Chapter 11 Sec 5 ppt
... impact the country? The students will be able to analyze the impact on federal-state relations and American society. ...
... impact the country? The students will be able to analyze the impact on federal-state relations and American society. ...
Civil War-Fighting Escalates
... He was a pivotal leader in taking the Mississippi River and bringing it under control of the North. ...
... He was a pivotal leader in taking the Mississippi River and bringing it under control of the North. ...
Civil War Battle Map 2015-2016
... Army marched into Pennsylvania where they met Union troops under General George G. Meade at Gettysburg. The Northern army had 90,000 men and the Southern army 75,000. Meade’s Union forces occupied a strong defensive position overlooking the battlefield. Confederate assaults were driven back by a hai ...
... Army marched into Pennsylvania where they met Union troops under General George G. Meade at Gettysburg. The Northern army had 90,000 men and the Southern army 75,000. Meade’s Union forces occupied a strong defensive position overlooking the battlefield. Confederate assaults were driven back by a hai ...
Chapter 11 The Civil War Guided Notes
... Lincoln issues the _________________________ Proclamation ...
... Lincoln issues the _________________________ Proclamation ...
Civil war battles - teacher copy
... The Union goal was to gain control of the Mississippi River. What was General Grant’s strategy for this battle? How did the Union win? Grant’s strategy was to surround the town of Vicksburg and not let anyone or anything in or out of the town until they surrendered. After a month Vicksburg was force ...
... The Union goal was to gain control of the Mississippi River. What was General Grant’s strategy for this battle? How did the Union win? Grant’s strategy was to surround the town of Vicksburg and not let anyone or anything in or out of the town until they surrendered. After a month Vicksburg was force ...
The Civil War Begins - Caggia Social Studies
... However, Southern leaders encouraged their generals to attack—and even to invade the North—if the opportunity arose. BULL RUN The first major bloodshed occurred on July 21, about three months after Fort Sumter fell. An army of 30,000 inexperienced Union soldiers on its way toward the Confederate cap ...
... However, Southern leaders encouraged their generals to attack—and even to invade the North—if the opportunity arose. BULL RUN The first major bloodshed occurred on July 21, about three months after Fort Sumter fell. An army of 30,000 inexperienced Union soldiers on its way toward the Confederate cap ...
3.2b
... slaves and Confederates were not likely to obey the President of the United States. • Slaves were freed as their homeland was captured by Union forces or as they fled toward the Union Army. ...
... slaves and Confederates were not likely to obey the President of the United States. • Slaves were freed as their homeland was captured by Union forces or as they fled toward the Union Army. ...
Chapter 16
... North South bring the South back, win recognition as an not ending slavery independent nation • 1. Blockade the south • 1. Defend its home, • 2. Gain control of holding on to Miss. River territory • 3. Capture • 2. Hoping England Richmond and France would come and aid ...
... North South bring the South back, win recognition as an not ending slavery independent nation • 1. Blockade the south • 1. Defend its home, • 2. Gain control of holding on to Miss. River territory • 3. Capture • 2. Hoping England Richmond and France would come and aid ...
33. 1861 to 1862 Stalemate
... Davis to take it. Lincoln had to display his will in order to keep it, and tried many options, but Major Anderson, the commander of the fort, said he’d starve by August 15. Lincoln therefore sent a supply ship after notifying the CSA that it was not a warship. Jefferson Davis ordered Ft. Sumter take ...
... Davis to take it. Lincoln had to display his will in order to keep it, and tried many options, but Major Anderson, the commander of the fort, said he’d starve by August 15. Lincoln therefore sent a supply ship after notifying the CSA that it was not a warship. Jefferson Davis ordered Ft. Sumter take ...
Social Studies Glossary
... Battle of Vicksburg – Battle fought in Vicksburg, MS. The Union, led by Ulysses S. Grant defeated the Confederate forces. Grant’s win gave control of the Mississippi R. to the North and won him a promotion from President Lincoln to lead the Union Army. Battle of Gettysburg – battle in southern Penns ...
