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Civil War Multiple Choice Quiz
Civil War Multiple Choice Quiz

... capturing the Confederate capital blockading ports striking along the Mississippi River fortifying positions in border states such as Indiana and Ohio. ...
Battle of Antietam - Perry Local Schools
Battle of Antietam - Perry Local Schools

... Union had 12401 casualties with 2108 dead. This represented 25% of the Federal force. Of the other casualties, 1910 Union troops died of their wounds soon after the battle. While 225 Union troops listed as MIA were later confirmed dead. Confederate casualties were 10318 with 1546 dead. This represen ...
Name
Name

... 4. Amendment that ended slavery in the United States. ...
Civil War Timeline
Civil War Timeline

... In a series of battles the Southern army led by Generals Joseph E. Johnston and Robert E. Lee, the South managed to drive back the Union army. Lee breaks McClellan siege of Richmond. The Union led by General John Pope was defeated at Bull Run Creek while trying to reach Richmond. The Union army retr ...
Battles of the Civil War 1862
Battles of the Civil War 1862

... • Protect Tennessee and Cumberland Rivers from Union • Forts fall to “Unconditional Surrender” Grant1st Union victory of the war ...
North Carolina in the Civil War
North Carolina in the Civil War

... Effects of the war on people in the South: Shortage of food, salt, cloth (for clothing), shoes and medicines  Women were left to tend children and farms  Inflation (driving up prices) Richard Gatling: patented the Gatling gun; his first invention was a rice seed planter ...
Civil War 1860-1865
Civil War 1860-1865

... withdraws from the United States. Soon after other Southern states join South Carolina and form the Confederate States of America, or Confederacy. They elect Jefferson Davis as president ...
Civil War - Cobb Learning
Civil War - Cobb Learning

... Atlanta and Savannah campaigns • First battle, April 10, 1862, was at all-brick Fort Pulaski, near Tybee Island • Rifled cannon used by U.S. Army in warfare for the first time; the Confederates surrendered the fort in less than two days • No brick American forts were built after this battle ...
The Civil War
The Civil War

... arrives for the Confederates. The battle ends with a Union victory when Lee retreats to Virginia. It is the bloodiest one-day battle in American History with 23,000 casualties. Battle builds Union confidence and leads Lincoln to issue the Emancipation Proclamation. ...
Georgia and the American Experience
Georgia and the American Experience

... Union Army fought series of battles against ______________________’s Confederate Army • Confederates continued to retreat further southward into Georgia • June 1864: Sherman attacked Johnston at Kennesaw Mountain; Sherman lost but continued toward Atlanta • July 1864: ______________________ replaced ...
The American Civil War
The American Civil War

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File
File

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The War Begins: 1860 - 1865
The War Begins: 1860 - 1865

... •Wanted to restore the Union to what it had been prior to the rise of the Republican party •Congress suggests a compromise which would extend the Missouri Compromise line to the Pacific, Lincoln ultimately rejects this plan ...
first Battle of Bull Run - Virginia and the Civil War
first Battle of Bull Run - Virginia and the Civil War

... kept Union troops from advancing South. ...
Modern World History Chapter 16-2: Japan`s Pacific
Modern World History Chapter 16-2: Japan`s Pacific

... Armies Clash at Gettysburg: 1) The Battle of Gettysburg was significant because it _____________________________ the South so badly that they would never again have enough troops to invade a _____________________________. 2) The South won the Battle of Chancellorsville, however an accident led to im ...
Chapter 12 Review
Chapter 12 Review

... 31. What did Lincoln suspend during the Civil War? __________________________________________ 32. What did Lincoln issue on New Year’s Day in 1863? __________________________________________ 33. Who devised a legal argument that allowed the Union Army to free enslaved Africans? ____________________ ...
1 Battle of Antietam The bloodiest single day in American history, the
1 Battle of Antietam The bloodiest single day in American history, the

... Meanwhile, in the Sunken Road, Union General William H. French’s division battled with General D.H. Hill’s troops. The fighting was so gruesome that the battlefield would later be known as Bloody Lane. Southeast of Sharpsburg, General Ambrose Burnside was attempting to cross a narrow bridge over Ant ...
9.4 PowerPoint
9.4 PowerPoint

... July 2, 1863- Lee attacked- Union held their ground Lee ordered 15,000 men under the command of general George E. Pickett and A.P. Hill to undertake a massive assault- Pickett’s Charge 7,000 casualties in less than half an hour of fighting ...
Study Guide for Mr - Fort Johnson Middle School
Study Guide for Mr - Fort Johnson Middle School

... the Mississippi River; negotiated the surrender of the army of northern Virginia at Appomattox; captured Vicksburg, MS William T. Sherman- Union general who left a trail of destruction behind him in his infamous “March to the Sea” Jefferson Davis- only president of the Confederate States of America ...
A Brothers* War: The Upper South
A Brothers* War: The Upper South

...  E. Lyon was shot and his men ran out of ammunition, they retreated  F. Confederates won  G. Fremont (Commander of the Union’s Western Department) issued an order that would put the whole state under martial law  H. Lincoln tells Fremont to modify his proclamation  I. Civil War  1. 80,000 whit ...
Chapter 16.5- Lecture Station - Waverly
Chapter 16.5- Lecture Station - Waverly

... Bridging the Rappahannock River is a formidable, all-day task for Union troops. As pontooniers begin construction on the morning of December 11, Confederate sharpshooters open fire. Union artillery at Stafford Heights aids the Federals in their advance, but Rebel resistance is strong. Union troops e ...
Texas and the Civil War
Texas and the Civil War

... Texas became the 7th state to secede from the United States on March 2, 1861 -Texas joined the seceding states to form the Confederate States of America with Jefferson Davis as president -March 1861, the Texas Secessionist convention wrote a new ...
Life During Wartime
Life During Wartime

... – African Americans suffered discrimination by having separate regiments – The mortality rate for African American soldiers was higher than that for white soldiers – Assigned to labor duties making it more likely to catch typhoid, pneumonia, malaria, or some other deadly disease – The Confederacy e ...
1. Define: Secession: leaving the Union Secede: to leave
1. Define: Secession: leaving the Union Secede: to leave

... 12. The Battle of Bull Run was fought in July of 1861 and was the first major battle of the war. It was a Confederate victory. Why was this battle important? The battle was a Confederate victory. It showed both sides that the war would be long and the casualties high. 13. The Battle of Antietam was ...
ended the civil war
ended the civil war

... the Potomac during early years of war General Ambrose Burnside: was a soldier, an industrialist, railroad executive and an inventor, eventually becoming the governor of Rhode Island as well as US Senator. General William Tecumseh Sherman: fought in many battles/best known for taking Atlanta & his br ...
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Battle of New Bern



The Battle of New Bern (also known as the Battle of New Berne) was fought on 14 March 1862, near the city of New Bern, North Carolina, as part of the Burnside Expedition of the American Civil War. The US Army's Coast Division, led by Brigadier General Ambrose E. Burnside and accompanied by armed vessels from the North Atlantic Blockading Squadron, were opposed by an undermanned and badly trained Confederate force of North Carolina soldiers and militia led by Brigadier General Lawrence O'B. Branch. Although the defenders fought behind breastworks that had been set up before the battle, their line had a weak spot in its center that was exploited by the attacking Federal soldiers. When the center of the line was penetrated, many of the militia broke, forcing a general retreat of the entire Confederate force. General Branch was unable to regain control of his troops until they had retreated to Kinston, more than 30 miles (about 50 km) away. New Bern came under Federal control, and remained so for the rest of the war.
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