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Choosing Sides • General Winfield Scott asked __________ __________ to command the Union’s troops. • Lee was one of the best senior officers in the __________ States Army. • Lee, however, was from Virginia, so when his state voted to secede, Lee chose to support the _______________. • of the Union’s military officers chose to support the Confederacy. _______________ • The South had a strong military _______________. Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. (pages 350–351) Choosing Sides (cont.) • of the eight military colleges were in the South, so the South had a large number of trained army officers. _______________ • The North had a strong _______________ tradition. Three-fourths of the U.S. Navy’s officers were from the North. • The North had a large pool of ________________________ from merchant ships. • Most of the navy’s warships and all but one shipyard were under _______________control. (pages 350–351) Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. Advantages and Disadvantages • The North’s _______________was more than twice as large as the South’s population. • This gave the North an advantage in ______________________________and in supporting the war. • One-third of the South’s population was _______________. • Therefore, the South had _______________ people to join the army and to support the war. (pages 351–352) Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. Advantages and Disadvantages (cont.) • The North’s industries gave it an _______________advantage over the South. • The North had _______________of the country’s factories. • It produced _______________of the nation’s pig iron, which is used to make weapons and equipment. • Almost all of the country’s firearms and gunpowder were produced in the ________. • After the war began, the _____________ quickly set up armories and foundries to produce weapons, gunpowder, and ammunition. (pages 351–352) Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. Advantages and Disadvantages (cont.) • The South was able to produce large amounts of _______________. • The South had only ________________________ line for moving food and troops, however. • Northern troops easily _______________the South’s rail system. • The North had several _______________ advantages over the South. • The North controlled the ______________________________and was able to continue collecting money from tariffs. (pages 351–352) Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. Advantages and Disadvantages (cont.) • Northern banks loaned the federal government money by buying government bonds. • Congress passed the __________________________ Act in February 1862. • This created a national currency and allowed the government to issue greencolored paper money known as _______________. • The _______________ financial situation was not good to start, and it continued to worsen. (pages 351–352) Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. Advantages and Disadvantages (cont.) • Southern planters and banks could not buy _______________. • The Union Navy blockaded Southern ports, so money raised by _______________trade was greatly reduced. • To raise money, the South taxed its own _______________. • Many Southerners _______________to pay the taxes. • The South was forced to print its own paper money, which caused rapid _______________in the South. (pages 351–352) Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. Party Politics in the North • As the Civil War began, there were many Republicans and Northern Democrats who challenged _______________policies. • Lincoln’s goal was to _______________the Union, even if that meant allowing slavery to continue. • The ______________________________supported the Civil War and restoring the Union. They opposed ending slavery. • The Peace Democrats, referred to by Republicans as _______________, opposed the war. They wanted to reunite the states by using negotiation. (pages 352–353) Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. Party Politics in the North (cont.) • In 1862 Congress introduced a militia law that required states to use _______________– the drafting of people for military service– to fill their regiments. • Many Democrats opposed the law, and riots _______________in many cities. • To enforce the militia law, Lincoln suspended writs of ______________________________ –a person’s right not to be imprisoned unless charged with a crime and given a trial. (pages 352–353) Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. Weak Southern Government • The Confederate constitution’s commitment to states’ rights _______________President Jefferson Davis’s ability to conduct the war. • Many Southern leaders opposed President ___________________________ policies. • They objected to the _______________forcing people to join the army. • They opposed _______________writs of habeas corpus and disliked the new _______________. Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. (page 353 ) The Diplomatic Challenge • The United States did not want Europeans to recognize the _______________ States of America as an _______________ country. • The United States wanted Europeans to _______________the Union navy’s blockade of Southern ports. • The South wanted Europeans to _______________the Confederacy and declare the Union navy’s blockade _______________. • The South wanted the _______________navy to help the South in the war. (pages 353–354) Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the answer. The Diplomatic Challenge (cont.) • To pressure France and Britain, Southern planters stopped selling _______________to these countries. • In 1861 the Confederacy sent ______________________________of Virginia and ______________________________of Louisiana to Europe to be permanent ministers to Britain and France. • In the ______________________________, a Union warship intercepted the Trent, the British ship that the two men were on, and arrested them. (pages 353–354) Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. The Diplomatic Challenge (cont.) • Britain demanded the _______________of the two men and threatened war against the United States. • President Lincoln _______________Mason and Slidell, but the Confederacy failed to gain the support of Europeans. (pages 353–354) Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. The