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the union`s “grand strategy”
the union`s “grand strategy”

... Southern strategy to combat McClellan’s. What advice could you give the Confederate leadership in developing a battle strategy of its own? 10. Based on what you’ve researched and know about the Civil War, which particular aspect of the Union strategy do you feel was the most effective in ending the ...
Sharpshooter February 2016 - Kirby
Sharpshooter February 2016 - Kirby

... military in nature and that it resulted from a plan by Abraham Lincoln to restore Florida to the Union in time for him to count on the votes of her delegates to his party's convention. ...
The Cape Fear Civil War Round Table The RUNNER
The Cape Fear Civil War Round Table The RUNNER

... October 6th: The Confederacy started a campaign to find crossings over the Upper Potomac that, if successful, would have allowed them to outflank the Unionist force in the capital. October 7th: Lincoln sent the Secretary of War to Missouri to investigate what exactly was going on as more reports rea ...
February 21, 1919 Surgeon, Spy, Suffragette, Prisoner of War
February 21, 1919 Surgeon, Spy, Suffragette, Prisoner of War

... Many of the officers on both sides of the war were graduates of the United States Military Academy at West Point. On the right is Custer as a lieutenant. On the left is his West Point classmate, James Washington of the Confederate Army, who had just been captured. ...
CivilWar_Jeopardy_Julian
CivilWar_Jeopardy_Julian

... points of the Civil War? ...
March - Delaware Valley Civil War Roundtable
March - Delaware Valley Civil War Roundtable

... Pennypacker Mills continues its exhibit on the life of Galusha Pennypacker through March 15, 2015. Pennypacker is considered to be the youngest Union General and was awarded the Medal of Honor for his actions at Fort Fisher, N. C. in January 1865. Galusha was the second cousin of Samuel Pennypacker, ...
Bellwork 1/6/14 - Hartsville Middle School
Bellwork 1/6/14 - Hartsville Middle School

... • d. The Confederate Army had not expected the Union to launch an attack on Charleston Answer: B ...
By Land or Sea, the Confederate States Marine Corp Was a Force to
By Land or Sea, the Confederate States Marine Corp Was a Force to

... Marines were used as a type of Special Forces unit. Confederate Marines were called upon many times for special missions such as the plan to capture Federal ironclads anchored off of Charleston Harbor in 1863. This plan called for the Marines to board the ships at night and disable the engine by dro ...
Transforming Fire: The Civil War, 1861–1865
Transforming Fire: The Civil War, 1861–1865

... Correct. The shortage of labor in western agricultural areas caused increased reliance on labor-saving farm machinery. This in turn created a boom in the sale of agricultural machinery and increased the food supply for the growing urban work force. a. No. There was a labor shortage in the western ag ...
What is Reconstruction?
What is Reconstruction?

...  Dick Dowling and the Davis Guards played a major role by capturing 350 soldiers and two boats. ...
Demonstration Flights
Demonstration Flights

... What about the rest? Although I did confirm that everyone in the painting who is supposed to have served in Massachusetts regiments actually did so, I also confirmed that none were at Antietam, mostly because they mustered out too soon or mustered in too late. How many were Concordians? Mass Soldier ...
“The Largest Men We Have Seen”: The Twenty-Seventh Indiana Infantry, 1861-64
“The Largest Men We Have Seen”: The Twenty-Seventh Indiana Infantry, 1861-64

... played on the battlefield. Most notable was the fact that 110 members of the regiment were killed or wounded out of the 339 engaged, which meant that nearly one-third of those who participated in the battle suffered a casualty of some kind.35 Gettysburg would be the last major conflict the Twenty-Se ...
map-civil-war-helena
map-civil-war-helena

... The history of the Hanks family and Estevan Hall are told in an outdoor exhibit. Estevan Hall is now being restored in preparation for its new life as the Civil War Helena Visitor Center. ...
Patriotic Essentialism, the Civil War and Postbellum
Patriotic Essentialism, the Civil War and Postbellum

... from foot soldiers to Presidents, believed that their cause was the true defence of American ideals and that their opponents’ viewpoint would only corrupt their country’s ideology. Even when the South formed its own nation, it did so not to separate itself from the ideals of the United States, but t ...
lincoln - Park University
lincoln - Park University

