People of the Civil War
... _____________ was known as the “Angel of the Battlefield”. _____________ General of the Union Army. _____________ President of the United States during the War. _____________ General of the Confederate Army. _____________ 1st African American to be awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor. _________ ...
... _____________ was known as the “Angel of the Battlefield”. _____________ General of the Union Army. _____________ President of the United States during the War. _____________ General of the Confederate Army. _____________ 1st African American to be awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor. _________ ...
File
... Jobs women preformed during the war… 1. Nurse – Both sides weren’t prepared for the onslaught of wounded. Jobs preformed: Cook and feed, washing the soldiers, bandages, and medicate. 2. Spies – Burning desire to do something for “the cause.” There job would usually be to gain information, code it, a ...
... Jobs women preformed during the war… 1. Nurse – Both sides weren’t prepared for the onslaught of wounded. Jobs preformed: Cook and feed, washing the soldiers, bandages, and medicate. 2. Spies – Burning desire to do something for “the cause.” There job would usually be to gain information, code it, a ...
The Civil War
... Most Civil War battles were fought in Virginia. There were many blockade runners from the North Carolina coast breaking through the North’s naval blockade Bentonville NC was the last major battle between the North and South before the South surrendered ...
... Most Civil War battles were fought in Virginia. There were many blockade runners from the North Carolina coast breaking through the North’s naval blockade Bentonville NC was the last major battle between the North and South before the South surrendered ...
American History
... weak Union generals Lee’s army won the Battle of Fredericksburg; Burnside Union Gen Ambrose Burnside resigned after repeated failure to overcome Lee’s entrenched troops. Chancellorsville, VA; Lee won this battle; Stonewall Jackson died in this battle © 2009 abcteach.com ...
... weak Union generals Lee’s army won the Battle of Fredericksburg; Burnside Union Gen Ambrose Burnside resigned after repeated failure to overcome Lee’s entrenched troops. Chancellorsville, VA; Lee won this battle; Stonewall Jackson died in this battle © 2009 abcteach.com ...
First Battle of Bull Run
... file:/Users/Teacher/Downloads/Fist%20Battle%20of%20Bull%20Run%20text%202 ...
... file:/Users/Teacher/Downloads/Fist%20Battle%20of%20Bull%20Run%20text%202 ...
17 - Coppell ISD
... Forward to Richmond! Forward to Richmond! Every day for more than a month, the New York Tribune published this on the front-page of their newspaper Giving into popular public pressure, Lincoln ordered an ATTACK!!! Battle of Bull Run July 21, 1861, Union troops left Washington, D.C. They ...
... Forward to Richmond! Forward to Richmond! Every day for more than a month, the New York Tribune published this on the front-page of their newspaper Giving into popular public pressure, Lincoln ordered an ATTACK!!! Battle of Bull Run July 21, 1861, Union troops left Washington, D.C. They ...
4-Civil_War - IB-History-of-the-Americas
... Shots Fired -War begins at Fort Sumter, S.C., 1861 -Bull Run/ Manassas -July 1861 -Southern victory -did not pursue the retreating Union army -citizens watched the battle Approximately 500 from Washington, DC South could have captured capital, but too disorganized ...
... Shots Fired -War begins at Fort Sumter, S.C., 1861 -Bull Run/ Manassas -July 1861 -Southern victory -did not pursue the retreating Union army -citizens watched the battle Approximately 500 from Washington, DC South could have captured capital, but too disorganized ...
How does new technology impact the war?
... HOMESTEAD ACT of 1862 • The Union used the following as a strategy to keep Southerners from fighting, the Law stated; • Any U.S. citizen, or intended citizen, who had never borne arms against the U.S. Government could file an application and lay claim to 160 acres ...
... HOMESTEAD ACT of 1862 • The Union used the following as a strategy to keep Southerners from fighting, the Law stated; • Any U.S. citizen, or intended citizen, who had never borne arms against the U.S. Government could file an application and lay claim to 160 acres ...
Chapter Twenty-One: The Furnace of Civil War
... 1) Fortified a Union position at Gettysburg with 92,000 troops 2) Attacked by Lee’s 76,000 troops July 1-3, 1863 3) Failed after Pickett’s charge was turned back 4) Lincoln turned back Jefferson’s delegation at the Union line, which had been sent to negotiate peace in anticipation of victory 5) 1863 ...
... 1) Fortified a Union position at Gettysburg with 92,000 troops 2) Attacked by Lee’s 76,000 troops July 1-3, 1863 3) Failed after Pickett’s charge was turned back 4) Lincoln turned back Jefferson’s delegation at the Union line, which had been sent to negotiate peace in anticipation of victory 5) 1863 ...
Battle of Bull Run May 1863
... match for the Merrimack. However, the very next day the north also displayed an armor clad ship, the Monitor. When the two ships challenged each other on March 9, 1862 there was no telling who would win. ...
