Library of Congress
... one Lee anticipated. At Gettysburg, a series of battles like the one shown here--this one on the first day of the fighting--cost Lee more than half of his entire army and forced him to retreat back into Virginia. President Lincoln hoped that the Union army would pursue the fleeing Confederates and d ...
... one Lee anticipated. At Gettysburg, a series of battles like the one shown here--this one on the first day of the fighting--cost Lee more than half of his entire army and forced him to retreat back into Virginia. President Lincoln hoped that the Union army would pursue the fleeing Confederates and d ...
I.CH 20 PPn - NOHS Teachers
... • April 19 and 27, the president proclaimed a blockade of Southern seaports • The call for troops aroused the South • Lincoln was now waging war—from the Southern view an aggressive war—on the Confederacy • Virginia, Arkansas Tennessee reluctantly joined Confederacy, as did North Carolina (see Map 2 ...
... • April 19 and 27, the president proclaimed a blockade of Southern seaports • The call for troops aroused the South • Lincoln was now waging war—from the Southern view an aggressive war—on the Confederacy • Virginia, Arkansas Tennessee reluctantly joined Confederacy, as did North Carolina (see Map 2 ...
the adaptable Word resource
... Interpretation B: From The Rise and Fall of the Confederate Government, by Jefferson Davis, published in 1881. Davis was the son of a plantation owner who, in 1845, entered Congress for the state of Mississippi. When Mississippi and six other states left the Union and set up their own Confederate go ...
... Interpretation B: From The Rise and Fall of the Confederate Government, by Jefferson Davis, published in 1881. Davis was the son of a plantation owner who, in 1845, entered Congress for the state of Mississippi. When Mississippi and six other states left the Union and set up their own Confederate go ...
Ch 20 The North & The South
... • April 19 and 27, the president proclaimed a blockade of Southern seaports • The call for troops aroused the South • Lincoln was now waging war—from the Southern view an aggressive war—on the Confederacy • Virginia, Arkansas Tennessee reluctantly joined Confederacy, as did North Carolina (see Map 2 ...
... • April 19 and 27, the president proclaimed a blockade of Southern seaports • The call for troops aroused the South • Lincoln was now waging war—from the Southern view an aggressive war—on the Confederacy • Virginia, Arkansas Tennessee reluctantly joined Confederacy, as did North Carolina (see Map 2 ...
Civil War Domestic Issues
... Prosperity and Expansion •Morrill Land Grant Act of 1862 – 30,000 acres of land each Congressional representative granted to each state. Proceeds of land sales to be used to finance ...
... Prosperity and Expansion •Morrill Land Grant Act of 1862 – 30,000 acres of land each Congressional representative granted to each state. Proceeds of land sales to be used to finance ...
Civil War Student Packet
... soldier to leave her a few chickens to feed her young children with, but the soldier felt no pity on her. "Madam," he replied, "we're gonna suppress this rebellion if it takes every last chicken in the Confederacy." And so, eating their way heartily through the heart of Georgia, Sherman's troops mar ...
... soldier to leave her a few chickens to feed her young children with, but the soldier felt no pity on her. "Madam," he replied, "we're gonna suppress this rebellion if it takes every last chicken in the Confederacy." And so, eating their way heartily through the heart of Georgia, Sherman's troops mar ...
What question - North Mac Schools
... Others were buried near the hospitals where they died. • At most battlefields the dead were exhumed and moved to National or Confederate cemeteries, but because there were so many bodies, and because of the time and the effort it took, they disinterred some of them. what question ...
... Others were buried near the hospitals where they died. • At most battlefields the dead were exhumed and moved to National or Confederate cemeteries, but because there were so many bodies, and because of the time and the effort it took, they disinterred some of them. what question ...
Hi Kate,
... rights had been dealt a severe blow. The nation was in the process of being knitted together by Republican Party initiatives, including a national bank and a transcontinental railroad. But these internal improvements were far from the only, or even the most important, examples of strengthened unity. ...
... rights had been dealt a severe blow. The nation was in the process of being knitted together by Republican Party initiatives, including a national bank and a transcontinental railroad. But these internal improvements were far from the only, or even the most important, examples of strengthened unity. ...
Document
... Party was purely ‘sectional’ – since southerners did not support it, the ‘Republican Party’ did not need to compromise to please the slaveholding South ...
... Party was purely ‘sectional’ – since southerners did not support it, the ‘Republican Party’ did not need to compromise to please the slaveholding South ...
Abraham Lincoln
... His wife complained of having a headache, and considered not going, but Lincoln in insisted on going The security guard went across the street for a drink somewhere during the third act Suddenly the door burst open and a man by the name of John Wilkes Booth pointed a derringer (a type of gun) at Lin ...
... His wife complained of having a headache, and considered not going, but Lincoln in insisted on going The security guard went across the street for a drink somewhere during the third act Suddenly the door burst open and a man by the name of John Wilkes Booth pointed a derringer (a type of gun) at Lin ...
CASE STUDY: RESEARCH ESSAY
... 1) William K. Klingaman. Final Freedom: The Civil War, Abraham Lincoln and the Road to Emancipation, 1861-1865 (2001) 2) Hofstadter, Richard. Great Issues in American History: from the Revolution to the Civil War, 1765- 1865 New York:Vintage Book, 1958 3) Donovan, Timothy H. The American Civil War ...
... 1) William K. Klingaman. Final Freedom: The Civil War, Abraham Lincoln and the Road to Emancipation, 1861-1865 (2001) 2) Hofstadter, Richard. Great Issues in American History: from the Revolution to the Civil War, 1765- 1865 New York:Vintage Book, 1958 3) Donovan, Timothy H. The American Civil War ...
African American Troops in the Civil War - Database of K
... • 8.H.1.2 ‐ Summarize the literal meaning of historical documents in order to establish context. • 8.H.1.3 ‐ Use primary and secondary sources to interpret various historical perspectives. • 8.H.1.4 ‐ Use historical inquiry to evaluate the validity of sources used to construct historical narrativ ...
... • 8.H.1.2 ‐ Summarize the literal meaning of historical documents in order to establish context. • 8.H.1.3 ‐ Use primary and secondary sources to interpret various historical perspectives. • 8.H.1.4 ‐ Use historical inquiry to evaluate the validity of sources used to construct historical narrativ ...
U.S. History (McKenna) Unit 4: The Union in Crisis Sept. 19 – Oct. 8
... The next section asserts that the government of the United States and of states within that government had failed to uphold their obligations to South Carolina. The specific issue stated was the refusal of some states to enforce the (11) ___________________________ and clauses in the (12) __________ ...
... The next section asserts that the government of the United States and of states within that government had failed to uphold their obligations to South Carolina. The specific issue stated was the refusal of some states to enforce the (11) ___________________________ and clauses in the (12) __________ ...
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.