* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download THE HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES 1492-1877
Thirteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution wikipedia , lookup
Battle of Fort Sumter wikipedia , lookup
Habeas Corpus Suspension Act (1863) wikipedia , lookup
Ex parte Merryman wikipedia , lookup
Battle of Gaines's Mill wikipedia , lookup
Origins of the American Civil War wikipedia , lookup
Conclusion of the American Civil War wikipedia , lookup
Fort Fisher wikipedia , lookup
Economy of the Confederate States of America wikipedia , lookup
First Battle of Bull Run wikipedia , lookup
Fort Sumter wikipedia , lookup
Battle of Fort Pillow wikipedia , lookup
Gettysburg Address wikipedia , lookup
Union blockade wikipedia , lookup
Tennessee in the American Civil War wikipedia , lookup
Military history of African Americans in the American Civil War wikipedia , lookup
Blockade runners of the American Civil War wikipedia , lookup
Baltimore riot of 1861 wikipedia , lookup
Virginia in the American Civil War wikipedia , lookup
Capture of New Orleans wikipedia , lookup
Alabama in the American Civil War wikipedia , lookup
Border states (American Civil War) wikipedia , lookup
Confederate privateer wikipedia , lookup
United States presidential election, 1860 wikipedia , lookup
Georgia in the American Civil War wikipedia , lookup
Jubal Early wikipedia , lookup
Anaconda Plan wikipedia , lookup
Commemoration of the American Civil War on postage stamps wikipedia , lookup
South Carolina in the American Civil War wikipedia , lookup
Mississippi in the American Civil War wikipedia , lookup
Opposition to the American Civil War wikipedia , lookup
Hampton Roads Conference wikipedia , lookup
Union (American Civil War) wikipedia , lookup
United Kingdom and the American Civil War wikipedia , lookup
THE HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES 1492-1877 Lecture 9 The Civil War „there is nothing civil about war” • • • • CAUSES OF THE WAR: Slavery controversy Failure of compromises Lack of strong presidential leadership, James Buchanan • Differing development of regions PRESIDENT BUCHANAN AMERICA AT THE EVE OF THE CIVIL WAR • North: more people, railroads, iron, money, soldiers • Strategy: blockade ports, take Mississippi River, take Richmond, confederate capital, • South: defend their own land, fighting spirit, just war, Better generals: Robert E. Lee, Thomas Stonewall Jackson, educated at West Point • Less population, less iron, railroads • Strategy: war of attrition, hoping for French or British help, invasion of the North THOMAS STONEWALL JACKSON MILITARY, POLITICAL DEVELOPMENTS • • • • USA Lincoln, Washington D.C, CSA Jefferson Davis, Richmond 1861 March 4, Lincoln’s inauguration “no intention of interfering with slavery in the states where it exists. • But: “union of the states is perpetual” • Secession of South Carolina, blockade of Fort Sumter FORT SUMTER MILITARY POLITICAL DEVELOPMENTS • Lincoln: calls for 75,000 volunteers, announces blockade of Southern ports • 1861 July 21 Bull Run • 1862 September: Antietam • 1863: Vicksburg, Gettysburg BULL RUN MILITARY, POLITICAL DEVELOPMENTS • Gettysburg Address, • Reference to Declaration of Independence, connecting the Civil War to Revolutionary War, consensual government, sacred document of American democracy • „Fourscore and seven years ago, dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal, government of the people, by the people, for the people shall not perish from this earth” LINCOLN AT GETTYSBURG MILITARY, POLITICAL DEVELOPMENTS • 1864: Sherman’s march to the sea • Burning of Atlanta in M. Mitchell’s Gone With the Wind • 1865: Appomatox • Lee surrenders to Grant ATLANTA BURNING THE FIRST MODERN WAR • Over 620,000 dead, 1.5 million wounded, frequent amputation of wounded • -total war, impacting the home front • not armies but whole societies were fighting against each other • utilizing contemporary developments of technology (submarine, railroad, telegraph, armed trains) • Institution of the draft, • Confederates first to adopt conscription • substitutes, “Rich man’s war, poor man’s fight” • 1863 New York Draft Riots SUBMARINES IN THE CIVIL WAR IMPACT ON SLAVERY • Emancipation Proclamation: • Lincoln’s aim: keeping the Union together with or without slavery • Issued on 9-22-1862 • “As of January 1, 1863 all slaves in Confederate states or areas still under active rebellion would be thenceforward and forever free” • Reasons: • Military: elimination of potential armed forces • Economic: depriving the South from its labor force • Diplomatic: isolation of the South, Britain freed slaves in 1833 IMPACT ON THE PRESIDENCY • Lincoln: constitutional dictatorship • Basis: presidential oath, power as commander in chief • Violation of the Constitution, in order to protect it • -calling for volunteers—declares war • -suspension of habeas corpus, (protection against unlawful arrests) • -military courts take over civilian courts Ex parte Milligan IMPACT ON U.S. HISTORY • • • • A watershed, a dividing line End of slavery Thirteenth Amendment, End of the states rights movement Test for the Union, expression of the unity, “the United States is” • Test for the Constitution • The beginning of modern America