... match for the Merrimack. However, the very next day the north also displayed an armor clad ship, the Monitor. When the two ships challenged each other on March 9, 1862 there was no telling who would win. ...
The Civil War
... The Naval War Lincoln proclaimed a blockade of all Confederate ports in an effort to cut the South’s trade with the world. The Union blockade became increasingly effective as the war went on. The Union navy, however, could not stop all of the blockade runners. A fleet of Union ships, led by David G ...
... The Naval War Lincoln proclaimed a blockade of all Confederate ports in an effort to cut the South’s trade with the world. The Union blockade became increasingly effective as the war went on. The Union navy, however, could not stop all of the blockade runners. A fleet of Union ships, led by David G ...
17 - Coppell ISD
... Forward to Richmond! Forward to Richmond! Every day for more than a month, the New York Tribune published this on the front-page of their newspaper Giving into popular public pressure, Lincoln ordered an ATTACK!!! Battle of Bull Run July 21, 1861, Union troops left Washington, D.C. They ...
... Forward to Richmond! Forward to Richmond! Every day for more than a month, the New York Tribune published this on the front-page of their newspaper Giving into popular public pressure, Lincoln ordered an ATTACK!!! Battle of Bull Run July 21, 1861, Union troops left Washington, D.C. They ...
The Civil War - Mrs. Rice
... attack Lee’s army. This gave Lee time to gather his troops together at Antietam Creek in Maryland. • The Union and Confederate armies clashed on September 17, 1862 at the Battle of Antietam. ...
... attack Lee’s army. This gave Lee time to gather his troops together at Antietam Creek in Maryland. • The Union and Confederate armies clashed on September 17, 1862 at the Battle of Antietam. ...
File
... attack Lee’s army. This gave Lee time to gather his troops together at Antietam Creek in Maryland. • The Union and Confederate armies clashed on September 17, 1862 at the Battle of Antietam. ...
... attack Lee’s army. This gave Lee time to gather his troops together at Antietam Creek in Maryland. • The Union and Confederate armies clashed on September 17, 1862 at the Battle of Antietam. ...
Am St I CP 111
... • First shots fired on Fort Sumter, South Carolina • April 1861 • Both sides felt it would be a quick war • In July 35,000 Union Troops trained in Washington • Less then a 100 miles away from the Confederate Capital of Richmond VA ...
... • First shots fired on Fort Sumter, South Carolina • April 1861 • Both sides felt it would be a quick war • In July 35,000 Union Troops trained in Washington • Less then a 100 miles away from the Confederate Capital of Richmond VA ...
Chapter 11 Section 2
... the union army in the east after Gen. McDowell’s defeat at the first Battle of Bull Run. Goal is to capture the CSA capital. McClellan develops the peninsula campaign: a plan to assemble troops near Yorktown, VA and march them up a peninsula where the James and York rivers meet up to Richmond. Thi ...
... the union army in the east after Gen. McDowell’s defeat at the first Battle of Bull Run. Goal is to capture the CSA capital. McClellan develops the peninsula campaign: a plan to assemble troops near Yorktown, VA and march them up a peninsula where the James and York rivers meet up to Richmond. Thi ...
the regimental dispatch - SOUTHERN PIEDMONT HISTORICAL
... moved, he realized he had been duped by the enemy into thinking they had more troops and artillery than they actually had. McClellan began to move the army closer and closer toward Richmond, fighting battles at Williamsburg, Eltham’s Landing, Drewry’s Bluff, Hanover Courthouse and Seven Pines. It wa ...
... moved, he realized he had been duped by the enemy into thinking they had more troops and artillery than they actually had. McClellan began to move the army closer and closer toward Richmond, fighting battles at Williamsburg, Eltham’s Landing, Drewry’s Bluff, Hanover Courthouse and Seven Pines. It wa ...
The Civil War - North Platte R
... • Asks permission from Lincoln and Grant to break off from supply lines and march to Savannah GA. • Wants to live off the land and destroy the heart of confederate’s industry. His plan is risky and since there will be no supply lines he is putting his men in danger. • Lincoln and Grant OK the plan, ...
... • Asks permission from Lincoln and Grant to break off from supply lines and march to Savannah GA. • Wants to live off the land and destroy the heart of confederate’s industry. His plan is risky and since there will be no supply lines he is putting his men in danger. • Lincoln and Grant OK the plan, ...
Trails map - Civil War Traveler
... • Dismal Swamp Canal – The oldest operating artificial waterway in America, it provided access between the Chesapeake Bay and the North Carolina Sounds. ...
... • Dismal Swamp Canal – The oldest operating artificial waterway in America, it provided access between the Chesapeake Bay and the North Carolina Sounds. ...
