Chapter 15
... Mass-produced weapons Joint army-navy tactics Iron-plated warships Rifled guns, artillery Trench warfare ...
... Mass-produced weapons Joint army-navy tactics Iron-plated warships Rifled guns, artillery Trench warfare ...
Chapter 16 Civil War Study Guide
... address? Also, know the key points of his second inaugural address and the Gettysburg address. Where and when did the Civil War begin and who fired the first shots? Understand the concepts of Cotton Diplomacy. Who were the key leaders of the Union and Confederate armies? Is there anything special ab ...
... address? Also, know the key points of his second inaugural address and the Gettysburg address. Where and when did the Civil War begin and who fired the first shots? Understand the concepts of Cotton Diplomacy. Who were the key leaders of the Union and Confederate armies? Is there anything special ab ...
unit 5: the nation breaks apart
... -Loss of slaves crippled the South’s ability to wage war. 2. African Americans participated in the war in a variety of ways. a. African Americans volunteered to fight. b. The War Department gave contrabands, or escaped slaves, the right to join the army in South Carolina. c. The mainly African Ameri ...
... -Loss of slaves crippled the South’s ability to wage war. 2. African Americans participated in the war in a variety of ways. a. African Americans volunteered to fight. b. The War Department gave contrabands, or escaped slaves, the right to join the army in South Carolina. c. The mainly African Ameri ...
Secession and War
... long endure…The world will little note, nor long remember what we say here, but it can never forget what they did here…It is rather for us to be here dedicated to the great task remaining before us—that…we here highly resolve that these dead shall not have died in vain—that this nation, under God, s ...
... long endure…The world will little note, nor long remember what we say here, but it can never forget what they did here…It is rather for us to be here dedicated to the great task remaining before us—that…we here highly resolve that these dead shall not have died in vain—that this nation, under God, s ...
The Civil War - thecivilwarforeighthgrade
... the idea that one person could "own" another. Abolitionists in the North wrote books, published newspapers spreading their ideas about slavery, and often assisted slaves to freedom when they ran away from their masters. Southerners believed that abolitionists were attacking their way of life and tha ...
... the idea that one person could "own" another. Abolitionists in the North wrote books, published newspapers spreading their ideas about slavery, and often assisted slaves to freedom when they ran away from their masters. Southerners believed that abolitionists were attacking their way of life and tha ...
AP Chapter 20 Review Packet
... upholding the feminine ideals of peace and reconciliation. e. operating farms and shops while their men were away fighting the war. ...
... upholding the feminine ideals of peace and reconciliation. e. operating farms and shops while their men were away fighting the war. ...
Week 6: The Colored Volunteers/Bonnet Brigades
... “It is not too much to say that if this Massachusetts 54th had faltered when its trial came,” reported the New York Tribune, “two hundred thousand troops for whom it was a pioneer would never have put into the field...But it did not falter. It made Fort Wagner such a name for the colored people as B ...
... “It is not too much to say that if this Massachusetts 54th had faltered when its trial came,” reported the New York Tribune, “two hundred thousand troops for whom it was a pioneer would never have put into the field...But it did not falter. It made Fort Wagner such a name for the colored people as B ...
Ch 16 Civil War Lesson 3 - McKinney ISD Staff Sites
... advantages, including a larger population and more industry. In April 1865, Union troops entered Richmond, Virginia, the Confederate capital. The Confederate government fled, but President Jefferson Davis was captured. Union troops then surrounded General Robert E. Lee’s army at Appomattox Court Hou ...
... advantages, including a larger population and more industry. In April 1865, Union troops entered Richmond, Virginia, the Confederate capital. The Confederate government fled, but President Jefferson Davis was captured. Union troops then surrounded General Robert E. Lee’s army at Appomattox Court Hou ...
Social Studies Glossary
... 13th Amendment – banned slavery throughout the nation. 14th Amendment – gave citizenship to all people born in the United States (except Native Americans). 15th Amendment – forbade any state from denying African-American males the right to vote. Lincoln’s Ten Percent Plan – Lincoln’s plan for recons ...
... 13th Amendment – banned slavery throughout the nation. 14th Amendment – gave citizenship to all people born in the United States (except Native Americans). 15th Amendment – forbade any state from denying African-American males the right to vote. Lincoln’s Ten Percent Plan – Lincoln’s plan for recons ...
NAME_________________________CLASS___
... What did the Battle of Bull run show both the North and South? (2 things) - this would be a long and bloody fight - showed the leaders on both sides that their troops needed training ...
... What did the Battle of Bull run show both the North and South? (2 things) - this would be a long and bloody fight - showed the leaders on both sides that their troops needed training ...
Battle at Bull Run
... The Merrimack quickly sunk the USS Cumberland by ramming it below the waterline. Next, the Merrimack went after the USS Congress, which ran itself aground. After a fierce battle, the Congress surrendered. However, when an onshore battery fired on Merrimack, the Confederate ironclad fired hot shot in ...
... The Merrimack quickly sunk the USS Cumberland by ramming it below the waterline. Next, the Merrimack went after the USS Congress, which ran itself aground. After a fierce battle, the Congress surrendered. However, when an onshore battery fired on Merrimack, the Confederate ironclad fired hot shot in ...
Civil War Battles Chart
... entrenched Union forces. “Pickett’s Charge” as this is known fails and Lee retreats back to Virginia. Never again would the South have a chance to win the war or threaten the North. This siege, which had Ulysses Grant bogged down for 3 months was one of the most important victories in the west. The ...
