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The American Civil War (1861-1865) Jonathon Davis BELLWORK APRIL 21 Get in your group and draw job cards. Recorder- Get a battle sheet paper off the front desk FOR EACH PERSON. Get out your study guide. Reporter-Get a CHROMEBOOK for your group. LEADER- RAISE YOUR HAND Put your name on the battle sheet. Sit Quietly. Battle Map Activity GROUP LEADER- Look at your battle task card. READER- Look at your first battle and pull it up on Mrs. Lee’s webpage/ Civil War Battles. Watch your video for your battle and take notes on battle sheet card then move to the next battle. Closing Procedures Reporter- Put CHROME BOOK back up and be sure to plug it up. GROUP LEADER- Make sure all job cards are put up and task folder is in middle of desk. EVERYBODY- PUT YOUR STUDY GUIDE AND BATTLE SHEET IN THE PRONGS OF YOUR BINDER *GROUP LEADER- Do not raise your hand until everybodys paper is IN THEIR BINDER. 65. Significant Results of War CITIES Petal-10,454 Hattiesburg-45,989 Gulfport-67,793 Jackson-173,514 Biloxi-45,054 Meridian-41,148 Pascagoula-22,392 Starkville-23,888 Oxford-18,918 Pearl-25,092 WARS Revolution-4,400 War of 1812-2,260 Mx-Am War-1,733 WWI-53,042 WWII-396,557 Korea-33,700 Vietnam-57,258 Global war on terror3,950 BEGINNING GOALS 37. Yankees – Union – North -wanted to preserve the Union 37. Rebels – Confederacy – South -wanted to preserve their way of life even if it meant independence Advantages: 38. Yankees – Union – North -larger, free population -more manufacturing capabilities -more railroads -stronger navy -volunteers -Lincoln 39. Rebels – Confederacy – South -knowledge of countryside -fought mostly a defensive war -fought for their property -great generals/Lee Railroad Lines, 1860 Men Present for Duty in the Civil War Nathan Bedford Forrest Only enlisted man to achieve rank of lieutenant general Brilliant, yet brutal, cavalry leader Lieutenant General James Longstreet Climbed the ranks quickly One of Lee’s most trusted advisors Lieutenant General Thomas “Stonewall” Jackson One of the most skilled tacticians of the Civil War Had a unique ability to inspire the men “I cannot raise my hand against my relatives, my children, my home.” 40. Robert E. Lee Border States/slave states / stayed in Union Delaware Maryland Kentucky Missouri 35. Lincoln wanted to hold on to border states; *Losing border states would increase Confederacy population. **Border states surrounded our nation’s capital. 41. General Winfield Scott’s 3-step strategy to defeat the South: capture Richmond take control of Mississippi River use navy to blockade Southern ports 42. Union’s strategy-Anaconda Plan 43. MS River supplied Confederate troops with supplies from the West. 44. The Confederate “White House” in Richmond, VA located 100 miles from Washington D.C. 46. The Battle of the Merrimack (C) and the Monitor (U) marked the end of wooden warships. 45. Battle of Bull Run (1st Manassas) July, 1861 (first major battle) 47. The bloodiest single day of fighting occurred along the Antietam Creek during the Battle of Antietam. (1862, over 23,000 casualties) A Bloody Day… 48. Confederates accidentally shot Thomas \ Stonewall Jackson during the Battle of Chancellorsville – left his arm amputated and he died a few days later. 49. BATTLE OF SHILOH April 1862, Grant overcame southern forces and took control of western Tennessee getting the Union closer to controlling the MS River. Confederate Union 50. The Emancipation Proclamation (1-1-1863) 3 reasons that Abraham Lincoln issued the Emancipation Proclamation. 1. gain support of antislavery groups 2. broaden the goals of the war 3. discourage foreign powers from helping the South. African-American Recruiting Poster 51. The Famous 54th Massachusetts African-Americans in Civil War Battles 52. Hardships: deadly weapons The North Initiates the Draft, 1863 NYC Draft Riots, (July 13-16, 1863) 53. Copperheads 54. Income tax *did not support war *wanted to end the War *tax people’s earnings 55. Women of the Civil War: Clara Barton-Union nurse/founded Red Cross Worked on farms and industries Gave out medical supplies Raised money Made uniforms/weapons Disguised as men/fought in battle Spies 56. Ulysses S. Grant •Hiram Ulysses Grant •Union General •“Unconditional Surrender” •Lincoln’s man to win Grant’s strategy on Vicksburg 56. siege -a military blockade of an enemy in order to force a surrender 6 weeks for Grant to take Vicksburg 56. Grant’s forces cut off the supply lines to Vicksburg in a strategy called a siege- blockade of a city. Vicksburg - blocked the Mississippi River where the South was getting its supplies. Starving residents ate horses, mules, and dogs. Citizens – forced to stay in city July 4, 1863 – Confederates surrendered The Road to Gettysburg: 1863 G. Meade 57. The Battle of Gettysburg lasted 3 days. It was a victory for the North and considered the turning point of the War. It was the most celebrated site of “Pickett’s Charge”. 58. “Pickett’s Charge” was a failure. Gettysburg Casualties 59. Gettysburg Address “We here highly resolve that these dead shall not have died in vain……and that government of the people, for the people, shall not perish from the earth.” This is a quote from the Gettysburg Address. The Battle of Chickamauga TOTAL WAR: 60. destroying food, supplies, transportation; whatever necessary 1864 Election Pres. Lincoln (R) George McClellan (D) 61. Sherman’s “March to the Sea” through Georgia, 1864 62. Second Inaugural Address –March 4, 1865 “With malice toward none with charity for all, let us strive to bind the nation’s wounds………” One of the finest speeches in American history…… Pres. Lincoln (R) malice – desire to cause harm 63. Surrender at Appomattox Court House April 9, 1865 64. 4 years TIMELINE UPDATE With the country on the brink of war, bachelor president James Buchanan failed to take action to preserve the Union. Abraham Lincoln guided the Union through the Civil War and proclaimed Slave Emancipation in 1863.