... Battle of Vicksburg – Battle fought in Vicksburg, MS. The Union, led by Ulysses S. Grant defeated the Confederate forces. Grant’s win gave control of the Mississippi R. to the North and won him a promotion from President Lincoln to lead the Union Army. Battle of Gettysburg – battle in southern Penns ...
Driving Tour - Trevilian Station Battlefield Foundation
... By mid-morning on June 11, 1864, Gen. George A. Custer's attack on Confederate Gen. Wade Hampton's wagon train here had gone from success to near disaster, as Southern cavalry surrounded Custer's force. A staff officer of Gen. Alfred T. A. Torbert, Gen. Philip H. Sheridan's 1st Cavalry Division comm ...
... By mid-morning on June 11, 1864, Gen. George A. Custer's attack on Confederate Gen. Wade Hampton's wagon train here had gone from success to near disaster, as Southern cavalry surrounded Custer's force. A staff officer of Gen. Alfred T. A. Torbert, Gen. Philip H. Sheridan's 1st Cavalry Division comm ...
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 15-1
... North, they wanted to defend their land until the Union got tired of fighting. They wanted to get aid from Britain and other European nations in exchange for badly wanted cotton. ...
... North, they wanted to defend their land until the Union got tired of fighting. They wanted to get aid from Britain and other European nations in exchange for badly wanted cotton. ...
Lesson 16.1 b
... Battle of Bull Run • The Confederate victory thrilled the South and many in the South thought the war was won. • Lincoln sent the 90-day militias home and called for a real army of 500,000 volunteers for three years. • It was beginning to look like it would be a long war. ...
... Battle of Bull Run • The Confederate victory thrilled the South and many in the South thought the war was won. • Lincoln sent the 90-day militias home and called for a real army of 500,000 volunteers for three years. • It was beginning to look like it would be a long war. ...
Anaconda Plan - OCPS TeacherPress
... South's industry. It was heavily guarded and provided a much better defensive position despite the fact that it was geographically much closer to the Union and only 100 miles away from Washington DC, the Union’s capital. Richmond was a tempting target for the Union. Its capture would hurt the southe ...
... South's industry. It was heavily guarded and provided a much better defensive position despite the fact that it was geographically much closer to the Union and only 100 miles away from Washington DC, the Union’s capital. Richmond was a tempting target for the Union. Its capture would hurt the southe ...
USI9e - socialstudiesSOLreview
... Orleans. The Union ships prevented trade in and out of these southern ports so that southerners could not get goods and supplies. Controlling the Mississippi River was extremely important. The South did not have the railroads that the North had, so it relied on the river to move supplies and troops. ...
... Orleans. The Union ships prevented trade in and out of these southern ports so that southerners could not get goods and supplies. Controlling the Mississippi River was extremely important. The South did not have the railroads that the North had, so it relied on the river to move supplies and troops. ...
Civil War Notes
... off from Louisiana and Texas), and blockading the Confederate coast (to cut off supplies by sea). Texans tried to defend the coast against Union Navy attack, but Galveston was still weakly defended. Union forces captured it in 1862 and losing Galveston made it even harder for Confederates in Texas t ...
... off from Louisiana and Texas), and blockading the Confederate coast (to cut off supplies by sea). Texans tried to defend the coast against Union Navy attack, but Galveston was still weakly defended. Union forces captured it in 1862 and losing Galveston made it even harder for Confederates in Texas t ...
Civil War Study Guide
... The Battle of Gettysburg was the worst battle fought in the Civil War. It was fought in Pennsylvania from July 1st to July 3rd of 1863 with the Union trying to prevent a Confederate invasion. Over 8,000 died and over 20,000 were injured in the fighting. Months later Abraham Lincoln gave a speech cel ...
... The Battle of Gettysburg was the worst battle fought in the Civil War. It was fought in Pennsylvania from July 1st to July 3rd of 1863 with the Union trying to prevent a Confederate invasion. Over 8,000 died and over 20,000 were injured in the fighting. Months later Abraham Lincoln gave a speech cel ...
Chapter 21 Focus Questions: Essay question: What was the relative
... Essay question: What was the relative importance of the following as factors in the Northern victory over the South during the Civil War? Emancipation Proclamation Western Battle Campaigns Eastern Battle Campaigns Objective Questions: ...
