![CH 21 Notes Part 2](http://s1.studyres.com/store/data/021491139_1-04171223c0e5542709da2596872b09c1-300x300.png)
CH 21 Notes Part 2
... Military Reconstruction******} Grant begins to earn his reputation in Feb. of 1862, at Fort Henry and Fort Donelson at the junction of the Tennessee and Cumberland Rivers….he crushes the rebels here and demands an Unconditional Surrender from their commanders… and thereafter is known as U. S. Grant ...
... Military Reconstruction******} Grant begins to earn his reputation in Feb. of 1862, at Fort Henry and Fort Donelson at the junction of the Tennessee and Cumberland Rivers….he crushes the rebels here and demands an Unconditional Surrender from their commanders… and thereafter is known as U. S. Grant ...
Civil War Battle Matching
... Match the battles with the description and outcome (who won) of the battle and the date(s) using the word bank below: Fort Sumter July 1 thru 3, 1863 Bull Run I (Manassas) Appomattox Courthouse July 21, 1861 April 12, 1861 April 6/7, 1862 Shiloh Antietam Gettysburg Vicksburg September 16, 1862 May 1 ...
... Match the battles with the description and outcome (who won) of the battle and the date(s) using the word bank below: Fort Sumter July 1 thru 3, 1863 Bull Run I (Manassas) Appomattox Courthouse July 21, 1861 April 12, 1861 April 6/7, 1862 Shiloh Antietam Gettysburg Vicksburg September 16, 1862 May 1 ...
- Hesston Middle School
... 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 ...
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 ...
total war - River Dell Regional School District
... Battle of Bull Run st (1 Manassas), July, 1861 Lincoln sent 30,000 inexperienced soldiers to fight at Bull Run. ...
... Battle of Bull Run st (1 Manassas), July, 1861 Lincoln sent 30,000 inexperienced soldiers to fight at Bull Run. ...
Civil War from 1863
... form the Union Party and re-nominated Lincoln • The Union Party selected Democrat Andrew Johnson as running mate to get Democrat votes • The Copperheads and Peace Democrats ...
... form the Union Party and re-nominated Lincoln • The Union Party selected Democrat Andrew Johnson as running mate to get Democrat votes • The Copperheads and Peace Democrats ...
The Civil War
... 2. May ’63 south wins at Chancellorsville, VA (Stonewall Jackson dies) 3. Lee goes on the offensive into Maryland and up into PA – Gen. Meade (union) follows north, they meet at Gettysburg, PA ...
... 2. May ’63 south wins at Chancellorsville, VA (Stonewall Jackson dies) 3. Lee goes on the offensive into Maryland and up into PA – Gen. Meade (union) follows north, they meet at Gettysburg, PA ...
January 1861 -- The South Secedes.
... • The Missouri Compromise admitted California to the Union as a free state but contained many compromises with slavery for other areas to keep the South happy and not fearful. • The Kansas Nebraska Act broke the Missouri Compromises solution to slavery in Louisiana Territory of no slaves north of th ...
... • The Missouri Compromise admitted California to the Union as a free state but contained many compromises with slavery for other areas to keep the South happy and not fearful. • The Kansas Nebraska Act broke the Missouri Compromises solution to slavery in Louisiana Territory of no slaves north of th ...
January 1861 -- The South Secedes.
... • The Missouri Compromise admitted California to the Union as a free state but contained many compromises with slavery for other areas to keep the South happy and not fearful. • The Kansas Nebraska Act broke the Missouri Compromises solution to slavery in Louisiana Territory of no slaves north of th ...
... • The Missouri Compromise admitted California to the Union as a free state but contained many compromises with slavery for other areas to keep the South happy and not fearful. • The Kansas Nebraska Act broke the Missouri Compromises solution to slavery in Louisiana Territory of no slaves north of th ...
his 201 class 14
... • On July 12 General McDowell’s troops were routed by Confederate General PGT Beauregard's troops at Manassas (Bull ...
... • On July 12 General McDowell’s troops were routed by Confederate General PGT Beauregard's troops at Manassas (Bull ...
