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4.7 Civil War Study Guide
4.7 Civil War Study Guide

... General Ulysses S. Grant in April 1865 ...
Battle of Gettysburg PPT
Battle of Gettysburg PPT

... General Lee’s Reasons for invading the Union: 1. His army needed supplies like weapons and clothing. 2. General Lee’s men were hungry and needed food. 3. General Lee hoped to take attention away from the Union victory at ...
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... but then were free to go home. • Grant allowed them to keep their horses so that they could “put a crop to carry themselves and their families through the next winter.” • Grant also ordered three days’ worth of food sent to Lee’s troops. • Jefferson Davis was captured on May 10th and the Civil War w ...
SSchapter11 - Mrs. Henriksson iClassroom Wikispace
SSchapter11 - Mrs. Henriksson iClassroom Wikispace

... The Union suffered about 12,000 causalities–persons killed, wounded, or missing in action. • Lee lost 14,000 men, and was forced to pull his battered army back into Virginia. • McClellan did not pursue them. • Neither side won a clear victory–because Lee ordered a retreat, the North claimed victory. ...
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Civil War Conclusions, Effects and Reconstruction

... in 1862, many freed black men signed up to fight.  Massachusetts was the first state to put together an all black regiment.  Controversy in that many people wondered if black men could and should fight a “white man’s war”.  Controversy continued with the idea of having black officers lead the tro ...
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... 1.  Explain the significance of:  ● George McClellan­ commander of the Union army in the east early in the Civil  War.   ● Ulysses S. Grant­ Union general who won battles in the west. He was eventually  promoted to command the Army of the Potomac.  ● Battle of Shiloh­ bloody battle in Tennessee won  ...
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... passenger ships along the northern coast of Maine, but that plan was also foiled. The confederacy did successfully carry out some terrorist plots. For example 20 Confederates robbed 3 northern banks and stole nearly $250,000. While escaping to Canada, the terrorists set fire to the town of St. Alban ...
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... road, and the bridge. While artillery began firing as soon as it was light, it was especially bad in Miller's cornfield. The field was full of tall stalks, but the gunfire was so thick that most of it was cut off at the ground. The Confederates under General Jackson could hardly move for a full hour ...
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Chapter 16 Civil War Review Questions

... Capital of the Confederate States of America. (Richmond) President of the Confederate States of America. (Jefferson Davis) First capital of the Confederate States of America. (Montgomery) List one strategy of the South for winning the Civil War (defensive fighting, wait for help from Britain or Fran ...
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Appomattox Court House

... Army of Northern Virginia, was typical of hundreds of hamlets t h r o u g h o u t the South. A federal soldier noted at the time that it consisted of only a handful of dwellings, a tavern, and a c o u r t h o u s e , " a l l on one s t r e e t and t h a t was boarded up at one end t o keep the cows ...
Chapter 15 Section 1
Chapter 15 Section 1

... *April 2, 1865 – Grant’s troops broke through Confederate lines. By evening, Richmond was under Union control. Lee’s army retreated to the town of Appomattox Court House. With any hopes of retreat cut off, Lee surrendered on April 9, 1865. *Grant offered Lee generous surrender terms. The Confederate ...
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Battle of Appomattox Station

The Battle of Appomattox Station was fought between a Union Army (Army of the Potomac, Army of the James, Army of the Shenandoah) cavalry division under the command of Brigadier General (Brevet Major General) George Armstrong Custer and Confederate Army of Northern Virginia artillery units commanded by Brigadier General Lindsay Walker with support from some dismounted cavalrymen, artillerymen armed with muskets and some stragglers on April 8, 1865, at Appomattox Station, Virginia during the Appomattox Campaign of the American Civil War.Following the withdrawal of General Robert E. Lee's Army of Northern Virginia from their defenses at Petersburg, Virginia after the Battle of Five Forks, Third Battle of Petersburg and Battle of Sutherland's Station, the Union Army closely pursued the Confederates westward on parallel and trailing routes. The Confederates, short of rations and supplies, suffered numerous losses from desertion, straggling and battle, especially the Battle of Sailor's Creek on April 6, 1865. After the Battle of Cumberland Church on April 7, Lee's army made a third consecutive night march in an effort to stay ahead of the Union forces. Union cavalry under the command of Major General Philip H. Sheridan made a long ride of about 30 miles (48 km) on April 8, 1865 in order to capture Confederate supply trains at Appomattox Station and get ahead of the Confederates, cutting off their routes of retreat.At the start of the action at Appomattox Station, between about 2:00 p.m. and 3:00 p.m. on April 8, the leading troopers of Company K, 2nd New York Cavalry Regiment rode up to three unguarded Confederate trains that had been sent from Lynchburg, Virginia with rations, ordnance and other supplies for the Army of Northern Virginia and forced them to surrender. The rest of the regiment and other troopers from the brigade of Colonel Alexander Pennington, Jr. soon rode into the station in support. Troopers with railroad experience ran the three trains east about 5 miles (8.0 km) to the camp of the Union Army of the James. A fourth locomotive and one or two cars escaped toward Lynchburg and at least one remaining car from that train was burned.The reserve artillery of the Confederate Army of Northern Virginia, under the command of Third Corps artillery chief, Brigadier General Lindsay Walker was parked near the station and the Lynchburg stage road. The artillery was guarded by about 500 cavalrymen commanded by Brigadier General Martin Gary, supported by artillerymen of Captain Crispin Dickenson's Ringgold Battery and Captain David Walker's Otey Battery, who had been re-armed with muskets, and some stragglers gathered up in the vicinity by Lieutenant W. F. Robinson of the Ringgold Battery. Walker began to shell the station soon after he learned of the presence of Union cavalry there. Custer's men soon discovered the source of the firing about 2 miles (3.2 km) away and attacked Walker's artillery park near the Lynchburg stage road. Walker's men were concentrated there with about 25 guns arrayed in a semi-circle to defend themselves and another 35 to 75 guns parked in reserve.After capturing the supply trains, the Union cavalry attacked the Confederate artillery batteries and their supporting dismounted cavalrymen, armed artillerymen and engineers and infantry stragglers. After making several futile charges in gathering darkness, the Union cavalry broke the Confederate defenses as the Confederates began to withdraw, taking as many guns and wagons with them as they could. After their breakthrough, Custer's men followed the fleeing Confederates in a running battle to the Lynchburg stage road, on which the Union troopers seized an important foothold.Sheridan relieved Custer's tired men with the division of Major General George Crook after the fighting died down. Sheridan advised Union General-in-Chief Lieutenant General Ulysses S. Grant of the favorable outcome of his raid at the station and fight at the artillery park. Sheridan expressed his opinion that the Union forces could surround and crush the Confederates the next morning with infantry support. He urged Major General Edward Ord, who had been pushing and encouraging his men of the XXIV Corps and two brigades of the 2nd Division (Brigadier General (Brevet Major General) William Birney's division, temporarily under Gibbon's command) of the XXV Corps (African-Americans) of the Army of the James to keep as close as possible to the cavalry. He also ordered Brigadier General (Brevet Major General) Charles Griffin, whose V Corps was moving just behind Ord's men, to close up so the Confederates could not escape in the morning.
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