First “Modern” War • The Civil War was the first “_______________” war, with new military technology and tactics. • The war involved huge _______________made up of mostly civilian _______________who required vast amounts of supplies and equipment. • New cone-shaped _______________used in the Civil War were more accurate and could be loaded and fired _______________than previous bullets. (pages 354–356) Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the answer. The First “Modern” War (cont.) • Instead of standing in a line, troops defending positions in the Civil War began to use _______________and _______________to protect themselves. • Attacking forces suffered _______________ casualties. • –the wearing down of one side by the other through exhaustion of soldiers and resources–meant that the armies had to keep replacing their soldiers. _______________ (pages 354–356) Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. The First “Modern” War (cont.) • Jefferson Davis wanted to wage a defensive war of _______________against the Union. • This defensive warfare outraged many _______________. • Southern troops instead often went on the _______________, charging enemy lines and suffering large numbers of casualties. (pages 354–356) Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. The First “Modern” War (cont.) • The Union implemented the ______________________________. • This strategy, proposed by ______________________________, included a blockade of Confederate ports and sending gunboats down the Mississippi to divide the Confederacy. (pages 354–356) Checking for Understanding Define Match the terms on the right with their definitions on the left. __ 1. a legal order for an inquiry to determine whether a person has been lawfully imprisoned __ 2. the act of wearing down by constant harassment __ 3. requiring people to enter military service __ 4. a piece of U.S. paper money first issued by the North during the Civil War Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the answers. A. greenback B. conscription C. habeas corpus D. attrition Mobilizing the Troops • Confederate reinforcements at the First Battle of Bull Run were led by Thomas J. Jackson–_______________ _______________. • He became one of the most effective commanders in the _______________ army. • Union commander General _______________ _______________ had his troops retreat when he saw the Confederate reinforcements. • The retreat turned into a _______________ by the Union troops. (pages 357–358) Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. Mobilizing the Troops (cont.) • At first, many Northern and Southern men enlisted in the _______________. • As the war dragged on, fewer _______________ men enlisted. • The South introduced _______________ in April 1862. • The North tried to get volunteers to enlist by offering a _______________ - an amount of money given as a bonus–to men who enlisted for three years of military service. (pages 357–358) Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. Mobilizing the Troops (cont.) • Congress passed the _______________ _______________ in July 1862, giving Lincoln the power to call state militias into federal service. • In 1863 Congress introduced a national _______________. (pages 357–358) Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. The Naval War • By the spring of 1862, the Union navy had _______________ all Confederate ports, except for Charleston, South Carolina, and Wilmington, North Carolina. • Lincoln wanted to cut the South’s _______________ with the world. • The Union blockade became increasingly _______________ as the war went on. • The Union navy, however, could not stop all of the _______________ _______________, small, fast vessels, used by the South to smuggle goods past the blockade. (pages 358–360) Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. The Naval War (cont.) • Confederate ships that worked out of foreign ports attacked Northern _______________ ships at sea. • The Confederacy had two of these ships built in _______________. • This _______________ the relations between the United States and Great Britain. • A fleet of Union ships, led by _______________ _______________, captured New Orleans and gained control of the lower Mississippi River in April 1862. (pages 358–360) Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. The War in the West • In February 1862, Union General _______________ _______________ began a campaign to control the Cumberland River and the Tennessee River. • Control of the rivers cut _______________ in two and gave the Union a river route deep into Confederate territory. • Grant had victories at Forts _______________ and _______________. • He and his troops advanced down the Tennessee River until the Confederates launched a surprise attack at _______________. (pages 360–361) Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. The War in the West (cont.) • The _______________ army won the Battle of Shiloh, but twenty thousand troops were killed or wounded. • Confederate troops led by General _______________ ______________ invaded Kentucky. • They were stopped by Union troops led by General _______________ _______________ _______________ at the Battle of Perryville. • Buell was ordered by Lincoln to seize _______________ and cut the rail lines that passed there to deprive the Confederacy of supplies they needed. (pages 360–361) Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. The War in the West (cont.) • Buell moved too slowly, so Lincoln replaced him with General _______________ _______________. • Bragg’s forces attacked Rosecrans’s forces near _______________. • Union reinforcements convinced Bragg to retreat to _______________. (pages 360–361) Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. The War in the East • General _______________ _______________ took over the Union army in the east after General McDowell’s loss at the First Battle of Bull Run. • The Union wanted to capture ______________. • proved to be too cautious and took too long to capture Yorktown. _______________ • This gave the Confederates time to move their troops into position in _______________. • also allowed his forces to become divided by a river. (pages 361-363) _______________ Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. The War in the East (cont.) • Confederate commander _______________ _______________ attacked McClellan’s troops, which then suffered great casualties. • Robert E. Lee took over Johnston’s forces and began a series of attacks against McClellan known as the _______________ _______________ _______________. • Lee inflicted heavy _______________ on the Union army and forced McClellan to retreat to the _______________ River. • Lincoln ordered McClellan and his troops to return to _______________. (pages 361–363) Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. The War in the East (cont.) • As McClellan withdrew, Lee attacked the Union forces defending _______________. • This became the _______________ _______________ _______________ _______________. • The South forced the North to _______________. • Confederate troops were just _______________ miles from Washington. (pages 361–363) Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. The War in the East (cont.) • Robert E. Lee and Jefferson Davis believed that an invasion of the North was the only way to convince the Union to accept the South’s _______________, gain help from _______________ _______________, and help the Peace Democrats win control of _______________ in upcoming elections. • Lee and his troops invaded _______________. • McClellan and his troops took position along _______________ Creek, east of Lee. (pages 361–363) Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. The War in the East (cont.) • The Battle of _______________ was the bloodiest one-day battle of the war. • McClellan inflicted so many casualties on the Confederate army that Lee decided to retreat to _______________. • This was an important _______________ for the Union. • The South lost its best chance to _______________ _________ _______________ and support. The defeat convinced Lincoln that it was time to end _______________ in the South. (pages 361–363) Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. The Emancipation Proclamation • _______________ opposed the end of slavery. • _______________ were divided on the issue. • Many were _______________. • Others, like Lincoln, did not want to lose the _______________ of the slaveholding border states. • As Union casualties rose, however, _______________ began to agree that slavery should end. (pages 363) Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. The Emancipation Proclamation (cont.) • In September of 1862, Abraham Lincoln, encouraged by the Union victory at Antietam, announced that he would issue the _______________ _______________ _______________. • This decree would free _______________ _______________ _______________ in states still in rebellion after January 1, 1863. • The Emancipation Proclamation changed the Civil War from a conflict over preserving the Union to a war to _______________ _______________ _______________. (pages 363) Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. Checking for Understanding Define Match the terms on the right with their definitions on the left. __ 1. ship that runs through a blockade, usually to smuggle goods through a protected area __ 2. money given as a reward, as to encourage enlistment in the army Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the answers. A. bounty B. blockade runner The Wartime Economies • As a result of the collapse of the South’s transportation system and the presence of Union troops in many agricultural regions, the South suffered severe ___________ shortages by the winter of 1862. • The food shortages hurt Southern _______________ and led to _______________. • The North had an _______________ boom because of the war. • The increased use of mechanical reapers and mowers made farming possible with fewer workers. (pages 364–366) Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. The Wartime Economies (cont.) • entered the workforce to fill labor shortages. _______________ • The North produced an abundance of _______________ for its soldiers. • The _______________ industry profited from government contracts. (pages 364–366) Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. African Americans in the Military • were officially allowed to enlist in the Union army and navy as a result of the Emancipation Proclamation. _______________ ____________ • Thousands of African Americans joined the _______________. • Many believed that serving in the military would help end _______________. • The _______________ _______________ was the first African American regiment officially organized in the North. (pages 366) Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. Military Life • Both Union and Confederate soldiers suffered _______________ during the war. • ____________ was tasteless and often scarce. • Union soldiers ate _______________, a hard biscuit made of wheat flour. • The Civil War produced huge numbers of _______________. • During this time, doctors did not understand infectious _______________, so infection spread quickly in field _______________. (pages 366–368) Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. Military Life (cont.) • Diseases such as _______________ and _______________ were threats facing Civil War soldiers. • Doctors often _______________ arms and legs to prevent _______________ and other infections from spreading. • Besides managing family farms and businesses, women contributed to the Civil War by serving as _______________ to the wounded at the battlefield. (pages 366–368) Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. Military Life (cont.) • In 1861 _______________ _______________, the first female physician in the United States, started the nation’s first training program for nurses. • As a result of her work, the _______________ _______________ _______________ was created. • This organization provided _______________ assistance and supplies to _______________ camps and hospitals. • and many other women in both the North and the South nursed soldiers on the battlefield. _______________ _______________ (pages 366–368) Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. Military Life (cont.) • The Civil War was a turning point for the ____________ profession in the United States. • At first, the Union and the Confederacy agreed to formal prisoner _______________. • After the Emancipation Proclamation, the South refused to recognize freed African Americans as soldiers and would not exchange them for Southern _______________ prisoners. • Instead, the South would