... Essay question: What was the relative importance of the following as factors in the Northern victory over the South during the Civil War? Emancipation Proclamation Western Battle Campaigns Eastern Battle Campaigns Objective Questions: ...
The North Wins
... seeking to meet up with Grant’s troops in Virginia. Since May 1864, Grant and his generals had been fighting savage battles against Lee’s forces. In battle after battle, Grant would attack, rest, then attack again, all the while moving south toward Richmond. At the Battle of the Wilderness in May 18 ...
... seeking to meet up with Grant’s troops in Virginia. Since May 1864, Grant and his generals had been fighting savage battles against Lee’s forces. In battle after battle, Grant would attack, rest, then attack again, all the while moving south toward Richmond. At the Battle of the Wilderness in May 18 ...
Surrenders After Appomattox - Essential Civil War Curriculum
... commands (Army of Northern Virginia, Army of Tennessee, and Army of the TransMississippi), with a number of smaller independent field units such as Forrest’s Cavalry Corps (in the latter stages of the war), the Thomas Legion of Cherokee Indians and Highlanders, and Mosby’s Partisan Rangers, and of g ...
... commands (Army of Northern Virginia, Army of Tennessee, and Army of the TransMississippi), with a number of smaller independent field units such as Forrest’s Cavalry Corps (in the latter stages of the war), the Thomas Legion of Cherokee Indians and Highlanders, and Mosby’s Partisan Rangers, and of g ...
apush ch 21
... the South and destroyed all resources the civilian population needed to survive. ...
... the South and destroyed all resources the civilian population needed to survive. ...
Antebellum, Civil War and Reconstruction Test
... 27. She is called the “angel of the battlefield” due to her bravery in war, and later founded the American Red Cross in 1881. 28. What is the final surrender of the Confederate Army took place here. 29. ___________ served as president of the Confederacy. 30. When the Civil War began, what was Abrah ...
... 27. She is called the “angel of the battlefield” due to her bravery in war, and later founded the American Red Cross in 1881. 28. What is the final surrender of the Confederate Army took place here. 29. ___________ served as president of the Confederacy. 30. When the Civil War began, what was Abrah ...
VS 7 Study Guide
... the Army of Northern Virginia, defeated Union troops at Fredericksburg, Virginia. ...
... the Army of Northern Virginia, defeated Union troops at Fredericksburg, Virginia. ...
Battle of Namozine Church
The Battle of Namozine Church, Virginia was an engagement between Union Army and Confederate States Army forces that occurred on April 3, 1865 during the Appomattox Campaign of the American Civil War. The battle was the first engagement between units of General Robert E. Lee's Confederate Army of Northern Virginia after that army's evacuation of Petersburg and Richmond, Virginia on April 2, 1865 and units of the Union Army (Army of the Shenandoah, Army of the Potomac and Army of the James) under the immediate command of Maj. Gen. Philip Sheridan, who was still acting independently as commander of the Army of the Shenandoah, and under the overall direction of Union General-in-Chief Lt. Gen. Ulysses S. Grant. The forces immediately engaged in the battle were brigades of the cavalry division of Union Brig. Gen. and Brevet Maj. Gen. George Armstrong Custer, especially the brigade of Colonel and Brevet Brig. Gen. William Wells, and the Confederate rear guard cavalry brigades of Brig. Gen. William P. Roberts and Brig. Gen. Rufus Barringer and later in the engagement, Confederate infantry from the division of Maj. Gen. Bushrod Johnson.The engagement signaled the beginning of the Union Army's relentless pursuit of the Confederate forces (Army of Northern Virginia and Richmond local defense forces) after the fall of Petersburg and Richmond after the Third Battle of Petersburg (sometimes known as the Breakthrough at Petersburg or Fall of Petersburg), which led to the near disintegration of Lee's forces within 6 days and the Army of Northern Virginia's surrender at Appomattox Court House, Virginia on April 9, 1865. Capt. Tom Custer, the general's brother, was cited at this battle for the first of two Medals of Honor that he received for actions within four days.