CE Civil War Review Questions
... What battle halted Robert E. Lee’s first advance into Maryland and Washington DC? What was clear by the end of 1862? Why did the Confederacy attempt to control Colorado? Why is the Battle of Glorieta Pass important? What did the US government do to Native American tribes that supported the South? Wh ...
... What battle halted Robert E. Lee’s first advance into Maryland and Washington DC? What was clear by the end of 1862? Why did the Confederacy attempt to control Colorado? Why is the Battle of Glorieta Pass important? What did the US government do to Native American tribes that supported the South? Wh ...
Unit 5 Vocab practice 4
... The turning point of the war; “Pickett’s Charge” as this is known fails and Lee retreats back to Virginia; never again would the South have a chance to win the war or threaten the North Lincoln was assassinated by John Wilkes Booth, a Confederate supporter, while seeing a play with his wife; Booth e ...
... The turning point of the war; “Pickett’s Charge” as this is known fails and Lee retreats back to Virginia; never again would the South have a chance to win the war or threaten the North Lincoln was assassinated by John Wilkes Booth, a Confederate supporter, while seeing a play with his wife; Booth e ...
Divine, Ch. 15 Lecture Notes Page
... 200,000 African-American Union troops Many others labor in Northern war effort Lincoln pushes further for black rights ...
... 200,000 African-American Union troops Many others labor in Northern war effort Lincoln pushes further for black rights ...
Civil War Sections 1 and 2
... • Conscription (It was opposed by the many Democrats.) • President Lincoln suspended the writs of habeas corpus which meant an individual could be imprisoned indefinitely without a trial. This was a very controversial measure during the war. ...
... • Conscription (It was opposed by the many Democrats.) • President Lincoln suspended the writs of habeas corpus which meant an individual could be imprisoned indefinitely without a trial. This was a very controversial measure during the war. ...
fighting the civil war - Taylor County Schools
... the crimes of this guilty land will never be purged away but with blood. I had, as I now think, vainly flattered myself that without very much bloodshed it might be done.“ Do you believe that John Brown was a martyr or a terrorist? ...
... the crimes of this guilty land will never be purged away but with blood. I had, as I now think, vainly flattered myself that without very much bloodshed it might be done.“ Do you believe that John Brown was a martyr or a terrorist? ...
fighting the civil war - Taylor County Schools
... the crimes of this guilty land will never be purged away but with blood. I had, as I now think, vainly flattered myself that without very much bloodshed it might be done.“ Do you believe that John Brown was a martyr or a terrorist? ...
... the crimes of this guilty land will never be purged away but with blood. I had, as I now think, vainly flattered myself that without very much bloodshed it might be done.“ Do you believe that John Brown was a martyr or a terrorist? ...
Georgia and the American Experience
... everything in its path, 300 miles from Atlanta to Savannah • A sixty mile-wide area is burned, destroyed, and ruined during a two-month period • Captured, but did not burn, Savannah in December 1864 because - ...
... everything in its path, 300 miles from Atlanta to Savannah • A sixty mile-wide area is burned, destroyed, and ruined during a two-month period • Captured, but did not burn, Savannah in December 1864 because - ...
The American Civil War
... first in history, the history of the world, based upon this great physical, philosophical, and truth.” ...
... first in history, the history of the world, based upon this great physical, philosophical, and truth.” ...
chapter-8-sec1noteskey
... Union Generals’ Plan: to destroy Confederate armies and lay_waste__ to land Confederate: Confederate Land Strategy: to wear down invading Union army Confederate Sea Strategy: to use _swift_raiders to foil Union blockade ...
... Union Generals’ Plan: to destroy Confederate armies and lay_waste__ to land Confederate: Confederate Land Strategy: to wear down invading Union army Confederate Sea Strategy: to use _swift_raiders to foil Union blockade ...
Chapter 18 Section 2, The Civil War Begins, P. 376
... Chapter 18 Section 2, The Civil War Begins, P. 376 Key Terms 1. Regiments: units of around 1,000 soldiers; Texas soldiers usually joined regiments with men from their hometowns or counties ...
... Chapter 18 Section 2, The Civil War Begins, P. 376 Key Terms 1. Regiments: units of around 1,000 soldiers; Texas soldiers usually joined regiments with men from their hometowns or counties ...
Civil War and Reconstruction
... Southern spies warned the CSA ahead of time, and the Union was defeated. Some women from D.C. came with picnic baskets and blankets to watch. ...
... Southern spies warned the CSA ahead of time, and the Union was defeated. Some women from D.C. came with picnic baskets and blankets to watch. ...
Civil War test
... 1. States that seceded from the Union did so because a) they were afraid slavery would be abolished b) they were afraid they would lose the war c) they were upset with the decision of the Dred Scott case d) All of the above 2. After South Carolina Seceded from the Union New York City mayor Fernando ...
... 1. States that seceded from the Union did so because a) they were afraid slavery would be abolished b) they were afraid they would lose the war c) they were upset with the decision of the Dred Scott case d) All of the above 2. After South Carolina Seceded from the Union New York City mayor Fernando ...