either re-enslave or execute African American prisoners. • In response, Lincoln stopped all _______________ exchanges. (pages 366–368) Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. Military Life (cont.) • , a prison in southwest Georgia, had no shade or shelter for its huge population. _______________ • Conditions in the prison included exposure, _______________, lack of food, and _______________. • Thousands of prisoners died in the camp. _______________ ________, the commandant at Andersonville, was the only person executed for war crimes during the Civil War. (pages 366–368) Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. Vicksburg Falls • Union forces wanted to capture _______________, Mississippi, in order to gain control of the Mississippi River and cut the South in two. • To distract the Confederate forces defending Vicksburg, General Grant ordered ______________________________ to take a troop on a cavalry raid through Mississippi. • This enabled Grant to land his troops south of _______________. (pages 369–370) Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. Vicksburg Falls (cont.) • As the Union troops marched toward _______________, General Grant ordered his troops to live off the country by ____________– searching and raiding for food. • Grant’s troops captured the town of _______________and proceeded west. • The march ended by driving Confederate troops back into their defenses at _______________. (pages 369–370) Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. Vicksburg Falls (cont.) • Grant and his Union forces put Vicksburg under _______________–cut off its food and supplies and bombarded the city–until the Confederate troops surrendered on July 4, 1863. • The Union victory cut the Confederacy in _______________. (pages 369–370) Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. The Road to Gettysburg • President Lincoln fired General McClellan because he did not destroy Robert E. Lee’s army at _______________. • Lincoln gave command of the Union army to General ______________________________. • Burnside ordered his troops to attack Lee’s troops entrenched on the hills south of _______________, Virginia. • The Union troops suffered enormous casualties. Lincoln replaced Burnside with General ______________________________. (pages 370–372) Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. The Road to Gettysburg (cont.) • General _______________divided his troops and left a large force at Fredericksburg to keep Lee’s troops from moving. • Hooker took the rest of his army west behind Lee’s troops to attack them from the _______________. • Lee, however, knew what Hooker was doing, so Lee also _______________his troops. • Lee’s troops attacked Hooker’s troops near _______________. (pages 370–372) Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. The Road to Gettysburg (cont.) • After Lee’s army defeated the Union forces, Hooker decided to retreat. • In June 1863, Lee and his troops invaded _______________. • When Hooker failed to stop Lee, Lincoln removed Hooker and replaced him with General ______________________________. • General Meade and his troops headed north to stop Lee. Some of Lee’s troops went to _______________. • There they met _______________cavalry. Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. (pages 370–372) The Road to Gettysburg (cont.) • On July 1, 1863, the Confederates pushed the Union troops out of Gettysburg and into the hills to the _______________. • The main troops of both armies went to the scene of the _______________. • On July 2 _______________attacked. • The Union forces held their _______________. (pages 370–372) Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. The Road to Gettysburg (cont.) • On July 3, Lee ordered _______________ men under the command of General George E. Pickett and General A.P. Hill to attack the Union troops. • Pickett’s forces led the attack. • This became known as ______________________________. • The Confederate troops _______________ across open farmland toward the ridge where Union forces stood. (pages 370–372) Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. The Road to Gettysburg (cont.) • In less than __________________________ of fighting, the Union forces used cannons and guns to inflict 7,000 casualties on the Confederate force. • The Union forces had _______________ casualties at Gettysburg. • The Confederates had _______________ casualties–a third of Lee’s army. (pages 370–372) Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. The Road to Gettysburg (cont.) • The Battle of Gettysburg was the ______________________________ of the war. • President Lincoln came to Gettysburg in November 1863 to dedicate part of the battlefield as a military _______________. • Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address became one of the best-known _______________in American history. (pages 370–372) Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. Grant Secures Tennessee • The Union wanted to capture _______________in order to control a major railroad running south to Atlanta, Georgia. • In September 1863, Union General Rosecrans forced the Confederates to evacuate _______________. • When Rosecrans’s forces advanced into Georgia, Confederate General Bragg and his forces attacked them at _______________ Creek. The Union forces retreated to Chattanooga. (pages 372–373) Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. Grant Secures Tennessee (cont.) • Lincoln sent General Meade and his forces to _______________to help Rosecrans. • Lincoln reorganized the military in the west and made General Grant the overall _______________. • Grant took charge at the Battle of _______________. • The Union forces attacked and defeated the Confederates on ______________ _______________________________. (pages 372–373) Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. Grant Secures Tennessee (cont.) • Grant ordered General to attack Confederates north of Missionary Ridge. _____________________________________________ • This attack failed, so Grant ordered forces under General George Thomas to launch a _______________attack on Missionary Ridge. • The quick, surprise charge on Missionary Ridge caused the Confederates to _______________. • The Union army gained _______________. (pages 372–373) Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. Grant Secures