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Gettysburg: A Turning Point (HA)
Gettysburg: A Turning Point (HA)

... Confederate soldiers in a charge across the low ground separating the two forces. Pickett’s charge marked the northernmost point reached by Southern troops during the war. But as Confederate troops pressed forward, Union gunners opened great holes in their advancing lines. Those men who managed to m ...
The American Civil War - ushistory
The American Civil War - ushistory

... • Abraham Lincoln passed the law called Emancipation Proclamation • This law stated that January 1, 1863, “all persons held as slaves" within the rebellious states "are, and henceforward shall be free." ...
Web Text - Secession Following Abe`s election, the state of South
Web Text - Secession Following Abe`s election, the state of South

... the Confederacy continued to mobilize. It elected Jefferson Davis as president and set up its capital headquarters in Montgomery, Alabama. War was eminent. War Begins As war approached, President Lincoln sent provisions to American forts that were now in Confederate territory, including Fort Sumter, ...
The Civil War Begins - Caggia Social Studies
The Civil War Begins - Caggia Social Studies

... upper South. On April 17, Virginia, unwilling to fight against other Southern states, seceded—a terrible loss to the Union. Virginia was the most heavily populated state in the South and the most industrialized (with a crucial ironworks and navy yard). In May, Arkansas, Tennessee, and North Carolina ...
The Civil War - Issues, Individuals and Events
The Civil War - Issues, Individuals and Events

... General Grant planned to take the port city in Mississippi and control the major river of the South. In March of 1863 he began to march his troops overland in an effort to outflank and surround the city. By May Grant had the city cut off with his 46,000 man army. The city fell on July 4, with the su ...
People and Economy of the Civil War
People and Economy of the Civil War

... lack of supplies and food  Springfield muzzleloader ...
UNIT 4: CIVIL WAR AND RECONSTRUCTION CHAPTER 5
UNIT 4: CIVIL WAR AND RECONSTRUCTION CHAPTER 5

... Four score and seven years ago our fathers brought forth on this continent, a new nation, conceived in Liberty, and dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal. Now we are engaged in a great civil war, testing whether that nation, or any nation so conceived and so dedicated, can long ...
Unit 5 Vocab practice 4
Unit 5 Vocab practice 4

... Elected as 16th President of the Union in 1860 and reelected in 1864; assassinated in 1865 after the end of the Civil War South Carolina Congressman and Senator who spoke for the South before and during the Civil War Lee’s surrender to Grant, the final chapter of the Civil War; by the time he surren ...
Chapter 16 The Civil War (1861-1865)
Chapter 16 The Civil War (1861-1865)

... Charge might work- the Confederates broke the Union’s first line • In the end 75% of those that charged were dead or wounded ...
Section 6: Vicksburg
Section 6: Vicksburg

... The town of Vicksburg was located on a bluff above a hairpin turn in the Mississippi River. The city was easy to defend and difficult to capture. Whoever held Vicksburg could, with a few well-placed cannons, control movement along the Mississippi. But even Farragut had to admit with fellow officer D ...
Hampton`s Civil War Experience
Hampton`s Civil War Experience

... tip of the Virginia Peninsula, Fort Monroe was the largest moat encircles masonry fortification in North America and designed to mount 412 cannons. It was the only fort in the Upper South not to fall into Confederate hands when the war erupted. Fort Monroe commanded the entrance to Hampton Roads and ...
The North Takes Charge
The North Takes Charge

... because of the overwhelming amount of smoke  Pickett’s “charge” was more like a slow death march; Union artillery mows them down!  Casualty ...
Document
Document

... hand and they would not close it.” ...
The Civil War - Maddox Middle School 6th Grade Social Studies
The Civil War - Maddox Middle School 6th Grade Social Studies

... Based on your knowledge of the Civil War Battles, summarize in a paragraph, which battle do you think was the most significant? ...
Introduction The First Battle of Bull Run The Battle of
Introduction The First Battle of Bull Run The Battle of

... That sent the Confederates running. The battle looked like a Union victory, but then the tables turned. One of the Confederate Generals kept his men fighting. All of the other Confederates went to him and reorganized. The general now told the men to scream like furies. The scream terrified the Union ...
Civil War - reneeASD10th
Civil War - reneeASD10th

... List – their names, where they were from, one battle they fought, did they win or lose the battle, 3 facts about each one, a picture of each person, a date of birth and date of death, what did they do after the war? Research one famous battle from the Civil War - Where was it fought, who won the bat ...
The Civil War
The Civil War

... ► After this, President Lincoln realized that the war would be longer than anyone previously thought ...
The Civil War
The Civil War

... Jefferson Davis called for volunteers. The Confederate Congress passed the Conscription Act in 1862. Conscription is the forced enrollment of people into military service. This required that all men between ages 18 and 35 to serve in the armed forces. The act allowed some to hire substitutes. Later ...
Civil War-US academic - EHuntNHS
Civil War-US academic - EHuntNHS

... other sides property and then could do with what they liked – Often used slaves for non combat jobs like building fortifications, and driving wagons ...
11. The Civil War
11. The Civil War

... Given the worst jobs ...
SSUSH 9 - LessonPaths
SSUSH 9 - LessonPaths

... would convince the North to settle for peace, gain support from the British, and find food for his men.  The two armies fought at Antietam, which became the bloodiest one-day battle in American history (over 22,000 casualties).  Lee is forced to retreat back into Virginia.  The Union victory led ...
11.1Revised - dullbrownhistory
11.1Revised - dullbrownhistory

... and Tactical Advantages:  “Home Court ...
Ch._18_Flashcards
Ch._18_Flashcards

... type of cone-shaped bullet that became popular during the Civil War. ...
Ch 13 The Civil War
Ch 13 The Civil War

... • Union losses decrease the North’s will to fight • North cannot get enough volunteers for it’s army • Congress implements a draft Draft Riots in NY • northerners opposed to being forced into fighting – Copperheads – Northern Democrats who want peace with South ...
Chapter 15 Section 1
Chapter 15 Section 1

... Only a few hundred Confederates reached the Union line but were driven back. About 7,500 Confederates were killed or wounded in “Pickett’s Charge”. *Battle of Gettysburg – more than 28,000 Confederates casualties. Union losses were more than 23,000. Lee again lost nearly a third of his army and too ...
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Battle of Fort Pillow



The Battle of Fort Pillow, also known as the Fort Pillow massacre, was fought on April 12, 1864, at Fort Pillow on the Mississippi River in Henning, Tennessee, during the American Civil War. The battle ended with a massacre of Federal troops (most of them African American) attempting to surrender, by soldiers under the command of Confederate Major General Nathan Bedford Forrest. Military historian David J. Eicher concluded, ""Fort Pillow marked one of the bleakest, saddest events of American military history.""
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