Study Guide Sheet – Day 1 (Part I) of Final Exam
... “I never in my life felt more certain that I am doing right than I do in signing this paper… If my name is every goes down in history it will be for this act, and my whole soul is in it.” --Abraham Lincoln, 1863 African Americans role in the Civil War: -At first, both the North and the South prevent ...
... “I never in my life felt more certain that I am doing right than I do in signing this paper… If my name is every goes down in history it will be for this act, and my whole soul is in it.” --Abraham Lincoln, 1863 African Americans role in the Civil War: -At first, both the North and the South prevent ...
Chapter 15 - Midway ISD
... 3. Which party did many Northerners who opposed slavery join? 4. What did Southern leaders threaten to do if the Republican won the 1860 election? 5. What were Sam Houston’s feelings about secession? 6. Who was elected president of the United States in 1860? 7. Who was elected president of the Confe ...
... 3. Which party did many Northerners who opposed slavery join? 4. What did Southern leaders threaten to do if the Republican won the 1860 election? 5. What were Sam Houston’s feelings about secession? 6. Who was elected president of the United States in 1860? 7. Who was elected president of the Confe ...
Civil War - West Point High School
... • What Union General received recognition because of his victories in the west at Fort Donaldson, Fort Henry, Shiloh, and eventually Vicksburg? ...
... • What Union General received recognition because of his victories in the west at Fort Donaldson, Fort Henry, Shiloh, and eventually Vicksburg? ...
document
... strategy known today as “Total War.” • This military success helped Lincoln to win a second term in the election of 1864. • Lincoln appointed a great general, Ulysses S. Grant, as commander of all Union forces in March 1864. ...
... strategy known today as “Total War.” • This military success helped Lincoln to win a second term in the election of 1864. • Lincoln appointed a great general, Ulysses S. Grant, as commander of all Union forces in March 1864. ...
The First Two Years of the Civil War
... • Meanwhile, Union General David G. Farragut led a fleet up the Mississippi River. On April 29, 1862, New Orleans surrendered. Baton Rouge, Louisiana, fell a few weeks later. ...
... • Meanwhile, Union General David G. Farragut led a fleet up the Mississippi River. On April 29, 1862, New Orleans surrendered. Baton Rouge, Louisiana, fell a few weeks later. ...
Slide 1
... In both North and South, men of certain classes, occupations, and professions were exempted from the draft. Furthermore, a man who was drafted in the North could avoid military service by making a money payment to the government and in both the North and South, a draftee could hire a substitute to g ...
... In both North and South, men of certain classes, occupations, and professions were exempted from the draft. Furthermore, a man who was drafted in the North could avoid military service by making a money payment to the government and in both the North and South, a draftee could hire a substitute to g ...
Civil War Battle Chart
... a strong thrust down the Mississippi Valley with a large force, o and the establishment of a line of strong Federal positions there would isolate the disorganized Confederate nation ...
... a strong thrust down the Mississippi Valley with a large force, o and the establishment of a line of strong Federal positions there would isolate the disorganized Confederate nation ...
Reading 1 on the battle
... charged the line shortly before sunset. Slough ordered his soldiers back to Camp Lewis leaving the Confederates in possession of the field. Both sides were exhausted after six hours of fighting, each having sustained more than 30 killed and 80 wounded or missing. Believing he had won the battle, Scu ...
... charged the line shortly before sunset. Slough ordered his soldiers back to Camp Lewis leaving the Confederates in possession of the field. Both sides were exhausted after six hours of fighting, each having sustained more than 30 killed and 80 wounded or missing. Believing he had won the battle, Scu ...
the civil war - OCPS TeacherPress
... -- Boosted northern morale in the face of humiliating losses in Virginia. 2. Confederates out of KY and most of TN. C. Shiloh (April 6 & 7, 1862) 1. Federals moved down through western Tennessee to take the Confederacy’s only east-west railroad linking the lower South to cities on the Confederacy’s ...
... -- Boosted northern morale in the face of humiliating losses in Virginia. 2. Confederates out of KY and most of TN. C. Shiloh (April 6 & 7, 1862) 1. Federals moved down through western Tennessee to take the Confederacy’s only east-west railroad linking the lower South to cities on the Confederacy’s ...
Chapter_21_E-Notes
... -- Boosted northern morale in the face of humiliating losses in Virginia. 2. Confederates out of KY and most of TN. C. Shiloh (April 6 & 7, 1862) 1. Federals moved down through western Tennessee to take the Confederacy’s only east-west railroad linking the lower South to cities on the Confederacy’s ...
... -- Boosted northern morale in the face of humiliating losses in Virginia. 2. Confederates out of KY and most of TN. C. Shiloh (April 6 & 7, 1862) 1. Federals moved down through western Tennessee to take the Confederacy’s only east-west railroad linking the lower South to cities on the Confederacy’s ...
The War in the West
... Had resigned from the army but volunteered when the Civil War began Impressed Lincoln with his willingness to fight Promoted to general by September 1861 ...
... Had resigned from the army but volunteered when the Civil War began Impressed Lincoln with his willingness to fight Promoted to general by September 1861 ...
