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The Furnace of Civil War 1861-1865 Chapter 21 A.P. US History I. The Eastern Theater 1861-1862 A. First Bull Run to Fredericksburg (cont.) • Jackson halted the Union assault and counter attacked –forcing them into a panicked retreat all the way to Washington, D.C. • For his actions at ‘First Manassas’ [First Bull Run], he earned the nickname ‘Stonewall Jackson’ - but the greater significance of Manassas lay in the lessons both sides drew from it Major Civil War Battles, 1861-1862 I. The Eastern Theater 1861-1862 A. First Bull Run to Fredericksburg (cont.) • Southerners interpreted their victory as proof of (1) the superior fighting ability of Confederate soldiers, and (2) the inevitability of Confederate independence • Lincoln and his military leaders learned that victory would not be quick, easy, or cheap I. The Eastern Theater 1861-1862 A. First Bull Run to Fredericksburg (cont.) • Lincoln also learned he needed a new general – replacing McDowell with George B. McClellan to lead the ‘Army of the Potomac’ • McClellan, a West Point graduate and superb organizer, had a high opinion of himself and a low opinion of Lincoln – referring to him as the “original gorilla” I. The Eastern Theater 1861-1862 A. First Bull Run to Fredericksburg (cont.) • In the ensuing ‘Seven Days Battles’ [June 25-July 1, 1862], Gen. Lee, assisted by Gen. ‘Stonewall’ Jackson and James E.B. (Jeb) Stuart, forced McClellan’s army to retreat back down the peninsula – a strategic victory that saved Richmond Peninsula Campaign, 1862 I. The Eastern Theater 1861-1862 A. First Bull Run to Fredericksburg (cont.) • Lincoln fired McClellan following his failed ‘Peninsula Campaign’ – replacing him with Gen. John Pope to lead the ‘Army of the Potomac’ • At ‘Second Manassas’ [Second Bull Run, Aug. 2930, 1862] Lee’s smaller force crushed Pope’s army – forcing Union troops to again retreat into Maryland I. The Eastern Theater 1861-1862 A. First Bull Run to Fredericksburg (cont.) At Antietam, McClellan came into possession of a copy of Lee’s orders to his army – orders that had been dropped by a careless Confederate officer before the battle began With this information in hand, McClellan succeeded in halting Lee’s invasion – forcing his battered army to retreat into Virginia Major Civil War Battles, 1861-1862 The Aftermath of the ‘Battle of Antietam’ – September 17, 1862 I. The Eastern Theater 1861-1862 A. First Bull Run to Fredericksburg (cont.) • Following ‘Antietam’, President Lincoln removed McClellan of command for the second and final time – angered at his failure to aggressively pursue and destroy Lee’s army before it reached the safety of Virginia • Still, ‘Antietam’ was one of the most decisive battles in U.S. history because (1) the Confederacy was never so close to victory as on that day, (2) it demonstrated unexpected Union power to the British and French governments which were considering diplomatic mediation, and (3) it gave Lincoln the victory he needed to draft a preliminary ‘Emancipation Proclamation’ on September 23, 1862 giving the Union cause the tone of a moral crusade II. The Western Theater 1861-1862 A. Fort Henry to Memphis (cont.) • It was in Tennessee that Gen. Ulysses S. Grant emerged as the key Union commander of the war – a graduate of West Point and a veteran of the Mexican War, Grant was working as a dry-goods clerk in Galena, Illinois when the war began II. The Western Theater 1861-1862 A. Fort Henry to Memphis (cont.) • At the ‘Battle of Shiloh’ in Tennessee [April 6-7, 1862], Grant’s army repulsed a ferocious attack by Confederate forces led by Gen. Albert Sidney Johnston – a costly victory which compelled Grant to conclude the Union could not be saved except by total and complete conquest of the South Major Civil War Battles, 1861-1862 III. The Atlantic Theater 1861-1862 A. The War at Sea & Diplomacy • From the beginning, Union strategy for winning the war included a complete blockade of the southern coastline from Virginia to Brownsville, Texas – a distance of 3,500 miles to patrol • For the North, implementing a blockade was complicated early on by the lack of enough warships – the U.S. Navy only had about three dozen ships when the war began • However, by 1863 the Union blockade proved increasingly effective as the Navy commissioned a new warship almost weekly – by 1865, the fleet numbered 150 ships and was intercepting nearly 50% of the southern blockade runners IV. Union and Freedom C. Blacks Battle Bondage (cont.) • Black soldiers faced various forms of discrimination, including (1) segregated black regiments led by white officers, (2) combat pay of $10/month instead of the $13 earned by white soldiers, (3) no opportunity to become commissioned officers, (4) punishments similar to those under slavery, and (5) frequent assignment to labor battalions instead of combat units • Notions that black soldiers could not fight were finally dispelled by their bravery under fire at the battles of Port Hudson and Milliken’s Bend on the Mississippi River and the