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CH 11_AM HISTORY III
... Key victories at Vicksburg and Gettysburg help the Union wear down the Confederacy ...
... Key victories at Vicksburg and Gettysburg help the Union wear down the Confederacy ...
Fort Duffield - Hardin County History Museum
... By January 1, 1862, the cabins and the fort were finished. The Federal army had some 950 soldiers stationed at Fort Replica log structures constructed at Fort Duffield Duffield. The supply line was secure. By mid December, 1862, the fort would be abandoned, as the soldiers were needed elsewhere. The ...
... By January 1, 1862, the cabins and the fort were finished. The Federal army had some 950 soldiers stationed at Fort Replica log structures constructed at Fort Duffield Duffield. The supply line was secure. By mid December, 1862, the fort would be abandoned, as the soldiers were needed elsewhere. The ...
Battle of Vicksburg 1863
... After crossing, Grant realized that he had to control Jackson, the capital of Mississippi, before he could get to his destination. It was an important railway center which could help move troops and supplies to Vicksburg. On May 14, 1863, he took the city. Before it was captured though, Confederate ...
... After crossing, Grant realized that he had to control Jackson, the capital of Mississippi, before he could get to his destination. It was an important railway center which could help move troops and supplies to Vicksburg. On May 14, 1863, he took the city. Before it was captured though, Confederate ...
Battles - Fort Sumter
... knew that Union forces would come to help him and give him fresh orders before that date. Union ships were closing in and could be seen outside the harbor. At 3:20 a.m. General Beauregard gave Anderson a one hour warning to get out or be shelled. Anderson stayed. Precisely one hour later, the first ...
... knew that Union forces would come to help him and give him fresh orders before that date. Union ships were closing in and could be seen outside the harbor. At 3:20 a.m. General Beauregard gave Anderson a one hour warning to get out or be shelled. Anderson stayed. Precisely one hour later, the first ...
Am St I CP 111
... Confederate Troops • This 4 day delay gave Beauregard to strengthen his army by adding some 11,000 troops (plus he had info from a spy) • Confederate troops were packed into freight cars and sped to the scene • (first time a train was used to transport troops) ...
... Confederate Troops • This 4 day delay gave Beauregard to strengthen his army by adding some 11,000 troops (plus he had info from a spy) • Confederate troops were packed into freight cars and sped to the scene • (first time a train was used to transport troops) ...
Continued
... The Anaconda Plan The strategy was devised to weaken the south without invading it. It was nicknamed the Anaconda Plan because it would strangle the Confederacy the way the anaconda snake constricts its victim. Lincoln had doubts about the plan, and rather than wait for a slow strangulation of the ...
... The Anaconda Plan The strategy was devised to weaken the south without invading it. It was nicknamed the Anaconda Plan because it would strangle the Confederacy the way the anaconda snake constricts its victim. Lincoln had doubts about the plan, and rather than wait for a slow strangulation of the ...
Civil War in Louisa County
... “To the loss in the destruction of the bridges over rivers, public stores of all kinds, horses and mules captured, and those brought out by escaped slaves, there must be added the money value of some 450 negroes, who came out of the country with the various parties. Several thousand more would have ...
... “To the loss in the destruction of the bridges over rivers, public stores of all kinds, horses and mules captured, and those brought out by escaped slaves, there must be added the money value of some 450 negroes, who came out of the country with the various parties. Several thousand more would have ...
Main Idea 1 - St. Mary of Gostyn
... • Gettysburg was turning point of war—Lee would never again attack in the North. • Some 23,000 Union and 28,000 Confederate casualties • Victory came the day before the Union capture of Vicksburg. • Britain and France refused to aid South after Gettysburg. ...
... • Gettysburg was turning point of war—Lee would never again attack in the North. • Some 23,000 Union and 28,000 Confederate casualties • Victory came the day before the Union capture of Vicksburg. • Britain and France refused to aid South after Gettysburg. ...
Chapter 16 Powerpoint
... • Gettysburg was turning point of war—Lee would never again attack in the North. • Some 23,000 Union and 28,000 Confederate casualties • Victory came the day before the Union capture of Vicksburg. • Britain and France refused to aid South after Gettysburg. ...
... • Gettysburg was turning point of war—Lee would never again attack in the North. • Some 23,000 Union and 28,000 Confederate casualties • Victory came the day before the Union capture of Vicksburg. • Britain and France refused to aid South after Gettysburg. ...
- Toolbox Pro
... • Gettysburg was turning point of war—Lee would never again attack in the North. • Some 23,000 Union and 28,000 Confederate casualties • Victory came the same day as the Union capture of Vicksburg. • Britain and France refused to aid South after Gettysburg. ...
