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McCLEAN HOUSE AND BARN
McCLEAN HOUSE AND BARN

... bridge over the Susquehanna River at Harrisburg and disabling the Pennsylvania Railroad. ...
Chapter 11 - Valhalla High School
Chapter 11 - Valhalla High School

... • Early in the war, General Butler said that slaves captured by the Union army were contraband, property of one side seized by the other. If, as the Southerners claimed, slaves were property, then the Union could consider them contraband, take ownership, and give them their freedom. • Congress autho ...
America: Pathways to the Present
America: Pathways to the Present

... • Early in the war, General Butler said that slaves captured by the Union army were contraband, property of one side seized by the other. If, as the Southerners claimed, slaves were property, then the Union could consider them contraband, take ownership, and give them their freedom. • Congress autho ...
Economics
Economics

... • Early in the war, General Butler said that slaves captured by the Union army were contraband, property of one side seized by the other. If, as the Southerners claimed, slaves were property, then the Union could consider them contraband, take ownership, and give them their freedom. • Congress autho ...
Chapter
Chapter

... 1. Why was the South able to quickly organize an army? 2. How was having a larger population than the South an advantage for the North? 3. How were the Northern Democrats divided over the Civil War? 4. Why was it important for the Confederate States of America to be recognized by the industrialized ...
The American Civil War
The American Civil War

... Lieutenant General Ulysses S. Grant and Major General George G. Meade. • Confederate Commanders were General Robert E. Lee and P.G.T. Beauregard. ...
1863 Civil War: Henry Bea Enlisted as a Private on 22 August 1863
1863 Civil War: Henry Bea Enlisted as a Private on 22 August 1863

... James B. McPherson’s Army of the Tennessee. He withdrew his main army at night from Atlanta’ s outer line to the inner line, enticing Sherman to follow. In the meantime, he sent William J. Hardee with his corps on a fifteen-mile march to hit the unprotected Union left and rear, east of the city. Whe ...
USch11
USch11

... • Early in the war, General Butler said that slaves captured by the Union army were contraband, property of one side seized by the other. If, as the Southerners claimed, slaves were property, then the Union could consider them contraband, take ownership, and give them their freedom. • Congress autho ...
did hunger defeat the confederacy?
did hunger defeat the confederacy?

... military, cavalry horses, and draft animals. Moreover, when food was available, inefficiencies in transportation prevented adequate distribution. Civil War railroad historian George Edgar Turner concluded that “Tons of bacon, rice, sugar and other perishable foods spoiled in accumulated masses while ...
The Wilderness Campaign and Beyond: The Civil War Letters of
The Wilderness Campaign and Beyond: The Civil War Letters of

... Burnsides army stuck in the mud) ... I dident see but it was said to be fact. there was a great deal of cursing done on that trip .... 9 This march was a low point in the moral of the Army of the Potomac. Unable to take the Confederate position at Fredericksburg by a frontal assault, Burnside decide ...
THE CIVIL WAR - algonac.k12.mi.us
THE CIVIL WAR - algonac.k12.mi.us

... Lee, despite being outnumbered by a ratio of about five to two, won arguably his greatest victory of the war. But he paid a terrible price for it. With only 52,000 infantry engaged, he suffered 12,764 casualties, losing some 25 percent of his force—men that the Confederacy, with its limited manpower ...
How the North Won - Mrs. McKoy`s Classroom
How the North Won - Mrs. McKoy`s Classroom

... whizzing so thick that it looked like a man could hold out a hat and catch it full.” ...
The American Civil War (1861–1865) was a separatist conflict
The American Civil War (1861–1865) was a separatist conflict

... finance, political organization and transportation were overwhelming the Confederacy. Grant fought a number of bloody battles with Lee in Virginia in the ...
World Book® Online: American Civil War: Battles
World Book® Online: American Civil War: Battles

... Heights get slaughtered. At the Battle of Fredericksburg, the Union army suffered approxi mately 13,000 casualties, mostly in front of Marye’s Heights. 26. In the middle of June, despite having a much larger force, Smith was reluctant to order a direct assault against the Confederates. ...
Robert E. Lee
Robert E. Lee

... Jefferson Davis on many military decisions. Lee was assigned control of the Army of Northern Virginia in 1862 because General Joseph E. Johnston had been shot. The press and his soldiers criticized Lee for tactical errors. However, he developed an aggressive approach that enabled him to win battles ...
Lesson Plan - Madame Tussauds
Lesson Plan - Madame Tussauds

... Jefferson Davis on many military decisions. Lee was assigned control of the Army of Northern Virginia in 1862 because General Joseph E. Johnston had been shot. The press and his soldiers criticized Lee for tactical errors. However, he developed an aggressive approach that enabled him to win battles ...
REV: Wexler on McPherson, `War on the Waters: The Union - H-Net
REV: Wexler on McPherson, `War on the Waters: The Union - H-Net

... that details the operations of both the Union and Confederate navies. The first chapter mentions the ways in which both sides mobilized for war and the decisions of April 1861. This includes backgrounds on Union Secretary of the Navy Gideon Welles, his Confederate counterpart Stephen Mallory, the sa ...
Driving Tour - Trevilian Station Battlefield Foundation
Driving Tour - Trevilian Station Battlefield Foundation

... 1864. The house at the intersection just north marks the approximate location of Clayton’s Store, Sheridan's headquarters. Although Sheridan knew Confederate forces were in the area, he had no idea that two divisions of Southern cavalry, commanded by Gen. Wade Hampton, had camped nearby. Gen. Wesley ...
Union Victory
Union Victory