assault on Fort Wagner in Charleston Harbor IV. Union and Freedom C. Blacks Battle Bondage (cont.) • Despite discrimination, (1) 71% of black men between the ages of 18 and 45 in the free states served in Union forces, (2) by war’s end 179,000 black men had served the Union, and (3) of those, more than 38,000 were killed, a mortality rate higher than that of white troops based on numbers alone V. The South at War A. Revolution from Above • Confederate President Jefferson Davis faced immense obstacles waging a war against the industrialized North – among them were (1) recruitment problems to replace heavy battlefield losses, (2) the Confederate Constitution’s embodiment of ‘state’s rights’ that made it difficult for Davis to centralize power, and (3) wartime economic changes, including high inflation, which hurt the war effort • Initially, the South was able to build an army relatively easily as hundreds of officers resigned their commissions to serve in the Confederate army – hundreds of thousands of young southern men volunteered to serve as well V. The South at War B. Hardship Below • In the South, manpower shortages, hyperinflation, and food shortages were felt by everyone – but they fell hardest on the poor • Inflation made necessities like salt outrageously expensive – in the first year of war salt increased from $2 to $60 a bag • The South’s heavy draft of military age men depopulated farms – leaving women and children to grow their own food, 10% of which was taken by government agents for military needs • As the war progressed, hardships and deprivations back home led increasing numbers of Confederate soldiers to desert and put family before defense of the ‘cause’ V. The South at War B. Hardship Below (cont.) • President Davis failed to convince most white yeoman farmers that the war’s burdens were being shared equally – a hard sell to poor people forced to give up necessities while the planters only had to make do without luxuries • The Confederate draft law itself became an issue because (1) it allowed a man with money to hire a ‘substitute’ to take his place, a practice also allowed in the Union army, and (2) it exempted one white man on every plantation with 20 or more slaves • Non-slaveholding southern white men considered such exemptions unjust when poor white women were plowing fields while they had to serve in the military VI. The North at War B. Women & Work on the Home Front • With the exception of New England textiles, northern industries prospered and reaped huge profits during the war – workers however, hit by rising inflation and taxes, saw their standard of living fall • Women in northern cities also moved into jobs vacated by men drafted into military service – by 1865, they held onethird of the manufacturing jobs, and new positions as government secretaries and clerks • Middle-class white women contributed to the war effort in traditional ways as well – sewing, wrapping bandages, and selling homemade goods to raise money VI. The North at War B. Women & Work on the Home Front (cont.) • In both North and South, thousands of women defied traditional notions of female roles by serving in army field hospitals nursing the wounded and dying – in the North, many served in the U.S. Sanitary Commission U.S. Sanitary Commission Brandy Station, Virginia, 1863 VI. The North at War B. Women & Work on the Home Front (cont.) In April 1861, Dorothea Dix, a pioneer in pre-war efforts to reform insane asylums, became superintendent of female nurses – one of many women who volunteered and became paid military nurses Clara Barton, another volunteer field nurse, later founded the American Red Cross Wounded Men at Savage’s Station Field Hospital VI. The North at War C. Politics & Dissent (cont.) • Opposition to the draft intensified because (1) a draftee with money could pay $300 to hire a substitute, and (2) many Irish and northern Democrats objected to linkage between the draft and emancipation • Northern Democrats considered the draft an unconstitutional law designed to achieve emancipation which they also considered unconstitutional • In the summer of 1863, many northern cities, including New York City, witnessed violent anti-draft and anti-black riots in which many were killed – the Irish, already suffering at the bottom of society, were especially opposed to fighting to free slaves VI. The North at War C. Politics & Dissent (cont.) • The riots shocked black Northerners and served notice that significant progress toward black equality would be not be achieved during the war – at best it would have to wait until the war ended VII. The Western & Eastern Theaters 1863-1865 A. Chancellorsville to Gettysburg • In the spring of 1863, the Confederacy stood at high tide with victories including (1) ‘Fredericksburg’ [December 13, 1862] where Lee defeated Burnside’s Army of the Potomac in Virginia, and (2) ‘Chancellorsville’ [May 2-4, 1863] in which Lee and Jackson again defeated the Army of the Potomac commanded by Gen. Hooker The Road to Gettysburg, Dec. 1862 – July 1863 VII. The Western & Eastern