Document
... Brainstorm a list of first government- students things you would do to will make some decisions start your government. about starting a new What might you use as government as your bases for your secessionists did. government? Why it matters now- U.S. Researching- examine vs Yugoslavia - analyzing a ...
... Brainstorm a list of first government- students things you would do to will make some decisions start your government. about starting a new What might you use as government as your bases for your secessionists did. government? Why it matters now- U.S. Researching- examine vs Yugoslavia - analyzing a ...
Love Story Notes part 3
... Abraham Lincoln, August 22, 1862 quoted in Carl Sandburg, Abraham Lincoln 1 of Class Notes 0.5 ...
... Abraham Lincoln, August 22, 1862 quoted in Carl Sandburg, Abraham Lincoln 1 of Class Notes 0.5 ...
Civil War
... On April 12, 1861 ship entered harbor South Carolina batteries open fire on the fort Sumter bombarded for 40 hours ...
... On April 12, 1861 ship entered harbor South Carolina batteries open fire on the fort Sumter bombarded for 40 hours ...
Civil War
... War Leaders beliefs and values of the two areas • Northern leaders – believed it was illegal for the southern states to secede from the Union and viewed them as outlaws not citizens of another country • Southern leaders – put loyalty to their home state above everything else and fought for the prote ...
... War Leaders beliefs and values of the two areas • Northern leaders – believed it was illegal for the southern states to secede from the Union and viewed them as outlaws not citizens of another country • Southern leaders – put loyalty to their home state above everything else and fought for the prote ...
Paper
... War during the last few decades is the increased recognition that slavery brought it about. Assumptions that were once widespread – that those who initiated secession did so because of differences about tariffs, internal improvements …. anything but slavery – are now generally discarded. The seven s ...
... War during the last few decades is the increased recognition that slavery brought it about. Assumptions that were once widespread – that those who initiated secession did so because of differences about tariffs, internal improvements …. anything but slavery – are now generally discarded. The seven s ...
Civil War Significances
... • North’s strategy to defeat the South- The plan would suffocate the South as an anaconda suffocates its prey. • Capture the Mississippi River, Capture, Richmond Virginia and blockade the South’s seaports ...
... • North’s strategy to defeat the South- The plan would suffocate the South as an anaconda suffocates its prey. • Capture the Mississippi River, Capture, Richmond Virginia and blockade the South’s seaports ...
Document
... . . Go tell my deluded friends that I am proud of their friendship, of their love and loyalty, . . . [but] to go to their homes and to conceal from the world that they would have been guilty of such an act.” ...
... . . Go tell my deluded friends that I am proud of their friendship, of their love and loyalty, . . . [but] to go to their homes and to conceal from the world that they would have been guilty of such an act.” ...
Ch. 16, Section 5: The Way to Victory pg. 485
... setting fire to the city of Richmond as they left. ...
... setting fire to the city of Richmond as they left. ...
Chapter 6 Notes
... 2) Lincoln relieved to “live to see the end” – pg. 511 & 512 C. Surrender at Appomattox 1) Formal end of war – April 9, 1865 2) Grant’s Terms for Lee: a) Could keep small firearms b) Officers could keep horses c) 25,000 rations to feed his troops D. Toll of War 1) More lives lost than any other conf ...
... 2) Lincoln relieved to “live to see the end” – pg. 511 & 512 C. Surrender at Appomattox 1) Formal end of war – April 9, 1865 2) Grant’s Terms for Lee: a) Could keep small firearms b) Officers could keep horses c) 25,000 rations to feed his troops D. Toll of War 1) More lives lost than any other conf ...
Ch 11 The Civil War
... Sec 3 Life During the War • As the southern economy collapsed during the civil war, the north experienced a great time of growth and production • African Americans were allowed to enlist in the Union army after the Emancipation ...
... Sec 3 Life During the War • As the southern economy collapsed during the civil war, the north experienced a great time of growth and production • African Americans were allowed to enlist in the Union army after the Emancipation ...
US History I
... slavery. More and more, the South saw the solution to these problems in secession. The North saw the Union with or without slavery as indissoluble. Southern soldiers generally believed in three causes for which they fought: states’ rights, slavery, and liberty… 1. States’ Rights: Southern leaders be ...
... slavery. More and more, the South saw the solution to these problems in secession. The North saw the Union with or without slavery as indissoluble. Southern soldiers generally believed in three causes for which they fought: states’ rights, slavery, and liberty… 1. States’ Rights: Southern leaders be ...
Civil War Website Treasure Hunt (updated 7/2003 by Susan C
... Ways of life were different for both sides: plantations versus factories. On state's rights the North argued no state had a right to secede from the Union, the South argued a state could ...
... Ways of life were different for both sides: plantations versus factories. On state's rights the North argued no state had a right to secede from the Union, the South argued a state could ...
I know no north, no south, no east, no west.
... • Fought when part of the union seceded from the country. • Did it because they wanted states rights. • Told that only the states in the South could have slaves. • The first battle was at Fort Sumpter. • Civil War ended in a surrender on the Confederate side. ...
... • Fought when part of the union seceded from the country. • Did it because they wanted states rights. • Told that only the states in the South could have slaves. • The first battle was at Fort Sumpter. • Civil War ended in a surrender on the Confederate side. ...
Ch. 21 Notes The Furnace of the Civil War
... Savannah, GA, causing as much destruction as possible. 4. This strategy was known as total war and its purpose is to not only destroy the enemies ability to fight but also their will to fight – its highly effective as large numbers of Confederate troops desert to go home and defend their land. ...
... Savannah, GA, causing as much destruction as possible. 4. This strategy was known as total war and its purpose is to not only destroy the enemies ability to fight but also their will to fight – its highly effective as large numbers of Confederate troops desert to go home and defend their land. ...
glory - Jack Nilan
... 25. The Civil War was fought a. 1776 – 1781 b. 1812 – 1817 c. 1861 – 1865 d. 1917 – 1921 26. President Abraham Lincoln fought the Civil War to: a. punish the South for its transgressions against blacks b. stabilize the economy, suffering the effects of uncooperative southern planters c. abolish slav ...
... 25. The Civil War was fought a. 1776 – 1781 b. 1812 – 1817 c. 1861 – 1865 d. 1917 – 1921 26. President Abraham Lincoln fought the Civil War to: a. punish the South for its transgressions against blacks b. stabilize the economy, suffering the effects of uncooperative southern planters c. abolish slav ...
Chapter 12: The Civil War Years 1861-1865
... On April 1, 1865 General Lee sends word to President Jefferson Davis that he can not stop union troops from taking the capital of the Confederacy, Richmond Virginia. Lee wanted to continue fighting, but his troops were short of supplies, outnumbered, weary from years of fighting, and cut off from re ...
... On April 1, 1865 General Lee sends word to President Jefferson Davis that he can not stop union troops from taking the capital of the Confederacy, Richmond Virginia. Lee wanted to continue fighting, but his troops were short of supplies, outnumbered, weary from years of fighting, and cut off from re ...
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.