Study Guide for SS8H6 The student will analyze the impact of the
... Robert Toombs – secretary of state 2. Who were the president (Jefferson Davis) and vice-president (Alexander Stephens) of the CSA? ...
... Robert Toombs – secretary of state 2. Who were the president (Jefferson Davis) and vice-president (Alexander Stephens) of the CSA? ...
Civil War Test Review
... Civil War Test Review Answer the following questions: 1) Who was Abraham Lincoln? ___________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________________________________ What side was he on? ________________________________________________________ What did he ...
... Civil War Test Review Answer the following questions: 1) Who was Abraham Lincoln? ___________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________________________________ What side was he on? ________________________________________________________ What did he ...
16- Civil War Study guide
... List the advantages of the North in regards to the Civil War. 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 ...
... List the advantages of the North in regards to the Civil War. 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 ...
Civil War Sections 1 and 2
... 1. War Democrats- They supported the war to restore the Union but opposed ending slavery. ...
... 1. War Democrats- They supported the war to restore the Union but opposed ending slavery. ...
military strategies, Northern vs. Southern
... Clashes between the two types of officers typically occurred within the Union and Confederate volunteer armies, because both the North and the South usually assigned experienced Regular Army officers the duty of leading volunteer regiments and brigades and teaching their inexperienced soldiers and o ...
... Clashes between the two types of officers typically occurred within the Union and Confederate volunteer armies, because both the North and the South usually assigned experienced Regular Army officers the duty of leading volunteer regiments and brigades and teaching their inexperienced soldiers and o ...
Chapter 14 - The Civil War
... o Formation of the Confederacy. What prompted it? Who joined first? Who joined after Fort Sumter o Jefferson Davis. Job before secession, job after secession. o Crittenden Compromise- what were its many components? Who proposed? Who agreed? Who disagreed? o Battles of the Civil War Where? When? Who? ...
... o Formation of the Confederacy. What prompted it? Who joined first? Who joined after Fort Sumter o Jefferson Davis. Job before secession, job after secession. o Crittenden Compromise- what were its many components? Who proposed? Who agreed? Who disagreed? o Battles of the Civil War Where? When? Who? ...
chapter-8-sec1noteskey
... Civil War had officially _begun_____ AK, TN, NC, & VA _seceded_________ from the Union. Raising Armies Most soldiers were _men/volunteers_______. Bounty Soldiers: received_cash___ awards for signing up; “bounty jumpers” Conscripted Soldiers: men drafted to serve in army, a first for the nation Draft ...
... Civil War had officially _begun_____ AK, TN, NC, & VA _seceded_________ from the Union. Raising Armies Most soldiers were _men/volunteers_______. Bounty Soldiers: received_cash___ awards for signing up; “bounty jumpers” Conscripted Soldiers: men drafted to serve in army, a first for the nation Draft ...
Name - Schoolwires.net
... C. Union army would take control of the Mississippi River D. Union would capture Richmond, the Confederate capital 5. Why did the Confederacy expect Great Britain to aid their cause? A. Britain strongly believed in slavery B. Britain still resented the U.S. for the Revolutionary War & the War of 181 ...
... C. Union army would take control of the Mississippi River D. Union would capture Richmond, the Confederate capital 5. Why did the Confederacy expect Great Britain to aid their cause? A. Britain strongly believed in slavery B. Britain still resented the U.S. for the Revolutionary War & the War of 181 ...
Chapter 8 Sec1Notes
... Chapter 8 Section 1 The Road to War What was the message of Lincoln’s inaugural address? The Union must be maintained as he has sworn in his oath to “preserve, protect, and defend it.” Fort Sumter—The Start of the War Who? ...
... Chapter 8 Section 1 The Road to War What was the message of Lincoln’s inaugural address? The Union must be maintained as he has sworn in his oath to “preserve, protect, and defend it.” Fort Sumter—The Start of the War Who? ...
CIVIL WAR UNIT STUDY GUIDE
... to the notebook as we work through the remaining sections of the Civil War Unit. SS5H1 The student will explain the causes, major events, and consequences of the Civil War. a. Identify Uncle Tom’s Cabin and John Brown’s raid on Harper’s Ferry, and explain how each of these events was related to the ...
... to the notebook as we work through the remaining sections of the Civil War Unit. SS5H1 The student will explain the causes, major events, and consequences of the Civil War. a. Identify Uncle Tom’s Cabin and John Brown’s raid on Harper’s Ferry, and explain how each of these events was related to the ...
FIGHTING THE CIVIL WAR - Kentucky Department of Education
... habeas corpus – the right to be charged with a crime or be released. ...
... habeas corpus – the right to be charged with a crime or be released. ...
Civil war
... resilence, character and leadership. Many people for the first time saw Robert E. Lee. Many more got their first glimpse of General Grant. Lincoln. Jackson. They all showed one common theme: these soldiers out there were their brothers, fathers and uncles. • Thanks to a group of dedicated and unself ...
... resilence, character and leadership. Many people for the first time saw Robert E. Lee. Many more got their first glimpse of General Grant. Lincoln. Jackson. They all showed one common theme: these soldiers out there were their brothers, fathers and uncles. • Thanks to a group of dedicated and unself ...
Civil War Review - Reading Community Schools
... Campaigns at Shiloh and Vicksburg, the latter of which gave them control of the Mississippi. • Eventually Lincoln realized that Ulysses S. Grant is the right general to lead the whole Union Army, as he had been so successful in the West. • Grant adopts Winfield Scott’s Anaconda Plan, which he first ...
... Campaigns at Shiloh and Vicksburg, the latter of which gave them control of the Mississippi. • Eventually Lincoln realized that Ulysses S. Grant is the right general to lead the whole Union Army, as he had been so successful in the West. • Grant adopts Winfield Scott’s Anaconda Plan, which he first ...
Causes of the Civil War
... • Canceled out- the rules of the Missouri Compromise • What did this do? Said that the people in Kansas and Nebraska could vote on if they would be a slave state or free state (popular sovereignty). • Bleeding Kansas- people for and against slavery began fighting. The fighting was so bad it became k ...
... • Canceled out- the rules of the Missouri Compromise • What did this do? Said that the people in Kansas and Nebraska could vote on if they would be a slave state or free state (popular sovereignty). • Bleeding Kansas- people for and against slavery began fighting. The fighting was so bad it became k ...
Civil War
... United States Opposed slavery Believed in staying as one nation, not as individual states. ...
... United States Opposed slavery Believed in staying as one nation, not as individual states. ...
Advantages of the North and South Read and highlight the handout
... The Union enjoyed a huge advantage in population. There were 22,000,000 people living in the North in 1861. The Confederacy could count only 9,000,000 and more than one-third of these were slaves. A steady flow of immigrants from Europe provided the Union with a tremendous amount of manpower to run ...
... The Union enjoyed a huge advantage in population. There were 22,000,000 people living in the North in 1861. The Confederacy could count only 9,000,000 and more than one-third of these were slaves. A steady flow of immigrants from Europe provided the Union with a tremendous amount of manpower to run ...
Chapter 15
... Union President: Abraham Lincoln Confederate President: Jefferson Davis * South Carolina – 1st state to secede On April 17th, Lincoln’s “call for troops” led many southern states to secede. States that seceded: Virginia Arkansas Tennessee North Carolina ...
... Union President: Abraham Lincoln Confederate President: Jefferson Davis * South Carolina – 1st state to secede On April 17th, Lincoln’s “call for troops” led many southern states to secede. States that seceded: Virginia Arkansas Tennessee North Carolina ...