Theaters 1863-1865 A. Chancellorsville to Gettysburg (cont.) • In the West, Gen. Grant continued efforts to gain control of the Mississippi River from Memphis, Tennessee to New Orleans – a stretch linking Texas, Louisiana, and Arkansas to the rest of the South • Standing between him and complete control of the river stood Vicksburg – a heavily fortified Confederate position The Mississippi River & Tennessee 1862-1863 VII. The Western & Eastern Theaters 1863-1865 A. Chancellorsville to Gettysburg (cont.) • Vicksburg, situated high atop a cliff overlooking a horseshoe-shaped bend in the Mississippi, was defended by swampy terrain to its north and Confederate armies to its west – southern military leaders considered it unconquerable • In May 1863, Gen. Grant initiated an elaborate plan to capture Vicksburg – marching his entire army more than 100 miles south beyond the western bank of the Mississippi River • Then, in a daring move, Union ironclad gunboats ran the gauntlet of Vicksburg’s guns at night – after meeting up with Grant’s army they were used to carry his army across to the eastern side of the river VII. The Western & Eastern Theaters 1863-1865 A. Chancellorsville to Gettysburg (cont.) Driving west from Jackson, Mississippi Grant’s army encircled and besieged Vicksburg [May 22-July 4, 1863] On July 4, 1863, Grant received the unconditional surrender of Gen. Pemberton’s army of 30,000 men at Vicksburg – that same day, Union forces defeated Lee’s Army of Northern Virginia at Gettysburg, Pennsylvania and forced him to retreat VII. The Western & Eastern Theaters 1863-1865 A. Chancellorsville to Gettysburg (cont.) • On June 28, 1863, Gen. George G. Meade led the 90,000 man Army of the Potomac into Pennsylvania to intercept Lee - arriving first at the town of Gettysburg, his army occupied the high ground along Cemetery Ridge • In three days of fighting [July 1-3, 1863], Lee’s 75,000 man army failed to break the Union lines Battle of Gettysburg - July 1863 VII. The Western & Eastern Theaters 1863-1865 B. Chattanooga to Petersburg • At the ‘Battle of Chattanooga’ [Nov. 23-25, 1863], Grant broke the siege and routed rebel forces – opening the door to a northern invasion of Georgia • In March 1864, President Lincoln appointed Ulysses S. Grant general-in-chief of all Union armies – rewarding him for his performance in the West and his ability to win on the battlefield • Afterwards, Grant implemented his grand strategy to bring the war to a rapid conclusion – initiating a war of total destruction that combined a series of coordinated assaults against remaining Confederate armies from Virginia to Louisiana VII. The Western & Eastern Theaters 1863-1865 B. Chattanooga to Petersburg (cont.) • The ‘Siege of Petersburg’ [June 1864-Apr. 1865] stalled both armies for 9 months – in February, Lincoln rejected Confederate efforts to negotiate a peace treaty • In May 1864, Grant ordered Gen. William T. Sherman and his army of 100,000 men to move against 65,000 rebels in northern Georgia VII. The Western & Eastern Theaters 1863-1865 B. Chattanooga to Petersburg (cont.) • At ‘Kennesaw Mountain’ [June 27, 1864], Sherman’s army won a pitched battle against the Confederates and continued moving south • In September, Atlanta fell to Sherman’s powerful army - on Nov. 15th, he led an army of 62,000 men and began his famous ‘March to the Sea’, leaving behind a path of destruction 60 miles wide Sherman’s March Through Georgia & the Carolina’s 1864-1865 VII. The Western & Eastern Theaters 1863-1865 B. Chattanooga to Petersburg (cont.) • By December 22nd, Sherman’s army had traveled 285 miles and entered undefended Savannah, Georgia on the Atlantic coast – sparing the town from burning, he offered it to President Lincoln as a Christmas gift VIII. War Democrats & Peace Democrats A. The Election of 1864 (cont.) • Republicans re-nominated Lincoln and changed their name to the ‘Union Party’ to make it easier for pro-war Democrats to vote for Lincoln - Andrew Johnson of Tennessee, a Southerner and Unionist, became his new running mate • Northern Democrats nominated Gen. George McClellan, a war Democrat, to run on a peace platform demanding immediate cessation of hostilities • Many voters viewed the Democrat’s peace platform as a sellout, especially after Sherman’s capture of Atlanta on September 2nd VIII. War Democrats & Peace Democrats A. The Election of 1864 (cont.) • Lincoln won in a landslide victory [212 electoral votes and 55% of the popular vote to McClellan’s 21] enabling the Republican’s to pick up voting majorities in the Congress • The election returns also gave Lincoln a political mandate to pursue the war until both slavery and the Confederacy were dead The Election of 1864 IX. The Western & Eastern Theaters 1863-1865 A. Nashville to Appomattox (cont.) • Grant pursued Lee for 100 miles to Appomattox Court House, Virginia – there, on April 9, 1865, Lee surrendered and, with all hope gone, the remaining Confederate armies surrendered within two weeks X. The Aftermath of the Nightmare B. Comparisons of War Casualties