Tennessee (cont.) • Lincoln appointed General Grant general in chief of the Union forces for his important victories at _______________and at _______________. (pages 372–373) Checking for Understanding Define Match the terms on the right with their definitions on the left. __ 1. a military blockade of a city or fortified place to force it to surrender __ 2. to search or raid for food Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the answers. A. forage B. siege Grant Versus Lee • General _____________ started a campaign against General _____________ forces in which warfare would continue without pause. • The first battle was fought in the Wilderness near _______________, Virginia. • Next, Grant and his forces battled the Confederates near _______________. • Grant was unable to break the Confederate lines there, so he headed toward ______________________________, an important crossroads northeast of Richmond. (pages 376–377) Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. Grant Versus Lee (cont.) • Grant launched an all-out _______________on Lee’s forces. • Lee stopped Grant, whose army had suffered heavy casualties. • General Grant ordered General ______________________________ and his cavalry to raid north and west of Richmond. • Grant then headed south past _______________ to cross the James River. • Grant ordered his troops to put _______________ under siege. Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. (pages 376–377) Union Victories in the South • On August 5, 1864, the Union navy led by ______________________________ closed the port of Mobile, Alabama. • It was the _______________ major Confederate port on the Gulf of Mexico east of the Mississippi River. • Union General _______________ marched his troops from Chattanooga toward Atlanta. • In late August 1864, Sherman’s troops cut the roads and railroads leading to _______________. (pages 378–379) Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. Union Victories in the South (cont.) • His troops heated the rails and twisted them into snarls of steel nicknamed “______________________________.” • Confederate General _______________ evacuated Atlanta on September 1. • Sherman and his troops occupied _______________. • Sherman ordered all _______________to leave Atlanta. • His troops _______________ everything in the city of military value. (pages 378–379) Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. Union Victories in the South (cont.) • The fires quickly spread and burned down more than a _______________ of Atlanta. • On November 15, 1864, Sherman began his ______________________________. • His troops cut a path of destruction through Georgia in which they ransacked _______________, burned crops, and killed _______________. • They reached the coast and seized _______________ on December 21, 1864. (pages 378–379) Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. Union Victories in the South (cont.) • After reaching the sea, Sherman and his troops turned _______________ toward South Carolina. • The Union troops _______________, or looted, almost everything in their path. • They burned at least ________________________, including South Carolina’s capital– Columbia. (pages 378–379) Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. The South Surrenders • The Democrats nominated General George _______________ as their presidential candidate in the 1864 election. • He promised to stop the war and negotiate with the South to restore the Union _______________. • The capture of _______________came in time for Lincoln’s re-election. • Lincoln considered his re-election a _______________, or a clear sign from the voters, to end slavery by amending the Constitution. (pages 379–380) Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. The South Surrenders (cont.) • The ______________________________to the Constitution, banning slavery in the United States, passed the House of Representatives on January 31, 1865 • General Robert E. Lee surrendered to General Grant at ______________________________on April 9, 1865. • The terms of surrender guaranteed that the United States would not prosecute Confederate soldiers for _______________. (pages 379–380) Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. The South Surrenders (cont.) • Lincoln gave a speech in which he explained his plan for _______________ the Southern states in the Union. • On April 14, 1865, shot and killed Abraham Lincoln at Ford’s Theater. _____________________________________________ • Lincoln’s death _______________the nation. (pages 379–380) Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. The South Surrenders (cont.) • The Civil War _______________ the Union and strengthened the power of the federal government over the states. • It changed American society by ending the _______________ of African Americans. • The South’s society and economy were _______________. (pages 379–380) Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. Checking for Understanding Define Match the terms on the right with their definitions on the left. __ 1. authorization to act given to a representative __ 2. to loot or plunder Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the answers. A. pillage B. mandate Reviewing Key Terms Define Match the terms on the right with their definitions on the left. __ 1. ship that runs through a blockade, usually to smuggle goods through a protected area A. conscription B. habeas corpus C. attrition __ 2. requiring people to enter military service D. bounty E. blockade runner __ 4. the act of wearing down by constant harassment F. hardtack G. forage __ 5. authorization to act given to a representative H. siege I. pillage J. mandate __ 3. to search or raid for food Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the answers. Reviewing Key Terms (cont.) Define Match the terms on the right with their definitions on the left. __ 6. a military blockade of a city or fortified place to force it to surrender A. conscription B. habeas corpus C. attrition D. bounty E. __ 8. a legal order for an inquiry to determine whether a person has been lawfully imprisoned blockade runner F. hardtack __ 9. a hard biscuit made of wheat flour G. forage H. siege I. pillage J. mandate __ 7. money given as a reward, as to encourage enlistment in the army __ 10. to loot or plunder Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the answers.