The Civil War Begins Objectives
... Why It Matter Now: The nation’s identity was forged in part by the Civil War. Sectional divisions remain very strong today. Union and Confederate Forces Clash ...
... Why It Matter Now: The nation’s identity was forged in part by the Civil War. Sectional divisions remain very strong today. Union and Confederate Forces Clash ...
Post-Gettysburg
... wrath and desperation of these poor people. I almost felt as if I should like to hang a Yankee myself. There was hardly a fence left standing all the way from Sparta to Gordon. The fields were trampled down and the road was lined with carcasses of horses, hogs, and cattle that the invaders, unable e ...
... wrath and desperation of these poor people. I almost felt as if I should like to hang a Yankee myself. There was hardly a fence left standing all the way from Sparta to Gordon. The fields were trampled down and the road was lined with carcasses of horses, hogs, and cattle that the invaders, unable e ...
General “Stonewall” Jackson
... At the same time as Lee was being turned back at Gettysburg, Grant was taking the important Miss. River fort at Vicksburg, MS by siege of the city • Not long after Vicksburg, General Grant would be moved east and given command of all Union forces by President Lincoln ...
... At the same time as Lee was being turned back at Gettysburg, Grant was taking the important Miss. River fort at Vicksburg, MS by siege of the city • Not long after Vicksburg, General Grant would be moved east and given command of all Union forces by President Lincoln ...
The Civil War
... Grant and the West • Unconditional surrender • Aided by David Farragut’s control of New Orleans • Vicksburg—last major holdout on the Mississippi River • People stayed in caves and ate rats and dogs to stay alive • Fell July 4, 1863, just ONE day after Gettysburg ...
... Grant and the West • Unconditional surrender • Aided by David Farragut’s control of New Orleans • Vicksburg—last major holdout on the Mississippi River • People stayed in caves and ate rats and dogs to stay alive • Fell July 4, 1863, just ONE day after Gettysburg ...
Battle of Shiloh
... Following fall of Forts Henry and Donelson in February of 1862, the commander of Confederate forces in the West, Gen. Albert Sidney Johnston, was compelled to withdraw from Kentucky, and leave much of western and middle Tennessee to the Federals. To prepare for future offensive operations, Johnston ...
... Following fall of Forts Henry and Donelson in February of 1862, the commander of Confederate forces in the West, Gen. Albert Sidney Johnston, was compelled to withdraw from Kentucky, and leave much of western and middle Tennessee to the Federals. To prepare for future offensive operations, Johnston ...
Chapter 16 section 3 study highlights.
... Church to wait for the Army of Ohio. As he was waiting he knew that General A.S. Johnston was nearby in Mississippi. Grant was not expecting an attack from Johnston. Grant, instead of sitting up defenses took the time to drill his new recruits. In the early morning April 6, 1862, the rebels sprang o ...
... Church to wait for the Army of Ohio. As he was waiting he knew that General A.S. Johnston was nearby in Mississippi. Grant was not expecting an attack from Johnston. Grant, instead of sitting up defenses took the time to drill his new recruits. In the early morning April 6, 1862, the rebels sprang o ...
The Civil War
... Confederates take control of town Lee knows that battle will not be won until they take Cemetery Hill ...
... Confederates take control of town Lee knows that battle will not be won until they take Cemetery Hill ...
File
... • While Sherman headed into Georgia, Grant pursued Lee into Virginia. • All spring and summer, Grant pushed Lee south, towards Richmond. • Lee, heavily outnumbered, continued to retreat, trying to avoid major engagements that might lose the war. • Grant would maintain pressure on Lee, always attacki ...
... • While Sherman headed into Georgia, Grant pursued Lee into Virginia. • All spring and summer, Grant pushed Lee south, towards Richmond. • Lee, heavily outnumbered, continued to retreat, trying to avoid major engagements that might lose the war. • Grant would maintain pressure on Lee, always attacki ...
ABC Book of a New Nation - Ms. Veal
... On the morning of April 6, 1862, 40,000 Confederate soldiers under the command of Gen. Albert Sidney Johnston poured out of the nearby woods and struck a line of Union soldiers occupying ground near Pittsburg Landing on the Tennessee River. The overpowering Confederate offensive drove the unprepared ...
