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Major Events before and during the Civil War
Major Events before and during the Civil War

... Emancipation (cont.) • The proclamation did not name the border states of Kentucky, Missouri, Maryland, or Delaware, which had never declared a secession, and so it did not free any slaves there. • The state of Tennessee had already mostly returned to Union control, so it also was not named and was ...
Chapter 8
Chapter 8

... of Confederacy • March, 1861, Lincoln made his inaugural address: intended to “hold, occupy and possess” federal property ...
Objectives: The student will demonstrate knowledge of the Civil War
Objectives: The student will demonstrate knowledge of the Civil War

... Southerners believed that states had freely joined the union and could freely leave. Essential Question # 3: Who were the key leaders of the Civil War? The Roles of Individual Leaders in the Civil War Union (North) Confederacy (South) Abraham Lincoln Jefferson Davis President of the United States du ...
questions and answers
questions and answers

Chapter 3: The Civil War and Reconstruction
Chapter 3: The Civil War and Reconstruction

... Lee’s attempt to escape Grant failed when his troops were surrounded at the Appomattox Courthouse ...
Events Leading to Civil War
Events Leading to Civil War

... after South Carolina secedes in December 1860 • Lincoln will not evacuate or send the Navy to defend, but sends supplies to the fort, or as he said, “food for hungry men”. • The Union refused to surrender the fort and Jefferson Davis orders Southern troops to bombard it. • After 33 hours the garriso ...
File
File

... oath of allegiance to the Union and accept federal policy on slavery 2. It denied pardons to all Confederate military and government officials and to southerners who had killed African American war prisoners. 3. It permitted each state to hold a constitutional convention only after 10 percent of vot ...
The Civil War (1861
The Civil War (1861

... • Grant headed up Tennessee River to attack Corinth, MS – cut rail line connecting MS & western TN • Confederates surprised Grant 20 miles north at Shiloh Church – Grant advised to retreat – No. Attacked Beauregard’s troops until he had to order a retreat – 20,000 troops wounded or killed – newspape ...
Unit 07 Social, Economic, Political, Diplomatic impact of Civil War
Unit 07 Social, Economic, Political, Diplomatic impact of Civil War

... • Goal: Diplomatic recognition ...
AP Chapter 14 Study Guide
AP Chapter 14 Study Guide

...  How did the Union and the Confederacy mobilize for the Civil War?  What were the goals of both the Union and the Confederacy when the war began?  What economic effects did the Civil War have on the North and the South?  How was western migration encouraged during the Civil War?  What were the ...
Chapter 21 The Furnace of the Civil War
Chapter 21 The Furnace of the Civil War

One of the most significant issues was the economic split between
One of the most significant issues was the economic split between

... Party picked Abraham Lincoln as its candidate for president. Lincoln was not an abolitionist but he had spoken against the spread of slavery into the territories, which meant the South considered him an enemy. Leading Southerners announced that they would demand secession from the Union if Lincoln w ...
Guided Reading 16-3
Guided Reading 16-3

... 2. Southerners feared enslaved African Americans would use the weapons, which they would be given as soldiers, in a rebellion. ...
Chapter 7 Study Cards
Chapter 7 Study Cards

... b. a new steam engine c. new iron rails d. the longest tunnel in the country ...
Leaders
Leaders

... Why did Lincoln win? ...
Civil War PPT
Civil War PPT

... Confederacy’s general officers were killed, wounded, or captured ...
Chapter 11 section 4
Chapter 11 section 4

... north to stop Lee’s progress across Pennsylvania. ...
Chapter 18 The Civil War- Section 1 The War begins
Chapter 18 The Civil War- Section 1 The War begins

Presentation 11 -
Presentation 11 -

... “On the occasion [of my first inaugural address] four years ago all thoughts were anxiously directed to an impending civil war. All dreaded it, all sought to avert it. While the inaugural address was being delivered from this place, devoted altogether to saving the Union without war, urgent agents w ...
THE AMERICAN CIVIL WAR
THE AMERICAN CIVIL WAR

... be looked upon by the CSA as a direct confrontation and a possible weakness on their part Lincoln decided to send provisions but NOT reinforcements. Why? ...
Name_____________________________________
Name_____________________________________

... 30. What was the purpose of the Northern blockade of Southern ports? Keep the South from selling Cotton Keep the South from importing anything from Europe (guns / supplies) 31. What was wrong with the Union blockade in the beginning of the war? Too few ships; Southern ships easily could avoid the bl ...
File
File

... whether territories would come in as free or slave states and it led to a physical conflict called “Bloody Kansas.” a. Compromise of 1850 b. Kansas-Nebraska Act c. Missouri Compromise d. Election of 1860 3. This Supreme Court case, based on a slave suing for his freedom, declared that African Americ ...
The American Civil War
The American Civil War

The Tide of War Turns
The Tide of War Turns

... - 90,000 Union troops clashed with 75,000 Confederate troops - The turning point of the Battle was when General George Pickett was ordered to mount a direct attack on the middle of the Union lines; a deadly mistake - This was known as Pickett’s Charge - Lee’s hopes for a Confederate victory in the N ...
Power Point
Power Point

... leave the Union and form a new nation called the Confederate States of America. Four months later, six other states seceded. They were Georgia, Florida, Alabama, Mississippi, Texas and Louisiana. Later Virginia, Arkansas, North Carolina, and Tennessee joined them. The people of these states elected ...
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Baltimore riot of 1861



The Baltimore riot of 1861 (also called the Pratt Street Riot and the Pratt Street Massacre) was a conflict on April 19, 1861, in Baltimore, Maryland, between anti-War Democrats (the largest party in Maryland), as well as Confederate sympathizers, and members of the Massachusetts militia en route to Washington for Federal service. It produced the first deaths by hostile action in the American Civil War.
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