HistorySage - Dover Union Free School District
... IV. The War in the Eastern Theater: 1862 A. The Peninsula Campaign (April 5-June 16, 1862) 1. McClellan abandoned a direct frontal assault by land for a flanking approach to Richmond by moving up the peninsula between James & York Rivers. -- After a month's fighting, McClellan pushed within a few mi ...
... IV. The War in the Eastern Theater: 1862 A. The Peninsula Campaign (April 5-June 16, 1862) 1. McClellan abandoned a direct frontal assault by land for a flanking approach to Richmond by moving up the peninsula between James & York Rivers. -- After a month's fighting, McClellan pushed within a few mi ...
Study Questions for Chapter 21 and 22 Test
... 2. What were the three steps of the Anaconda Plan? ...
... 2. What were the three steps of the Anaconda Plan? ...
a Sample - Rainbow Resource
... ______ 1. Received the nickname “Stonewall” at the First Battle of Bull Run ______ 2. Developed the Anaconda Plan ______ 3. Refused the offer of field command of the Union army ______ 4. Replaced Irvin McDowell after the Union loss at Bull Run ______ 5. Brought Confederate reinforcements to the Firs ...
... ______ 1. Received the nickname “Stonewall” at the First Battle of Bull Run ______ 2. Developed the Anaconda Plan ______ 3. Refused the offer of field command of the Union army ______ 4. Replaced Irvin McDowell after the Union loss at Bull Run ______ 5. Brought Confederate reinforcements to the Firs ...
Civil War PowerPoint
... •Attempt to capture Richmond •Union met with resistance at Bull Run Creek •Union had initial advantage •Confederate forces led by Thomas Jackson turned the tide •Stonewall •Union Army forced to retreat back to Washington ...
... •Attempt to capture Richmond •Union met with resistance at Bull Run Creek •Union had initial advantage •Confederate forces led by Thomas Jackson turned the tide •Stonewall •Union Army forced to retreat back to Washington ...
April—Charleston Harbor
... issuing the Emancipation Proclamation. The Emancipation Proclamation, which went into effect on January 1, 1863, was a decisive moment in the relationship of Douglass and Lincoln. Once having been issued, the slavery system was doomed. Douglass had persuaded Lincoln to make the pronouncement, and on ...
... issuing the Emancipation Proclamation. The Emancipation Proclamation, which went into effect on January 1, 1863, was a decisive moment in the relationship of Douglass and Lincoln. Once having been issued, the slavery system was doomed. Douglass had persuaded Lincoln to make the pronouncement, and on ...
- Our Schools
... chorus of the Union, when again touched, as surely they will be, by the better angels of our nature. ...
... chorus of the Union, when again touched, as surely they will be, by the better angels of our nature. ...
Civil War Battles
... Day 3 • Lee commits Confederate troops to one final attack to center of Union line – Longstreet disagrees • Guns quieted in afternoon – Lee thought Union was weakened - orders CHARGE! • Pickett’s Charge: CSA loses 75% of men ...
... Day 3 • Lee commits Confederate troops to one final attack to center of Union line – Longstreet disagrees • Guns quieted in afternoon – Lee thought Union was weakened - orders CHARGE! • Pickett’s Charge: CSA loses 75% of men ...
My the Confederacy Lost
... .shenandoah Valley, spring 1862; became Lee's most brilliant divisional and corps commander; famous for his flanking march and attack at Chancellorsville, where he was mortally wounded by his own pickets. JOHNSTON, ALBERT SIDNEY Many Confederates considered him the best general in the rebel army; co ...
... .shenandoah Valley, spring 1862; became Lee's most brilliant divisional and corps commander; famous for his flanking march and attack at Chancellorsville, where he was mortally wounded by his own pickets. JOHNSTON, ALBERT SIDNEY Many Confederates considered him the best general in the rebel army; co ...
The Civil War - 9th Grade World History Overview
... the Mississippi River. The commander in the West, General Ulysses S. Grant, impressed Lincoln. The president had been looking for a leader who would press the attack against the South and quickly end the war. Because the war was fought on their land, the Confederates needed help. While Union armies ...
... the Mississippi River. The commander in the West, General Ulysses S. Grant, impressed Lincoln. The president had been looking for a leader who would press the attack against the South and quickly end the war. Because the war was fought on their land, the Confederates needed help. While Union armies ...
Chapter 22: The Civil War Section 1
... In this chapter, you read about the Civil War between the Union and the Confederacy. The North Versus the South Both sides had strengths and weaknesses going into the war. The North had a larger population and more factories and railroads than the South, but it lacked strong military leadership. The ...
... In this chapter, you read about the Civil War between the Union and the Confederacy. The North Versus the South Both sides had strengths and weaknesses going into the war. The North had a larger population and more factories and railroads than the South, but it lacked strong military leadership. The ...
Battles and notes - Mrs. Ball`s Social Studies Class
... Day 3 • Lee commits Confederate troops to one final attack to center of Union line – Longstreet disagrees • Guns quieted in afternoon – Lee thought Union was weakened - orders CHARGE! • Pickett’s Charge: CSA loses 75% of men ...
... Day 3 • Lee commits Confederate troops to one final attack to center of Union line – Longstreet disagrees • Guns quieted in afternoon – Lee thought Union was weakened - orders CHARGE! • Pickett’s Charge: CSA loses 75% of men ...
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.