitute instead of entering the war just by paying $300 to Congress. i. As a result, many riots broke out, such as one in New York City. 2. Volunteers manned more than 90% of the Union army ...
... passed its first conscription law ever (the draft), one that angered the poor because rich men could hire a substitute instead of entering the war just by paying $300 to Congress. i. As a result, many riots broke out, such as one in New York City. 2. Volunteers manned more than 90% of the Union army ...
Goal_3_Civil_War_PPt_2
... • Slavery did not become a war aim until 1863. • The Union feared that Britain would join on the side of the South if they did not include abolition as a war aim. • The Emancipation Proclamation was issued as a military decree freeing all slaves in rebelling territories. No slave was emancipated, ho ...
... • Slavery did not become a war aim until 1863. • The Union feared that Britain would join on the side of the South if they did not include abolition as a war aim. • The Emancipation Proclamation was issued as a military decree freeing all slaves in rebelling territories. No slave was emancipated, ho ...
Battle of Antietam
... The Confederacy had a choice either __________________ and slavery ____________ be allowed to continue OR continue to fight and the institution of slavery would ultimately come to an _______________. Confederate leaders chose to ____________ and not _________________. ...
... The Confederacy had a choice either __________________ and slavery ____________ be allowed to continue OR continue to fight and the institution of slavery would ultimately come to an _______________. Confederate leaders chose to ____________ and not _________________. ...
5_-_Secession
... •His last words were to this effect: “I believe that the issue of slavery will never be solved unless through the shedding of blood.” •Northerners thought of John Brown as a martyr to the abolitionist cause. •Southerners were terrified that if John Brown almost got away with this, there must be othe ...
... •His last words were to this effect: “I believe that the issue of slavery will never be solved unless through the shedding of blood.” •Northerners thought of John Brown as a martyr to the abolitionist cause. •Southerners were terrified that if John Brown almost got away with this, there must be othe ...
The Road to Civil War Part 5
... was the last straw. They believed that the President and the Congress would be totally against them. Many leaders had already decided that if Lincoln did win the election it was their duty to leave the Union. ...
... was the last straw. They believed that the President and the Congress would be totally against them. Many leaders had already decided that if Lincoln did win the election it was their duty to leave the Union. ...
Review for Chapter 11 Section 1 Quiz
... What advantages did the Union have? What advantages did the Confederacy have? The Civil War began with the firing on_____in Charleston Harbor. Northern newspapers dubbed the Union’s strategy the______, after a snake that wraps around its victims and suffocates them. ...
... What advantages did the Union have? What advantages did the Confederacy have? The Civil War began with the firing on_____in Charleston Harbor. Northern newspapers dubbed the Union’s strategy the______, after a snake that wraps around its victims and suffocates them. ...
434-451.chapter review.ch-20 - apush
... balance of power. • their existing colonies would be safe against further American expansion. • they might more readily seize new colonial territory in the Americas. ...
... balance of power. • their existing colonies would be safe against further American expansion. • they might more readily seize new colonial territory in the Americas. ...
CIVIL WAR ADVANTAGES/DISADVANTAGES
... CIVIL WAR BATTLES , 1862 Shiloh: April 6, 1862 (Tennessee) The Union found hope in the work of a little known general named Ulysses Grant, who took control of Tennessee. This was the bloodiest US battle up to that day: -- 1,735 Union dead -- 7,882 Union wounded -- 1,728 Confederate dead -- 8,012 Co ...
... CIVIL WAR BATTLES , 1862 Shiloh: April 6, 1862 (Tennessee) The Union found hope in the work of a little known general named Ulysses Grant, who took control of Tennessee. This was the bloodiest US battle up to that day: -- 1,735 Union dead -- 7,882 Union wounded -- 1,728 Confederate dead -- 8,012 Co ...
Class Notes - Mrs. Wilcoxson
... were greatly inflated. A bag of salt that could be sold for $5.00 before the war was being sold for $1,200.00 during the Civil War. ...
... were greatly inflated. A bag of salt that could be sold for $5.00 before the war was being sold for $1,200.00 during the Civil War. ...
Topic 27 Why did the North win the Civil War
... strength and willingness to fight on in the end led him to success and that commitment is what makes him perhaps the greatest President of all time. The Civil War, or the "War between the states," was fought on both moral and economic grounds. It was certain advantages, however, inherent in the Nort ...
... strength and willingness to fight on in the end led him to success and that commitment is what makes him perhaps the greatest President of all time. The Civil War, or the "War between the states," was fought on both moral and economic grounds. It was certain advantages, however, inherent in the Nort ...
Quiz: Lincoln and the Politics of the Civil War – Team 6
... Write the word from the word bank on the line that makes each sentence true. Not all words will be used. WORD BANK Thirteenth Confederate Union Sixteenth 3. In 1860, Abraham Lincoln was elected the ______ President of the United States of America. 4. During the Civil War, the Northern states were kn ...
... Write the word from the word bank on the line that makes each sentence true. Not all words will be used. WORD BANK Thirteenth Confederate Union Sixteenth 3. In 1860, Abraham Lincoln was elected the ______ President of the United States of America. 4. During the Civil War, the Northern states were kn ...
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. [[