... he stood in front of the Capitol on Inauguration Day, ready to take his oath of office as the sixteenth president of the United States. 44. In his speech, he appealed to the people of the South, ...
CH 21 Part 3 Notes - Iredell
CH 21 Part 3 Notes - Iredell

... conclusion that the hour and the man of our redemption had somehow met in the person of Abraham Lincoln. It mattered little to us what language he might employ on special occasions; it mattered little to us, when we fully knew him, whether he was swift or slow in his movements; it was enough for us ...
South Carolina senator John C. Calhoun was so sick that he had
South Carolina senator John C. Calhoun was so sick that he had

... grown in population so quickly that it skipped the territorial phase of becoming a state. In late 1849, California held a constitutional convention, adopted a state constitution, elected a governor and a legislature, and applied to join the Union. California’s new constitution forbade slavery, a fac ...
The Battle of Baton Rouge (Formatted Word Doc)
The Battle of Baton Rouge (Formatted Word Doc)

... On July 10th Ruggles reported to Van Dorn that he had 1500 men and one battery ready and if he had an additional battery and 3500 troops he could liberate the capital city. In the days following this report Ruggles received intelligence that suggested the Union garrison had been reinforced by 2200 t ...
Civil_War_Quiz
Civil_War_Quiz

... the South lost a major manufacturing city. the weakened Southern army could no longer try to invade the North. the South could no longer control the Mississippi River. ...
Reconstruction to 1900 - Virginia History Series
Reconstruction to 1900 - Virginia History Series

... In the spring of 1862, Gen. Johnston withdrew his Confederate army south to defend Richmond. According to the book Fairfax Virginia: A City Traveling Through Time, the withdrawal of thousands of soldiers revealed the magnitude of destruction to Centreville, Virginia. “In less than one year, the dev ...
Summer 2011 issue - Camp Olden Civil War Round Table
Summer 2011 issue - Camp Olden Civil War Round Table

... Contributed by Leslie Peck and Terri Paglione The George & Hettie Shriver House in Gettysburg, PA, shows what everyday life was like in the mid-19th century and how one family became affected by the Battle of Gettysburg and the Civil War. This house was occupied by the Confederates and there is an e ...
APUSH Unit 5 Study Guide: Chapters 18
APUSH Unit 5 Study Guide: Chapters 18

... Which areas of the world did the US attempt to colonize during the mid-1850s? Why were these attempts unsuccessful? How did the action of John Brown divide the nation? Describe the election of 1860. Why did South Carolina secede from the Union? What were the advantages of the Union at the beginning ...
The Killer Angels
The Killer Angels

... through very challenging circumstances together. The soldiers who go through difficult battles,  and the generals who work together through great diversity, come to be linked by an almost  mystical bond. War fosters an unbreakable brotherhood.  Pride can cause us to make irrational decisions.   A ma ...
a comparison of hms warrior (1861) to the uss monitor
a comparison of hms warrior (1861) to the uss monitor

... The Warrior had both steam and sail so she could theoretically use both to travel to America. The ship was fitted out and ready for action June 1862.5 “Overseas service was out of the question, at least until new dry docks had been constructed [near the area of battle]. “6 It wasn’t until 1866 that ...
Why? essential question: What defined the Civil War?
Why? essential question: What defined the Civil War?

... The eleven Confederate States. Note that Missouri, Kentucky, Maryland, and Delaware did not secede, though they were slave states. West Virginia formed early in the war when it was occupied by Union forces, but did not join the Union as a state until 1863. ...
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Jubal Early



Jubal Anderson Early (November 3, 1816 – March 2, 1894) was a lawyer and Confederate general in the American Civil War. He served under Stonewall Jackson and then Robert E. Lee for almost the entire war, rising from regimental command to lieutenant general and the command of an infantry corps in the Army of Northern Virginia. He was the Confederate commander in key battles of the Valley Campaigns of 1864, including a daring raid to the outskirts of Washington, D.C. The articles written by him for the Southern Historical Society in the 1870s established the Lost Cause point of view as a long-lasting literary and cultural phenomenon.
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