... A. Buildings, arsenals, forts, and equipment confiscated. II. Fort Sumter a. Federal fort located 3 miles offshore from Charleston, S.C. 1. Rebels wanted it in order to control Charleston Harbor. a. Lincoln refused to give the fort to the Confederates. 2. The Rebels fired on the fort April 12, 1861. ...
October - 7th Maryland
October - 7th Maryland

... sources there were several names for this battle or battles. Poplar Springs Church, Wyatt’s Farm, Chappell’s House, Pegram’s Farm, Vaughan Road, Harmon Road. Also listed as Peeble’s Farm in Dinwiddie County, Virginia. One thing is clear and that is that all of these actions were part of the extended ...
Allatoona Pass Battlefield
Allatoona Pass Battlefield

... Directions: From Red Top Mountain, take I-75 South to Exit 283. Turn left. Allatoona Pass will be on the left. Atlanta had fallen. The Confederacy was desperate to stop Sherman and lure Union forces away from Atlanta. CSA General John B. Hood drove north attacking the railroad, Sherman’s line of sup ...
The Civil War – Create A “Living” Timeline - Database of K
The Civil War – Create A “Living” Timeline - Database of K

... December 1862 - The Battle of Fredericksburg Presentation January 1863 - Emancipation Proclamation Presentation March 1863 - The First Conscription Act & Draft Riots Presentation o Additional information to share with students:  In late April/May of 1863, in the Battle of Chancellorsville, Union Ge ...
Presentation Plus!
Presentation Plus!

... Lee moved his army west of Richmond, hoping to link up with the small Confederate force that was trying to stop Sherman’s advance.  The Union army blocked his escape route. ...
Bloodiest day in American history: The battle of Antietam
Bloodiest day in American history: The battle of Antietam

... Today, 3rd July 1863, many dead people from the Confederate States were found after the end of the 3rd day of the battle in Gettysburg. The battle began on the 1st July, it was fought because of the Confederate army which wanted to have shoes of the Northerners. But the Union soldiers noticed that t ...
1 Standard 8.80 Lesson
1 Standard 8.80 Lesson

... When the war began in April 1861, most Americans expected the conflict to be brief. When President Lincoln called upon the governors and states of the Union to furnish him with 75,000 soldiers, he asked for an enlistment of only 90 days. When the Confederacy moved its capital to Richmond, Virginia, ...
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Battle of White Oak Road

The Battle of White Oak Road, also known as The Battle of Hatcher’s Run, Gravelly Run, Boydton Plank Road, White Oak Ridge was fought on March 31, 1865, during the American Civil War at the end of the Richmond-Petersburg Campaign and in the beginning stage of the Appomattox Campaign. Along with the Battle of Dinwiddie Court House which was fought simultaneously on March 31, the battle involved the last offensive action by General Robert E. Lee's Confederate Army of Northern Virginia to stop the progress of Lieutenant General Ulysses S. Grant's Union Army (Army of the Potomac, Army of the Shenandoah and Army of the James). Grant's forces were moving to cut the remaining Confederate supply lines and to force the Confederates to extend their defensive lines at Petersburg, Virginia and Richmond, Virginia to the breaking point, if not to force them into a decisive open field battle.On March 29, 1865, the Union V Corps under Major General Gouverneur K. Warren moved to the end of the Confederate's White Oak Road Line, the far right flank of the Confederate defenses. At the conclusion of the Battle of Lewis's Farm on that day, Warren's corps took control of advance Confederate picket or outpost positions and occupied a segment of a key transportation and communication route, the Boydton Plank Road, at the junction of the Quaker Road. Warren's corps was the closest Union infantry unit to Major General Philip Sheridan's force which had moved about 4 miles (6.4 km) to Dinwiddie Court House, Virginia west of the end of the Confederate lines and just south of Five Forks, Virginia. Five Forks was an important road junction for control of the critical Confederate supply line of the South Side Railroad (sometimes shown as Southside Railroad). Colonel Frederick Winthrop's brigade of Brigadier General Romeyn B. Ayres's division of the V Corps took a further advance position across Gravelly Run near the Confederate White Oak Road Line in torrential rain on March 30, 1865. Ayres was unaware of how close his men were settling in near the Confederate White Oak Road Line and that contrary to his observation and belief, the Confederate line extended beyond the end of his new position. This, and the separation between Ayres's corps and Sheridan's cavalry, were important factors when Ayres's troops were surprised by a Confederate attack the next day. Warren's corps, led by Brevet Major General Charles Griffin's First Division, counterattacked, pushed the Confederates back to their original lines, secured advanced positions and cut the Confederates access to direct communication with Pickett over White Oak Road and the Boydton Plank Road. After securing his position, Warren also was able to send units to outflank and drive off Pickett's forces which were in a position to inflict a serious defeat on Sheridan's troopers whom Pickett's force had pushed back that day at Dinwiddie Court House.The battles at White Oak Road and Dinwiddie Court House, while initially successful for the Confederates, even a tactical victory at Dinwiddie, ultimately did not advance their lines or achieve their strategic objective of weakening and driving back the Union forces or separating Sheridan's force from support. The battles and their aftermath set the stage for the Confederate defeats and the collapse of Confederate lines at the Battle of Five Forks on the following day, April 1, 1865, and the Third Battle of Petersburg (also known as the Breakthrough at Petersburg) on April 2, 1865 and ultimately led to the surrender of Lee's Army of Northern Virginia after the Battle of Appomattox Court House, Virginia on April 9, 1865.
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