Chapter 8 Section1 and two vocab answer key
... 1. Alexander Stephens was named vice president of the Confederacy. 2. Transportation, Population, Agriculture, Industry, and Wealth were areas where the Union’s resources outweighed the Confederacy’s 3. The purpose of the Union Blockade was to block the Confederacy from exporting and importing suppl ...
... 1. Alexander Stephens was named vice president of the Confederacy. 2. Transportation, Population, Agriculture, Industry, and Wealth were areas where the Union’s resources outweighed the Confederacy’s 3. The purpose of the Union Blockade was to block the Confederacy from exporting and importing suppl ...
Chapter 14
... • Forces still occupying the fort ran dangerously low on supplies. • Lincoln warned S. Carolina he would send supply ships, not military. • No soldiers or reinforcements unless the ships were fired upon. • Confederates fired on the ships • Southern Code of Honor: prefer belligerent action instead of ...
... • Forces still occupying the fort ran dangerously low on supplies. • Lincoln warned S. Carolina he would send supply ships, not military. • No soldiers or reinforcements unless the ships were fired upon. • Confederates fired on the ships • Southern Code of Honor: prefer belligerent action instead of ...
Antebellum, Civil War and Reconstruction Test
... 27. She is called the “angel of the battlefield” due to her bravery in war, and later founded the American Red Cross in 1881. 28. What is the final surrender of the Confederate Army took place here. 29. ___________ served as president of the Confederacy. 30. When the Civil War began, what was Abrah ...
... 27. She is called the “angel of the battlefield” due to her bravery in war, and later founded the American Red Cross in 1881. 28. What is the final surrender of the Confederate Army took place here. 29. ___________ served as president of the Confederacy. 30. When the Civil War began, what was Abrah ...
American Civil War: War Erupts Cornell Notes
... Take control of Mississippi River to split Confederacy in two Capture Richmond, VA – the Confederate capital Fight a defensive war – keep the war in the South ...
... Take control of Mississippi River to split Confederacy in two Capture Richmond, VA – the Confederate capital Fight a defensive war – keep the war in the South ...
Unit III A : Civil War 1861
... B. African-Americans were not allowed to enlist in the Union army until after the Emancipation Proclamation. 200,000 served. The most famous was the Massachusetts __________th Regiment. Black soldiers served in segregated units and were led by white officers. ...
... B. African-Americans were not allowed to enlist in the Union army until after the Emancipation Proclamation. 200,000 served. The most famous was the Massachusetts __________th Regiment. Black soldiers served in segregated units and were led by white officers. ...
North Carolina in the Civil War
... Women were left to tend children and farms Inflation (driving up prices) Richard Gatling: patented the Gatling gun; his first invention was a rice seed planter ...
... Women were left to tend children and farms Inflation (driving up prices) Richard Gatling: patented the Gatling gun; his first invention was a rice seed planter ...
chapter 20 notes
... 1. Lincoln declared he was not fighting to free blacks (this would turn away border states) 2. border state West Virginia legally tore itself apart from Virginia mid-1861 because “the North did not shoot first” in this war over “states rights” 3. (the border states still were permitted to have slave ...
... 1. Lincoln declared he was not fighting to free blacks (this would turn away border states) 2. border state West Virginia legally tore itself apart from Virginia mid-1861 because “the North did not shoot first” in this war over “states rights” 3. (the border states still were permitted to have slave ...
Chapter 8 Sec1Notes
... Texas, Arkansas, and Louisiana _____________________ Union Plan to Capture Confederate Capital __________________, VA Union Generals’ Plan: to destroy Confederate armies and lay_________ to land Confederate: Confederate Land Strategy: to_____ down invading_____________ army Confederate Sea Strategy: ...
... Texas, Arkansas, and Louisiana _____________________ Union Plan to Capture Confederate Capital __________________, VA Union Generals’ Plan: to destroy Confederate armies and lay_________ to land Confederate: Confederate Land Strategy: to_____ down invading_____________ army Confederate Sea Strategy: ...
People of the Civil War
... 1, 1863), freeing all slaves Assassinated by John Wilkes Booth in 1865 ...
... 1, 1863), freeing all slaves Assassinated by John Wilkes Booth in 1865 ...
Lincoln`s Concept of Sustainability
... There were nearly as many casualties in the Civil War as in all of America's other ...
... There were nearly as many casualties in the Civil War as in all of America's other ...
Cornelius Vanderbilt
... • The Civil War was also known as the “War Between the States.” People from the North were called Yankees, and people from the South were called Rebels. • The Confederacy was led by Jefferson Davis. He was considered the president of the South. Robert E. Lee was the leader of the Confederate Army. T ...
... • The Civil War was also known as the “War Between the States.” People from the North were called Yankees, and people from the South were called Rebels. • The Confederacy was led by Jefferson Davis. He was considered the president of the South. Robert E. Lee was the leader of the Confederate Army. T ...
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.