... • Gettysburg was turning point of war—Lee would never again attack in the North. • Some 23,000 Union and 28,000 Confederate casualties • Victory came the same day as the Union capture of Vicksburg. • Britain and France refused to aid South after Gettysburg. ...
Chapter 21
... Cut the South in half by seizing control of the Mississippi Chop the confederacy into pieces by sending troops through the Carolinas and Georgia Decapitate it by seizing Richmond Wage war of attrition and attack the southern main forces with Bigger Union forces. South can’t afford to lose tr ...
... Cut the South in half by seizing control of the Mississippi Chop the confederacy into pieces by sending troops through the Carolinas and Georgia Decapitate it by seizing Richmond Wage war of attrition and attack the southern main forces with Bigger Union forces. South can’t afford to lose tr ...
Wilmot Proviso
... • Doctors had little understanding of infectious germs. • They used the same unsterilized instruments on patient after patient. •Infection spread quickly in the field hospitals. • Disease was one of the greatest threats facing Civil War soldiers. • Many regiments lost half their men to illness befor ...
... • Doctors had little understanding of infectious germs. • They used the same unsterilized instruments on patient after patient. •Infection spread quickly in the field hospitals. • Disease was one of the greatest threats facing Civil War soldiers. • Many regiments lost half their men to illness befor ...
The Battle of Gettysburg
... because Union weakened Lee ordered an artillery barrage at the middle of Union lines mid afternoon PICKETT’S CHARGE - Longstreet, confident the barrage had silenced Union guns, ordered Confederate troops to attack the center of the Union lines. ...
... because Union weakened Lee ordered an artillery barrage at the middle of Union lines mid afternoon PICKETT’S CHARGE - Longstreet, confident the barrage had silenced Union guns, ordered Confederate troops to attack the center of the Union lines. ...
Civil War Battle Chartrmar27rev.doc
... a strong thrust down the Mississippi Valley with a large force, o and the establishment of a line of strong Federal positions there would isolate the disorganized Confederate nation ...
... a strong thrust down the Mississippi Valley with a large force, o and the establishment of a line of strong Federal positions there would isolate the disorganized Confederate nation ...
Pair 6 - Lexington-Richland School District 5
... Although most of the fighting of the Civil War took place in northern Virginia and along the Mississippi River, there were several specific events that took place at geographic locations in South Carolina. The first shots of the war were fired by the Confederacy on Fort Sumter (to confiscate it) aft ...
... Although most of the fighting of the Civil War took place in northern Virginia and along the Mississippi River, there were several specific events that took place at geographic locations in South Carolina. The first shots of the war were fired by the Confederacy on Fort Sumter (to confiscate it) aft ...
Breaking the Union`s Blockade Anaconda Plan
... While the two armies fought for control of the land, the Union navy controlled the sea. The North had most of the U.S. Navy’s small fleet, and many experienced naval officers had remained loyal to the Union. The North also had enough industry to build more ships. The Confederacy turned to British co ...
... While the two armies fought for control of the land, the Union navy controlled the sea. The North had most of the U.S. Navy’s small fleet, and many experienced naval officers had remained loyal to the Union. The North also had enough industry to build more ships. The Confederacy turned to British co ...
17 - Coppell ISD
... fancy I stagger myself. We do not average two ounces of meat daily; and some do not get any for several days together.” John B Jones, A Rebel War Clerk’s Dairy The Civil War caused hardships not only for soldiers but for people at home as well. Southerners were especially hard hit, because most of t ...
... fancy I stagger myself. We do not average two ounces of meat daily; and some do not get any for several days together.” John B Jones, A Rebel War Clerk’s Dairy The Civil War caused hardships not only for soldiers but for people at home as well. Southerners were especially hard hit, because most of t ...
Early Stages of the Civil War
... o Massachusetts 54th Colored Regiment a regiment of 600 to 1,000 African American soldiers and was the first group of African American troops organized for combat in the Union army. Led an attack at Fort Wagner in South Carolina and lost 4 out of every 10 men. William Carney served as a sergea ...
... o Massachusetts 54th Colored Regiment a regiment of 600 to 1,000 African American soldiers and was the first group of African American troops organized for combat in the Union army. Led an attack at Fort Wagner in South Carolina and lost 4 out of every 10 men. William Carney served as a sergea ...
The First Two Years of the Civil War
... The First Battle of Bull Run • Confederate General Thomas J. Jackson and his brigade of Virginians stood firm when the Confederate line began to crumble. “There is Jackson, standing like a stone wall! Rally around the Virginians.” the bravery of Stonewall Jackson, as he was called from then on stop ...
