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The United States Civil War By Rick Redinger ED 417 Why we fought • North Manufacture based • South Agriculture based • North had abundance of workers • South needed slave labor Why we fought (cont’d) • North wanted western expansion not to include slavery • South wanted western expansion to include slavery Why expansion was an issue • As the U.S. expanded westward, new states added Senate and Congress representation to an already close North/South split • The addition of all non-slave or all slave states would tip the balance • Neither the North or the South wanted to lose influence in the Federal Government A Nation Divided • Tensions were high and the country was clearly becoming divided between the North and the South • The situation would soon explode The Civil War Begins • April 12, 1861, 4:30 am. General Pierre Beauregard leads a Confederate group with fifty cannons that opens fire on Fort Sumpter, South Carolina. • The only war fought on American soil by Americans had begun THE UNION 1861 • Abraham Lincoln is President • The Capitol is in Washington DC • Consists of states north of approx. 39’ latitude THE CONFEDERACY 1861 • Jefferson Davis is named President • Richmond, Virginia becomes the Capitol City • Consists of 11 states south of approximately 39’ latitude The United States Civil War • Over three million people fought against their own countrymen • Over 600,000 persons died Bull Run • July 1861 Union troops are repelled at Bull Run, 25 miles south of Washington, DC • Confederate General Thomas J. Jackson acquires the nickname “Stonewall” A future President is made • February 1862 General Ulysses S. Grant captures two Tennessee forts in a ten day span, earning the nickname “Unconditional Surrender” Grant • Soon after the war he would become President of the United States of America Naval History is made 1862 • Confederate ironclad Merrimac sinks two wooden Union ships then battles ironclad Monitor to a draw • Naval warfare is forever changed, making wooden ships obsolete “Damn the torpedoes…” • April 1862 Flag Officer David Garragut takes New Orleans, the South’s largest seaport • Sailing through a rebel minefield he utters “Damn the torpedoes, full speed ahead”. The Bloodiest Day in History • September 17, 1862 General Robert E. Lee’s Confederate troops are stopped at Antietam, Maryland • By nightfall over 26,000 men are dead, wounded, or missing • The was the bloodiest single day of this, or any, war in United States history Emancipation Proclamation • January 1, 1863 Union President Abraham Lincoln issues the Emancipation Proclamation, declaring all slaves in the Confederate states free and emphasizing their enlistment in the Union army • The war becomes a revolutionary struggle to abolish slavery South loses a leader • May 10 the Confederates suffer a huge blow when “Stonewall” Jackson dies 6 days after suffering injuries at the battle of Chancellorville, Virginia • The fatal wounds were accidentally inflicted by his own troops Battle of Gettysburg • The tide of the war turns for the North as the South suffers a defeat at Gettysburg • This was the northernmost battle of the war Lincoln meets Douglas • August 10 President Lincoln meets with abolitionist Frederick Douglas who pushes for full equality for Union “Negro troops” Cemetery Dedication • November 19, 1863 President Lincoln delivers a two minute speech dedicating a Cemetery at Gettysburg, Pennsylvania • This would forever be known at The Gettysburg Address Grant’s march to Richmond • May 1864 General Grant takes an army of 120,000 Union troops toward Richmond to attack General Robert E. Lee’s troops, now numbering 64,000 • Major battles ensue at Wilderness and Spotsylvania, Virginia leading up to the battle at Cold Harbor Grant’s error • General Grant makes tactical error while attacking well fortified Cold Harbor resulting loss of 7000 troops in twenty minutes Sherman takes Atlanta • September 2, 1864 Union General Sherman captures Atlanta • November 15 before his march to the sea he destroys Atlanta’s warehouses and railroad yards March to the Sea • December 21, 1864 General Sherman arrives at Savannah, Georgia leaving a 300 mile path of destruction over 60 miles wide in his wake • Sherman offers President Lincoln Savannah as “a Christmas present” The 13th Amendment • January 31, 1865 Congress approves the 13th Amendment to the United States Constitution, to abolish slavery • It is sent to the states for ratification Richmond Abandoned • April 2, 1865 Grant breaks through Lee’s troops at Petersburg, Virginia • Confederates abandon Capital at Richmond Confederate Surrender • April 9, 1865 General Robert E. Lee surrenders his troops to General Grant at Appomattox Court House, Virginia Lincoln Assassinated • April 14, 1865 At 10:13pm while watching the third act of the play “Our American Cousin” with his wife Mary, President Lincoln is shot and killed by John Wilkes Boothe The War Ends • May 1865 The remaining Confederate troops surrender reuniting a country after four years and 620,000 deaths