General Order`s No. 9: Ending the war peacefully
... current hostilities between the North and South, and issued the order on April 10th to commanding officers. The document presented here is from a second group made out by Charles Marshall for distribution. Lee hoped his general order would help ease the South’s humiliation and sense of loss that cam ...
... current hostilities between the North and South, and issued the order on April 10th to commanding officers. The document presented here is from a second group made out by Charles Marshall for distribution. Lee hoped his general order would help ease the South’s humiliation and sense of loss that cam ...
File - American History I with Ms. Byrne
... – The south was desperate for a win after the losses in Kentucky and Ohio – An initial attack from the Confederates forced the Union back. The next day, the Union troops regained the lost ground. – Each side suffered over 10,000 casualties ...
... – The south was desperate for a win after the losses in Kentucky and Ohio – An initial attack from the Confederates forced the Union back. The next day, the Union troops regained the lost ground. – Each side suffered over 10,000 casualties ...
- Hesston Middle School
... situation around. Lee sent Jeb Stuart and his cavalry-soldiers on horseback-to spy on McClellan. With about 1,000 men, Stuart rode around the whole Union army in a few days and reported its size back to Lee. Lee then attacked McClellan's army. The two sides clashed for a week, from June 25 to July 1 ...
... situation around. Lee sent Jeb Stuart and his cavalry-soldiers on horseback-to spy on McClellan. With about 1,000 men, Stuart rode around the whole Union army in a few days and reported its size back to Lee. Lee then attacked McClellan's army. The two sides clashed for a week, from June 25 to July 1 ...
16-3 No End in Sight
... situation around. Lee sent Jeb Stuart and his cavalry-soldiers on horseback-to spy on McClellan. With about 1,000 men, Stuart rode around the whole Union army in a few days and reported its size back to Lee. Lee then attacked McClellan's army. The two sides clashed for a week, from June 25 to July 1 ...
... situation around. Lee sent Jeb Stuart and his cavalry-soldiers on horseback-to spy on McClellan. With about 1,000 men, Stuart rode around the whole Union army in a few days and reported its size back to Lee. Lee then attacked McClellan's army. The two sides clashed for a week, from June 25 to July 1 ...
July 1863-1864
... the Potomac and heads east • J.E.B. Stuart’s mistake – Stuart was riding Lee’s right flank informing him of Union movements – Stuart believed he could ride around Hooker and get a better idea of Union movements – Union movement pushed Stuart farther east than anticipated and he was out of contact wi ...
... the Potomac and heads east • J.E.B. Stuart’s mistake – Stuart was riding Lee’s right flank informing him of Union movements – Stuart believed he could ride around Hooker and get a better idea of Union movements – Union movement pushed Stuart farther east than anticipated and he was out of contact wi ...
Letter To His Son
... anarchy and civil war (chaotic) • Wants it to be peaceful • Says the 1st 4 states have already succeeded, and 4 more (including his own) are expected to follow • Believes North has been unfair to South ...
... anarchy and civil war (chaotic) • Wants it to be peaceful • Says the 1st 4 states have already succeeded, and 4 more (including his own) are expected to follow • Believes North has been unfair to South ...
Northern Virginia Campaign
The Northern Virginia Campaign, also known as the Second Bull Run Campaign or Second Manassas Campaign, was a series of battles fought in Virginia during August and September 1862 in the Eastern Theater of the American Civil War. Confederate General Robert E. Lee followed up his successes of the Seven Days Battles in the Peninsula Campaign by moving north toward Washington, D.C., and defeating Maj. Gen. John Pope and his Army of Virginia.Concerned that Pope's army would combine forces with Maj. Gen. George B. McClellan's Army of the Potomac and overwhelm him, Lee sent Maj. Gen. Thomas J. ""Stonewall"" Jackson north to intercept Pope's advance toward Gordonsville. The two forces initially clashed at Cedar Mountain on August 9, a Confederate victory. Lee determined that McClellan's army on the Virginia Peninsula was no longer a threat to Richmond and sent most of the rest of his army, Maj. Gen. James Longstreet's command, following Jackson. Jackson conducted a wide-ranging maneuver around Pope's right flank, seizing the large supply depot in Pope's rear, at Manassas Junction, placing his force between Pope and Washington, D.C. Moving to a very defensible position near the battleground of the 1861 First Battle of Bull Run (First Manassas), Jackson successfully repulsed Union assaults on August 29 as Lee and Longstreet's command arrived on the battlefield. On August 30, Pope attacked again, but was surprised to be caught between attacks by Longstreet and Jackson, and was forced to withdraw with heavy losses. The campaign concluded with another flanking maneuver by Jackson, which Pope engaged at the Battle of Chantilly on September 1.Lee's maneuvering of the Army of Northern Virginia against Pope is considered a military masterpiece. Historian John J. Hennessy wrote that ""Lee may have fought cleverer battles, but this was his greatest campaign.""