Teaching Resources - Jefferson Forest High School
... recruiting as many African Americans as it could. 4. Military service did not end racial discrimination, yet African Americans volunteered for Union military service in disproportionate numbers. 5. Lincoln put Ulysses S. Grant in charge of all Union armies and directed him to advance against all maj ...
... recruiting as many African Americans as it could. 4. Military service did not end racial discrimination, yet African Americans volunteered for Union military service in disproportionate numbers. 5. Lincoln put Ulysses S. Grant in charge of all Union armies and directed him to advance against all maj ...
PowerPoint Presentation - Wyckoff School District
... Union burned the city Atlanta Ripped up railroad tracks, burned homes, factories, & barns Total war•new type of combat •destroyed food & equipment that the enemy might use • everyone was affected (not just soldiers) ...
... Union burned the city Atlanta Ripped up railroad tracks, burned homes, factories, & barns Total war•new type of combat •destroyed food & equipment that the enemy might use • everyone was affected (not just soldiers) ...
The Civil War
... The Battle of Gettysburg-July 3, 1863 After the failure of the attacks on the second day of battle, Longstreet again begged Lee to move South towards Washington, but Lee planned an all out frontal assault on the Union lines. The attack would begin with a concentrated artillery attack on the center ...
... The Battle of Gettysburg-July 3, 1863 After the failure of the attacks on the second day of battle, Longstreet again begged Lee to move South towards Washington, but Lee planned an all out frontal assault on the Union lines. The attack would begin with a concentrated artillery attack on the center ...
17 - Coppell ISD
... Confederacy State’s righter’s resisted paying taxes to central government Georgia even threatened to secede from the seceded Confederacy *** Possibly a DOUBLE secession, indeed this was a mixed up group of state leaders The South also passed draft laws Their law had special clauses also; if ...
... Confederacy State’s righter’s resisted paying taxes to central government Georgia even threatened to secede from the seceded Confederacy *** Possibly a DOUBLE secession, indeed this was a mixed up group of state leaders The South also passed draft laws Their law had special clauses also; if ...
Civil_War_Battles - Cambridge Public Schools Moodle Site
... positions near Fredericksburg and heading for the Shenandoah Valley. Lee planned a raid into Pennsylvania to relieve the strained Virginia countryside, disrupt Union economic security east of the Susquehanna River, and bring foreign recognition to the Confederacy. When Lee learned from scouts the wh ...
... positions near Fredericksburg and heading for the Shenandoah Valley. Lee planned a raid into Pennsylvania to relieve the strained Virginia countryside, disrupt Union economic security east of the Susquehanna River, and bring foreign recognition to the Confederacy. When Lee learned from scouts the wh ...
Civil War Unit - Lesson 6 - Civil War Battles - Gallery
... Confederate army of the South in Tennessee, the Union army continued to move South towards Georgia. The leader of this army was General George William Sherman. Sherman and his Union army marched into Atlanta. Atlanta was important for the Confederate army of the South because it was a key city for t ...
... Confederate army of the South in Tennessee, the Union army continued to move South towards Georgia. The leader of this army was General George William Sherman. Sherman and his Union army marched into Atlanta. Atlanta was important for the Confederate army of the South because it was a key city for t ...
11. The Civil War
... Sometimes given tedious tasks If captured by the Confederacy they would be killed Southern slaves help Union troops as they pass through Food Spies Scouts ...
... Sometimes given tedious tasks If captured by the Confederacy they would be killed Southern slaves help Union troops as they pass through Food Spies Scouts ...
American History
... Vicksburg, MS surrenders; Gen Grant, July 4th,1863 Port Hudson in Louisiana was seized TX, LA, AR were cut off from the rest of the confederacy Union now holds the entire MS Lee’s army out of PA © 2009 abcteach.com ...
... Vicksburg, MS surrenders; Gen Grant, July 4th,1863 Port Hudson in Louisiana was seized TX, LA, AR were cut off from the rest of the confederacy Union now holds the entire MS Lee’s army out of PA © 2009 abcteach.com ...
document
... • April 9, 1865-- General Lee surrenders the Confederate Army of North Virginia to General Grant at the town of Appomattox, Virginia. • The terms of surrender were very generous: – No one was arrested for treason. – Confederate soldiers could return to their homes. – They could keep their horses/mul ...
... • April 9, 1865-- General Lee surrenders the Confederate Army of North Virginia to General Grant at the town of Appomattox, Virginia. • The terms of surrender were very generous: – No one was arrested for treason. – Confederate soldiers could return to their homes. – They could keep their horses/mul ...
The War
... Chancellorsville to invade the North. Lee believed that a major victory in the North would tip the balance in his favour. Early in July 1863, Lee’s attack ground to a halt at a Pennsylvania road junction named Gettysburg. Confederates looking for shoes in the town encountered some Union cavalry. So ...
... Chancellorsville to invade the North. Lee believed that a major victory in the North would tip the balance in his favour. Early in July 1863, Lee’s attack ground to a halt at a Pennsylvania road junction named Gettysburg. Confederates looking for shoes in the town encountered some Union cavalry. So ...
