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CivilWar1[1] - Sire`s US History Part 2
CivilWar1[1] - Sire`s US History Part 2

... The Peace Movement: Copperheads: Southern sympathizers from the North ...
Chapter 22 Notes
Chapter 22 Notes

... 1. South wins showing that the war will be long and hard on both sides Anaconda Strategy: Proposed by General Winfield Scott 1. A blockade of Southern ports to cut supplies off from the south 2. Divide the Confederacy in two by taking control of the Mississippi 3. Raise and train an army of 500,000 ...
The Civil War - Los Angeles Center for Enriched Studies
The Civil War - Los Angeles Center for Enriched Studies

... 50,000 casualties 8,000 killed Confederate army forced to retreat from Northern states Turning point for the war - but no total victory ...
Civil War12 - LarsonAmericanHistory
Civil War12 - LarsonAmericanHistory

... ► 11. The Union needed a strong central government for the infrastructure for industry ► 12. The Confederacy felt a strong federal government was not needed and that a strong government could interfere with slavery. ...
Chapter 16p. 515 homework Ques. 1, 3, 4, 5, 7 1. Fort
Chapter 16p. 515 homework Ques. 1, 3, 4, 5, 7 1. Fort

... probably better to let them come and attack you. This gives you an  advantage­­ usually the army attacking loses more men.  ● Staying on your home territory shortens your supply lines and allows  you to conserve resources.   ● You will be on territory you are familiar with; your enemy will not know  ...
The Civil War - The Goals of War Change
The Civil War - The Goals of War Change

... •Radical Republicans in Congress: ...
18.1 The Two Sides
18.1 The Two Sides

... the_____ major battle of ...
The Civil War - SchoolWorld an Edline Solution
The Civil War - SchoolWorld an Edline Solution

... South, but he did not send in military troops either.  Lincoln ordered supplies sent to the fort. By doing this he gave South Carolina the choice of allow the aid to pass or starting a war.  The Civil War began on April 12, 1861.  After the Confederate forces fired on Fort Sumter – Virginia, Arka ...
The Civil War
The Civil War

... The North thought with superior resources they would steamroll the South. The South thought they were better fighters and had more courage and “fightin’ spirit” ...
UIL Civil War Study Guide
UIL Civil War Study Guide

... Union. Six other states will follow and form the Confederate States of America. Jefferson Davis is elected President of the Confederacy Texas Secession- the U.S. state of Texas declared its secession from the United States of America on February 2, 1861, and joined the Confederate States on March 2, ...
The Civil War Begins - Catawba County Schools
The Civil War Begins - Catawba County Schools

... Setting the Stage Nov. 6, 1860 – Abraham Lincoln (Republican) elected President of the United State. Received 40% of the Popular Vote. His name wasn’t even on the ballot in the Southern States. Dec. 20, 1860 – South Carolina secedes from the Union. Within 2 months Mississippi, Florida, Alabama, Geo ...
Civil War and Reconstruction
Civil War and Reconstruction

...  Needed a strong central government to survive  Needed help from foreign countries ...
The Civil War
The Civil War

... plantations and waited for the Union army to come to them.  The EMANCIPATION PROCLAMATION declared all the slaves free in territory occupied by the Union.  Many free blacks and runaway slaves joined the UNION ARMY where many were discriminated against. They served under WHITE OFFICERS officers and ...
Chapter 7 Section 1 study guide
Chapter 7 Section 1 study guide

... 3. The Bible that Jefferson Davis used in his inauguration to the presidency of the Confederate States of America has been used in the inauguration of every Alabama governor since 1861. ...
ANTICIPATION GUIDE: The Antebellum Period through the Civil War
ANTICIPATION GUIDE: The Antebellum Period through the Civil War

... claim all lands west of the Mississippi River The Georgia Platform (political party) supported the Compromise of 1850, which said that any new states joining the United States could choose whether they wished to have slaves or not. The Kansas-Nebraska Act allowed slave owners to bring slavery to the ...
Girding For War - The North & The South
Girding For War - The North & The South