... entrenched Union forces. “Pickett’s Charge” as this is known fails and Lee retreats back to Virginia. Never again would the South have a chance to win the war or threaten the North. This siege, which had Ulysses Grant bogged down for 3 months was one of the most important victories in the west. The ...
Civil War Battles Chart
... entrenched Union forces. “Pickett’s Charge” as this is known fails and Lee retreats back to Virginia. Never again would the South have a chance to win the war or threaten the North. This siege, which had Ulysses Grant bogged down for 3 months was one of the most important victories in the west. The ...
... entrenched Union forces. “Pickett’s Charge” as this is known fails and Lee retreats back to Virginia. Never again would the South have a chance to win the war or threaten the North. This siege, which had Ulysses Grant bogged down for 3 months was one of the most important victories in the west. The ...
Chapter 6 Notes
... 2) New rifles led to more death 3) Medical facilities were overwhelmed & not high quality ...
... 2) New rifles led to more death 3) Medical facilities were overwhelmed & not high quality ...
Chapter 15 The Start of the Civil War
... birth of freedom -- and that government of the people, by the people, for the people, shall not perish from the earth. “ ...
... birth of freedom -- and that government of the people, by the people, for the people, shall not perish from the earth. “ ...
Chapter 21 Study Guide
... unconditional surrender: the force which surrenders agrees in advance to accept anything required of it by the victors Lincoln on initial Union war aims: “My paramount object in this struggle is to save the Union and is not either to save or to destroy slavery.” [text, p. 453] size of the United Sta ...
... unconditional surrender: the force which surrenders agrees in advance to accept anything required of it by the victors Lincoln on initial Union war aims: “My paramount object in this struggle is to save the Union and is not either to save or to destroy slavery.” [text, p. 453] size of the United Sta ...
History-SS5H1 - Effingham County Schools
... 2. By 1864, the North was winning the Civil War. To help bring the war to an end, the North sent General William Sherman on his "March to the Sea." The purpose of this was to A. move Union troops to the coast where they could be moved to other places. B. destroy property and make Southerners realize ...
... 2. By 1864, the North was winning the Civil War. To help bring the war to an end, the North sent General William Sherman on his "March to the Sea." The purpose of this was to A. move Union troops to the coast where they could be moved to other places. B. destroy property and make Southerners realize ...
The Furnace of Civil War, 1861-1865 A. True or False Where the
... ___ 1. The First Battle of Bull Run was the turning point of the Civil War because it convinced the South the war would be long and difficult ___ 2. The Emancipation Proclamation was more important for its political effects on the North and Europe than for its freeing large numbers of slaves. ___ 3. ...
... ___ 1. The First Battle of Bull Run was the turning point of the Civil War because it convinced the South the war would be long and difficult ___ 2. The Emancipation Proclamation was more important for its political effects on the North and Europe than for its freeing large numbers of slaves. ___ 3. ...
der of JOHNSTON the last formidable fragment of the rebel armies is
... provided that “Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as a punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted, shall exist within the United States, or any place subject to their jurisdiction.” Although not yet ratified by the required number of states at the time of th ...
... provided that “Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as a punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted, shall exist within the United States, or any place subject to their jurisdiction.” Although not yet ratified by the required number of states at the time of th ...
The Civil War - United States History
... theorists throughout history have formulated what they considered to be the most important strategic and tactical principles of war. Napoleon I, for example, had 115 such principles. The Confederate general Nathan Bedford Forrest had but one: "Get there first with the most men." ...
... theorists throughout history have formulated what they considered to be the most important strategic and tactical principles of war. Napoleon I, for example, had 115 such principles. The Confederate general Nathan Bedford Forrest had but one: "Get there first with the most men." ...
The Battle of Palmito Ranch - Western National Parks Association
... The series of violent skirmishes endured for two days, over twelve miles of prairie. When the engagement ended on the afternoon of May 13, with a decisive rout of Federal troops, the Confederacy had prevailed in the last battle of the American Civil War. ...
... The series of violent skirmishes endured for two days, over twelve miles of prairie. When the engagement ended on the afternoon of May 13, with a decisive rout of Federal troops, the Confederacy had prevailed in the last battle of the American Civil War. ...
Major Battles - Chiles Social Studies
... When Grant’s men began to cheer after hearing the news, Grant silenced them by declaring, “The war is over. The Rebels are our countrymen again.” Genl. Grant at Appomattox. Lithograph by C. Inger, 1872, after drawing by Edgar Klemroth, 6th Penn. Cavalry, April 9 & 10, 1865. Library of Congress Prin ...
... When Grant’s men began to cheer after hearing the news, Grant silenced them by declaring, “The war is over. The Rebels are our countrymen again.” Genl. Grant at Appomattox. Lithograph by C. Inger, 1872, after drawing by Edgar Klemroth, 6th Penn. Cavalry, April 9 & 10, 1865. Library of Congress Prin ...
Goal_3_Civil_War_PPt_2
... trenches, and building forts • The battle was a draw, but is considered a Confederate loss. ...
... trenches, and building forts • The battle was a draw, but is considered a Confederate loss. ...
Fort Fisher
Fort Fisher was a Confederate fort during the American Civil War. It protected the vital trading routes of the port at Wilmington, North Carolina, from 1861 until its capture by the Union in 1865.The fort was located on one of Cape Fear River's two outlets to the Atlantic Ocean on what was then known as Federal Point and today is known as Pleasure Island. Because of the roughness of the seas there, it was known as the Southern Gibraltar.