Unit 8 - Mr. O`Sullivan`s World of History
... Chancellorsville to invade the North. Lee believed that a major victory in the North would tip the balance in his favour. Early in July 1863, Lee’s attack ground to a halt at a Pennsylvania road junction named Gettysburg. Confederates looking for shoes in the town encountered some Union cavalry. So ...
... Chancellorsville to invade the North. Lee believed that a major victory in the North would tip the balance in his favour. Early in July 1863, Lee’s attack ground to a halt at a Pennsylvania road junction named Gettysburg. Confederates looking for shoes in the town encountered some Union cavalry. So ...
Name: Date - Bibb County Schools
... President Abraham Lincoln: Lincoln was the most ______________________ public figure of the Civil War. He was elected president ___________________, in ___________ and ___________. He was a lawyer, a state legislator in _________________ and a _________________in Congress for the state of Illinois. ...
... President Abraham Lincoln: Lincoln was the most ______________________ public figure of the Civil War. He was elected president ___________________, in ___________ and ___________. He was a lawyer, a state legislator in _________________ and a _________________in Congress for the state of Illinois. ...
Read Chapter 16, Section 1: pages 353
... president to send a relief ship to federal property when a “foreign power” is attacking the property, even though he thought that the relief could be taken as an “act of war.” B3: Following the attack on Fort Sumter, Lincoln insisted that the war with the Confederacy was caused by the Confederacy in ...
... president to send a relief ship to federal property when a “foreign power” is attacking the property, even though he thought that the relief could be taken as an “act of war.” B3: Following the attack on Fort Sumter, Lincoln insisted that the war with the Confederacy was caused by the Confederacy in ...
Chapter-8-PPt
... IX. Battle of Baton Rouge • Farragut was furious that Confederates hid in the town’s buildings and fired at Union soldiers. • He bombed Baton Rouge, destroying much of the city • General Thomas Williams then landed 2,600 soldiers, occupied the city, and ...
... IX. Battle of Baton Rouge • Farragut was furious that Confederates hid in the town’s buildings and fired at Union soldiers. • He bombed Baton Rouge, destroying much of the city • General Thomas Williams then landed 2,600 soldiers, occupied the city, and ...
graphic guided notes page.
... Lincoln won the election of 1860 but his victory was odd because he won with only a 40% of the votes. This means 60% of voters did not favor Lincoln for president. His name wasn’t even on the ballot in 10 southern states. But the remaining 60% of the votes were divided between the other three candid ...
... Lincoln won the election of 1860 but his victory was odd because he won with only a 40% of the votes. This means 60% of voters did not favor Lincoln for president. His name wasn’t even on the ballot in 10 southern states. But the remaining 60% of the votes were divided between the other three candid ...
the civil war begins
... Abraham Lincoln was elected the 16th President of the United States in 1860. Lincoln and many Northerners believed that the United States was one nation that should not be separated or divided. Most Southerners believed that states had freely created and joined the union and could freely leave it. ...
... Abraham Lincoln was elected the 16th President of the United States in 1860. Lincoln and many Northerners believed that the United States was one nation that should not be separated or divided. Most Southerners believed that states had freely created and joined the union and could freely leave it. ...
Civil War notes
... note nor long remember what we say here, but it can never forget what they did here. It is for us, the living, rather, to be dedicated here to the unfinished work which they who fought here have thus far so nobly advanced. It is rather for us to be here dedicated to the great task remaining before u ...
... note nor long remember what we say here, but it can never forget what they did here. It is for us, the living, rather, to be dedicated here to the unfinished work which they who fought here have thus far so nobly advanced. It is rather for us to be here dedicated to the great task remaining before u ...
Unit 6-Civil War
... goal in the war was to preserve the Union. Although the South had better trained generals, the North had more soldiers, as well as factories which produced more guns, ammunition, and supplies for the war, which gave them the advantage to win the war. Fort Sumter: The war began at Fort Sumter, a US m ...
... goal in the war was to preserve the Union. Although the South had better trained generals, the North had more soldiers, as well as factories which produced more guns, ammunition, and supplies for the war, which gave them the advantage to win the war. Fort Sumter: The war began at Fort Sumter, a US m ...
5th Grade Unit 4 Civil War
... point in the war because the South lost men and supplies, they could not replace ...
... point in the war because the South lost men and supplies, they could not replace ...
5th Grade Unit 4 Civil War
... point in the war because the South lost men and supplies, they could not replace ...
... point in the war because the South lost men and supplies, they could not replace ...
Battle of Gettysburg
... Despite the victory, President Lincoln was concerned with the threat Jackson’s forces posed to Washington D.C., so he redirected reinforcements to the Shenandoah Valley instead of sending them to McClellan, who was trying to capture Richmond by fighting his way up the Yorktown peninsula. McClellan c ...
... Despite the victory, President Lincoln was concerned with the threat Jackson’s forces posed to Washington D.C., so he redirected reinforcements to the Shenandoah Valley instead of sending them to McClellan, who was trying to capture Richmond by fighting his way up the Yorktown peninsula. McClellan c ...
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.