8.3-Civil_War_Politics_and Economics-Historysage
... b. Lincoln: Hoped to have God on his side but he had to “have Kentucky.” 2. West Virginia left Virginia in mid-1861 to join the Union; large “mountain white” population 3. Contained over 50% of the South’s white population; fewest number of slaves 4. War began with slaveholders on both sides Broth ...
... b. Lincoln: Hoped to have God on his side but he had to “have Kentucky.” 2. West Virginia left Virginia in mid-1861 to join the Union; large “mountain white” population 3. Contained over 50% of the South’s white population; fewest number of slaves 4. War began with slaveholders on both sides Broth ...
Mr. Judd Civil War Review Name_____________ OVERVIEW
... 4. What did Southern planters think when abolitionists like William Lloyd Garrison called for an end to slavery? ________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________ 5. At the time of the Civil War, black slaves made up abo ...
... 4. What did Southern planters think when abolitionists like William Lloyd Garrison called for an end to slavery? ________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________ 5. At the time of the Civil War, black slaves made up abo ...
userfiles/605/my files/ch. 16 pp civil war?id=2958
... Georgia Governor Joseph E. Brown called for volunteer soldiers, seized federal forts and arsenals in Georgia, and occupied the U.S. mint in Dahlonega, where gold and silver money was made. Lincoln tried to resupply a federal fort in Charleston Harbor, but Confederate troops forced the fort to su ...
... Georgia Governor Joseph E. Brown called for volunteer soldiers, seized federal forts and arsenals in Georgia, and occupied the U.S. mint in Dahlonega, where gold and silver money was made. Lincoln tried to resupply a federal fort in Charleston Harbor, but Confederate troops forced the fort to su ...
16 - Coppell ISD
... storekeeper and a lawyer in Illinois. Lincoln’s presidency began during a troubled time. The Civil War between Northern and Southern States started just five weeks after he took office. In addition to his nickname ‘Honest Abe’, Lincoln is also known as the “Great Emancipator” for signing the 16th Pr ...
... storekeeper and a lawyer in Illinois. Lincoln’s presidency began during a troubled time. The Civil War between Northern and Southern States started just five weeks after he took office. In addition to his nickname ‘Honest Abe’, Lincoln is also known as the “Great Emancipator” for signing the 16th Pr ...
16 - Coppell ISD
... storekeeper and a lawyer in Illinois. Lincoln’s presidency began during a troubled time. The Civil War between Northern and Southern States started just five weeks after he took office. In addition to his nickname ‘Honest Abe’, Lincoln is also known as the “Great Emancipator” for signing the 16th Pr ...
... storekeeper and a lawyer in Illinois. Lincoln’s presidency began during a troubled time. The Civil War between Northern and Southern States started just five weeks after he took office. In addition to his nickname ‘Honest Abe’, Lincoln is also known as the “Great Emancipator” for signing the 16th Pr ...
Name - Wsfcs
... Reconstruction was the time period from 1865-1877 defined by the Confederate states reentering the Union. The Constitution does not say what branch of government might oversee states reentering the union, leaving the President and Congress will compete for this responsibility. Even before the Civil ...
... Reconstruction was the time period from 1865-1877 defined by the Confederate states reentering the Union. The Constitution does not say what branch of government might oversee states reentering the union, leaving the President and Congress will compete for this responsibility. Even before the Civil ...
File
... Civil War Myths by William E. Quinn It is good to see renewed interest in that darkest period of our nation’s history during this Sesquicentennial of the War Between the States. With the exception of the Revolutionary War, no war has more defined the United States of America. The state of our govern ...
... Civil War Myths by William E. Quinn It is good to see renewed interest in that darkest period of our nation’s history during this Sesquicentennial of the War Between the States. With the exception of the Revolutionary War, no war has more defined the United States of America. The state of our govern ...
Chapter 21 Notes - Spokane Public Schools
... Pennsylvania in hopes that it might force the Union to end the war. It proved to be a turning point, but not the 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 re ...
... Pennsylvania in hopes that it might force the Union to end the war. It proved to be a turning point, but not the 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 re ...
Divided Loyalties - Deer Creek High School
... The Kansas-Nebraska Act provided for popular sovereignty, or the right of the people to decide the slavery issue for themselves. Violence broke out between abolitionists and pro-slavery groups. Kansas also tried to claim all lands south to the 36o30’ line, but the Cherokee strongly objected. Kansas ...
... The Kansas-Nebraska Act provided for popular sovereignty, or the right of the people to decide the slavery issue for themselves. Violence broke out between abolitionists and pro-slavery groups. Kansas also tried to claim all lands south to the 36o30’ line, but the Cherokee strongly objected. Kansas ...
The North Wins
... Lee's army in Virginia, while Union forces under General William Tecumseh Sherman pushed through the Deep South to Atlanta and the Atlantic coast. Battling southward from Tennessee, Sherman took Atlanta in September 1864. He then set out on a march to the sea, cutting a path of destruction up to 6 ...
... Lee's army in Virginia, while Union forces under General William Tecumseh Sherman pushed through the Deep South to Atlanta and the Atlantic coast. Battling southward from Tennessee, Sherman took Atlanta in September 1864. He then set out on a march to the sea, cutting a path of destruction up to 6 ...
Abraham Lincoln`s Inaugural Addresses
... Abraham Lincoln’s Second Inaugural Address March 4, 1865 Fellow-Countrymen: At this second appearing to take the oath of the Presidential office there is less occasion for an extended address than there was at the first. Then a statement somewhat in detail of a course to be pursued seemed fitting an ...
... Abraham Lincoln’s Second Inaugural Address March 4, 1865 Fellow-Countrymen: At this second appearing to take the oath of the Presidential office there is less occasion for an extended address than there was at the first. Then a statement somewhat in detail of a course to be pursued seemed fitting an ...
North vs. South
... Constitution of the Confederate States of America • When the framers of the Confederate Constitution set out to draft the document they were set on forming a document that was fundamentally different form the one they opposed. • The framers wanted a document that not only represented their ideologi ...
... Constitution of the Confederate States of America • When the framers of the Confederate Constitution set out to draft the document they were set on forming a document that was fundamentally different form the one they opposed. • The framers wanted a document that not only represented their ideologi ...
Chapter 21 - Newton Public Schools
... commitment to emancipate slaves and bring them into the Union army. 15. As the Democratic Party nominee in 1864, General George McClellan a. denounced Lincoln as a traitor and called for an immediate end to the war. b. repudiated the Copperhead platform that called for a negotiated settlement with t ...
... commitment to emancipate slaves and bring them into the Union army. 15. As the Democratic Party nominee in 1864, General George McClellan a. denounced Lincoln as a traitor and called for an immediate end to the war. b. repudiated the Copperhead platform that called for a negotiated settlement with t ...
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.