... and attacked blacks and others until federal troops arrived. ...
Unit 2 Reading Quiz 2
Unit 2 Reading Quiz 2

... In a series of famous debates, (1)___________________ proposed popular sovereignty as a way to limit slavery’s expansion, while (2)_________________ argued that slavery was immoral and could only be stopped through a Constitutional amendment. (B.2.b) Following Lincoln’s election and the failed Critt ...
Chapter 14
Chapter 14

... 4. Military arrest of all dissenters and suspended habeas corpus (speedy trial). • Initially, only in border states • by war’s end 13,000 people were imprisoned • When Chief Justice Taney ordered him to release a Maryland secession leader, Lincoln simply refused. ...
The Civil War - Hogan`s History Page
The Civil War - Hogan`s History Page

... Lincoln described the war aim now as a struggle to preserve the nation“SECOND AMERICAN REVOLUTION” “All men are created equal” Government “of the people, by the people, for the people” America is “ONE NATION” not a collection of sovereign states as the South believed. Southerners believed that state ...
Battles of the Civil War - Immaculateheartacademy.org
Battles of the Civil War - Immaculateheartacademy.org

... Objective: What event specifically sparked the U.S. Civil War. ...
The War Begins: 1860 - 1865
The War Begins: 1860 - 1865

... Sumter (located in South Carolina) or surrender it to the Confederacy Supplies were dispatched to the Fort; prior to their arrival South Carolina opens fire on the fort. Lincoln responds by calling out the militia Several more states secede from the Union including Virginia, Arkansas, North Carolina ...
File - Ms. Xiques` Classroom
File - Ms. Xiques` Classroom

... that the then-prevailing "assumption of the equality of races" was "fundamentally wrong." "Our new [Confederate] government is founded … upon the great truth that the negro is not equal to the white man; that slavery—subordination to the superior race—is his natural and normal condition," and, furth ...
The Civil War
The Civil War

... Americans sobered to the realities of war What do you need to effectively wage war in the 19th century? ...
16- Civil War Study guide
16- Civil War Study guide

... List the advantages of the South in regards to the Civil War. What is significant about the battle at Fort Sumter? What were the Confederate war strategies? What was the purpose of the Emancipation Proclamation? What ultimatum did it give the south? What made Sherman so successful? Who is Henry Wirz ...
The Start of the Civil War
The Start of the Civil War

... war, wanted to use negotiation, anti-slavery, viewed as traitors (snakes) • Two main disagreements- conscription and habeas corpus. ...
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Confederate States of America



The Confederate States of America (CSA or C.S.), commonly referred to as the Confederacy, was a confederation of secessionist American states existing from 1861 to 1865. It was originally formed by seven slave states in the Lower South region of the United States whose regional economy was mostly dependent upon agriculture, particularly cotton, and a plantation system that relied upon the enslavement of African Americans.Each state declared its secession from the United States following the November 1860 election of Republican candidate Abraham Lincoln to the U.S. presidency on a platform which opposed the expansion of slavery. A new Confederate government was proclaimed in February 1861 before Lincoln took office in March, but was considered illegal by the government of the United States. After civil war began in April, four slave states of the Upper South also declared their secession and joined the Confederacy. The Confederacy later accepted Missouri and Kentucky as members, although neither officially declared secession nor were they ever fully controlled by Confederate forces; Confederate shadow governments attempted to control the two states but were later exiled from them.The government of the United States (the Union) rejected the claims of secession and considered the Confederacy illegitimate. The American Civil War began with the April 12, 1861 Confederate attack upon Fort Sumter, a Union fort in the harbor of Charleston, South Carolina. In spring 1865, after very heavy fighting, largely on Confederate territory, all the Confederate forces surrendered and the Confederacy vanished. No foreign government officially recognized the Confederacy as an independent country, although Great Britain and France granted it belligerent status. While the war lacked a formal end, Jefferson Davis later lamented that the Confederacy had ""disappeared"" in 1865.
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