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NCSCOS Goal 3 Page 21 War Begins -Election of 1860 Lincoln Elected -Secession of lower states SC, AL, GA, LA, TX, MS, FL -Confederate States of America -Firing on Ft. Sumter US fort in SC, CSA fires after Lincoln tries to resupply fort Lincoln calls for troops from all states in the Union -Virginia Secedes followed by Ark., NC, and Tenn. -11 States Leave Union Modern War -Uses both old and new methods of war -Cavalry, Muzzle Rifles, Battlefield Formations - Railroads, telegraph, drafts, submarines, armored ships, observation balloons First Ironclads: Monitor (US) and Merrimac (CS) Meet at sea and Monitor wins Smoke Stake from the CSS Virginia Built in 1862, the USS Monitor was steam powered and completely armored. Engineering spaces, crew and officer quarters, and the galley were all located below the waterline. The famous 21 1/2-foot diameter, revolving gun turret was the first of its kind. The CSS Virginia was a Confederate ironclad built from the burned hull of the USS Merrimack. The Monitor was ordered to Hampton Roads in early March 1862 to defend the Union against the powerful Virginia. The two ships clashed on the morning of March 9, bombarding each other for over four hours with no substantial damage to either vessel. Although there was no clear victor in the battle, the Monitor succeeded in preventing further destruction to the Union blockade. On December 31, 1862, while under tow by the Rhode Island en route to Beaufort, North Carolina, the Monitor sank in a storm off Cape Hatteras, North Carolina, in an area nicknamed the "graveyard of the Atlantic.“ The wreck of the famous Civil War ship, the USS Monitor, lies 230 feet below the surface of the ocean, off the coast of North Carolina, in the Monitor National Marine Sanctuary. The crew of the CSS Virginia destroyed her shortly after the battle with the USS Monitor. The ship ran aground and burned by the crew to keep it from being captured by the Union. Strategy-Union -Constrictor / Anaconda Plan developed by Winfield Scott - Divide the south through the Mississippi and control access to its ports Three Parts 1) Control Mississippi River (cuts CSA in half) 2) Blockade the South 3) Capture Richmond (CSA capital) General Winfield Scott Founder of Anaconda Plan Strategy-Confederacy - Defensive battle Prepare and wait Works well for South for the first two years of the war Every time Lee tries to go on offensive, he loses Confederate Goal: To Protect Richmond Seen Above in a Period Drawing Sir Arthur Fremantle A British Soldier observing the Confederacy during the Battle of Gettysburg -European recognition Want help from Britain and France The only thing that is keeping them from joining for South is SLAVERY Advantages-Union -Most of the population -Large advantages in resources More supplies, more railroads, more telegraph lines -Most of the transportation and industry General Robert E. Lee Overall Commander of Confederate Army 2nd in class at West Point without any demerits Advantages-Confederacy -Defending their homes Offered command of Union Army, but declined due to loyalty to Virginia -Strong sectional pride LT. General Stonewall Jackson Considered by many historians to be the most gifted tactical commander of the Civil War - Better military tradition and leadership Lt. General James Longstreet Lee’s Second in Command 54th of 56th in class at West Point Developed Idea of Trench Warfare - Better trained generals (Lee, Jackson, Longstreet, Stuart) Government Powers - Both sides had to increase central government powers - Raise an army Drafts New York Draft Riots -Supply armies Take food at expense of citizens – South suffers most -Finance the war Collect taxes -Suppress any opposition - Copperheads: Northern Democrats who oppose the war Immigrants in New York riot against the draft, killing as many as 300 free blacks. “Your letter shows you to be a cowardly traitor. No traitor can be my friend; if you cannot renounce your allegiance to the Copperhead scoundrels and own your allegiance to the Government which has always protected you, you are my enemy, and I wish you were in the ranks of my open, avowed, and manly enemies, that I might put a ball through your black heart, and send your soul to the Arch Rebel himself.” A Union Soldier in Response to a Copperhead Friend Raising Armies Bounty Jumpers were men that enlisted in the Union army during the Civil War only to collect a bounty and then leave. Bounty jumpers commonly enlisted numerous times in the army, collecting many bounties -Northern Advantage -Volunteers at first -Drafts begin -riots -bounties paid Money paid to soldiers to fight; shopped around for highest bounties before A Draftee could gain an exemption by paying a fee of $300 or by hiring a substitute. The obvious inequity of this provision prompted the cry of "rich man's war, but poor man's fight." joining -substitution possible -many volunteers Supplying Armies -Northern Advantage -Industrial Capacity Some Northern merchants were profiteers -Transportation Capabilities -Financial Centers -Foraging the land South had to search for food -Shortages Bread lines in South “The whole of the laws which I was sworn to execute were being resisted...in nearly one-third of the states. Must I have allowed them to finally fail of execution?... Are all the laws but one, the writ of habeas corpus, to go unexecuted, and the government itself...go to pieces, lest that one be violated?” Abraham Lincoln War Politics -War to Preserve Union Lincoln’s official stance -Civil rights were restricted Habeas Corpus Suspended Lincoln would put people in jail Accused Confederate spy, Rose Greenhow, and her daughter in Old Capitol Prison in Washington. She was held there from 1861-1862. She drowned when a blockade runner she traveled on ran aground off the coast of NC. She drowned with $2,000.00 worth of gold for the Confederate Treasury sewn into her dress. without proper trial if seen as enemies of Union -Emancipation Debated Needed higher cause (Would also keep South from getting foreign help) -Emancipation Proclamation Jan. 1, 1863 Only frees slaves in states of rebellion So really frees no one at the time “My paramount objective in this struggle is to save the Union, and is not either to save or destroy slavery. If I could save the Union without freeing any slave, I would do it; and if I could save it by freeing all the slaves, I would do it…” Abraham Lincoln Others in the War -African Americans Robert Gould Shaw and the 54th Massachusetts Segregated Forces 54th Massachusetts Unit of African Americans Most killed at Fort Wagner -Women Nursing Clara Barton Founder of the Red Cross “The only regiment I ever looked upon during the war was the 54th Massachusetts on its departure for the South. I can never forget the scene as Colonel Shaw rode at the head of his men. The very flower of grace and chivalry, he seemed to me beautiful and awful, as an angel of God come down to lead the host of freedom to victory." John Greenleaf Whittier “I think one’s feelings are wasted in words, they ought all to be distilled into actions which bring results.” Florence Nightingale “I may be compelled to face danger, but never fear it, and while our soldiers can stand and fight, I can stand and feed and nurse them.” Clara Barton Soldier’s Lives -Disillusionment of war desertion rate increases (especially in South) -Filthy conditions -Poor food -Bad medical care 1 out of 4 Civil War soldiers died Mostly from diseases -Prison camps Andersonville Confederate prison camp CSA could not feed own men Warden later hanged for war crimes Union soldier on his release from Andersonville in May, 1865 Andersonville, located in Georgia, was the largest of the camps established during the Civil War. During the fourteen months it existed, more than 45,000 Union soldiers were confined there. Of these, almost 13,000 died from disease, poor sanitation, malnutrition, overcrowding, or exposure to the elements. Handicapped by deteriorating economic conditions, an inadequate transportation system, and the need to concentrate all available resources on its army, the Confederate government was unable to provide adequate housing, food, clothing, and medical care to their captives.