... On the morning of April 6, 1862, 40,000 Confederate soldiers under the command of Gen. Albert Sidney Johnston poured out of the nearby woods and struck a line of Union soldiers occupying ground near Pittsburg Landing on the Tennessee River. The overpowering Confederate offensive drove the unprepared ...
Chapter 11: The Civil War Section 1 The Civil War Begins What
... The Confederates might have taken Washington, D.C. after the First Battle of Bull Run if they had not At the outset, President Lincoln held that the Civil War was being fought to What was the three part Anaconda Plan? Section 2 The Politics of War Emancipation Proclamation conscription Section 3 Lif ...
... The Confederates might have taken Washington, D.C. after the First Battle of Bull Run if they had not At the outset, President Lincoln held that the Civil War was being fought to What was the three part Anaconda Plan? Section 2 The Politics of War Emancipation Proclamation conscription Section 3 Lif ...
Section 5 - History With Mr. Wallace
... Confederates had erected at Petersburg intimidated the Union troops, so Grant ordered his troops to put the city under ...
... Confederates had erected at Petersburg intimidated the Union troops, so Grant ordered his troops to put the city under ...
Fort Sumter
... • Joshua Lawrence Chamberlain and men from the 20th Maine July 3, 1863 • Go up through the center • Toward the copse of trees • One mile of open field • In 50 minutes, the Confederacy lost 10,000 men James Longstreet Pickett’s Charge After Gettysburg • Over 51,000 casualties • Over 5,000 dead horses ...
... • Joshua Lawrence Chamberlain and men from the 20th Maine July 3, 1863 • Go up through the center • Toward the copse of trees • One mile of open field • In 50 minutes, the Confederacy lost 10,000 men James Longstreet Pickett’s Charge After Gettysburg • Over 51,000 casualties • Over 5,000 dead horses ...
Slide 1
... 1. to rally the troops and boost morale 2. assert that the men who had died, would not die in vain ...
... 1. to rally the troops and boost morale 2. assert that the men who had died, would not die in vain ...
Ulysses S. Grant and the American Civil War
![](https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Special:FilePath/GenUSGrant.jpg?width=300)
Ulysses S. Grant, was the most acclaimed Union general during the American Civil War and was twice elected President. Grant began his military career as a cadet at the West Point military academy in 1839. After graduation he went on to serve with distinction as a lieutenant in the Mexican–American War. Grant was a keen observer of the war and learned battle strategies serving under Generals Zachary Taylor and Winfield Scott. After the war Grant served at various posts especially in the Pacific Northwest; he retired from the service in 1854. On the onset of the Civil War in 1861 Grant was working as a clerk in his father's leather goods store in Galena, Illinois.Grant trained Union military recruits and was promoted to Colonel in June 1861. Maj. Gen. John C. Frémont, who viewed in Grant an ""iron will"" to win, appointed Grant to commander of the District of Cairo. Grant became famous around the nation after capturing Fort Donelson in February 1862 and promoted to Major General by President Abraham Lincoln. After a series of decisive yet costly battles and victories at Shiloh, Vicksburg, and Chattanooga, Grant was promoted to Lieutenant General by President Lincoln in 1864 and given charge of all the Union Armies. Grant went on to defeat Robert E. Lee after another series of costly battles in the Overland Campaign, Petersburg, and Appomattox. After the Civil War, Grant was given his final promotion of General of the Armed Forces in 1866 and served until 1869. Grant's popularity as a Union war general enabled him to be elected two terms as the 18th President of the United States.Some historians have viewed Grant as a ""butcher"" commander who in 1864 used attrition without regard to the lives of his own soldiers in order to kill off the enemy which could no longer replenish its losses. Throughout the Civil War Grant's armies incurred approximately 154,000 casualties, while having inflicted 191,000 casualties on his opposing Confederate armies. In terms of success, Grant was the only general during the Civil War who received the surrender of three Confederate armies. Although Grant maintained high casualties during the Overland Campaign in 1864, his aggressive fighting strategy was in compliance with the U.S. government's strategic war aims. Grant has recently been praised by historians for his ""military genius"", and viewed as a decisive general who emphasized movement and logistics.