... The First Battle of Bull Run • Confederate General Thomas J. Jackson and his brigade of Virginians stood firm when the Confederate line began to crumble. “There is Jackson, standing like a stone wall! Rally around the Virginians.” the bravery of Stonewall Jackson, as he was called from then on stop ...
Chapter 20 PowerPoint
... The Alabama sank sixty-four Union ships before it was destroyed off the coast of Cherbourg, France, in 1864. The Kearsarge rescued most of the Alabama’s crew from their sinking vessel, but Confederate captain Raphael Semmes managed to escape aboard an English yacht that had been observing the sea ba ...
... The Alabama sank sixty-four Union ships before it was destroyed off the coast of Cherbourg, France, in 1864. The Kearsarge rescued most of the Alabama’s crew from their sinking vessel, but Confederate captain Raphael Semmes managed to escape aboard an English yacht that had been observing the sea ba ...
the regimental dispatch - SOUTHERN PIEDMONT HISTORICAL
... bloodiest single day in American history, 23,000 Confederate and Union forces were killed, with neither side gaining a clear advantage. The battle became a tactical draw. However, with Lee having lost a third of his army, the Confederates were forced to return to Virginia. McClellan chose not to pur ...
... bloodiest single day in American history, 23,000 Confederate and Union forces were killed, with neither side gaining a clear advantage. The battle became a tactical draw. However, with Lee having lost a third of his army, the Confederates were forced to return to Virginia. McClellan chose not to pur ...
Battle of Kinston
... The next day, the Union army recrossed the river, burned the bridge, and turned towards Goldsboro. Foster damaged the C.S.S. Neuse at White Hall and burned the Wilmington-Weldon railroad bridge in Goldsboro, but he did not achieve his final objective. Circumstances following the Confederate victory ...
... The next day, the Union army recrossed the river, burned the bridge, and turned towards Goldsboro. Foster damaged the C.S.S. Neuse at White Hall and burned the Wilmington-Weldon railroad bridge in Goldsboro, but he did not achieve his final objective. Circumstances following the Confederate victory ...
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 ...
The Civil War
... The National Banking System was a landmark of the war for the North, created to establish a standard bank-note currency, and banks that joined the National Banking System could buy government bonds and issue sound paper money. In the South, runaway inflation plagued the Confederates, and overall, in ...
... The National Banking System was a landmark of the war for the North, created to establish a standard bank-note currency, and banks that joined the National Banking System could buy government bonds and issue sound paper money. In the South, runaway inflation plagued the Confederates, and overall, in ...
The Civil War
... The National Banking System was a landmark of the war for the North, created to establish a standard bank-note currency, and banks that joined the National Banking System could buy government bonds and issue sound paper money. In the South, runaway inflation plagued the Confederates, and overall, in ...
... The National Banking System was a landmark of the war for the North, created to establish a standard bank-note currency, and banks that joined the National Banking System could buy government bonds and issue sound paper money. In the South, runaway inflation plagued the Confederates, and overall, in ...
Battle of Roanoke Island
![](https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Special:FilePath/Battle_of_Roanoke_Island.png?width=300)
The opening phase of what came to be called the Burnside Expedition, the Battle of Roanoke Island was an amphibious operation of the American Civil War, fought on February 7–8, 1862, in the North Carolina Sounds a short distance south of the Virginia border. The attacking force consisted of a flotilla of gunboats of the Union Navy drawn from the North Atlantic Blockading Squadron, commanded by Flag Officer Louis M. Goldsborough, a separate group of gunboats under Union Army control, and an army division led by Brig. Gen. Ambrose Burnside. The defenders were a group of gunboats from the Confederate States Navy, termed the Mosquito Fleet, under Capt. William F. Lynch, and about 2,000 Confederate soldiers commanded locally by Brig. Gen. Henry A. Wise. The defense was augmented by four forts facing on the water approaches to Roanoke Island, and two outlying batteries. At the time of the battle, Wise was hospitalized, so leadership fell to his second in command, Col. Henry M. Shaw.During the first day of the battle, the Federal gunboats and the forts on shore engaged in a gun battle, with occasional contributions from the Mosquito Fleet. Late in the day, Burnside's soldiers went ashore unopposed; they were accompanied by six howitzers manned by sailors. As it was too late to fight, the invaders went into camp for the night.On the second day, February 8, the Union soldiers advanced but were stopped by an artillery battery and accompanying infantry in the center of the island. Although the Confederates thought that their line was safely anchored in impenetrable swamps, they were flanked on both sides and their soldiers were driven back to refuge in the forts. The forts were taken in reverse. With no way for his men to escape, Col. Shaw surrendered to avoid pointless bloodshed.