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CHAPTER 3: THE CIVIL WAR AND RECONSTRUCTION Section 1: The Civil War Begins ELECTION OF 1860 The Republicans needed a candidate who could sweep the North Lincoln is the Republican nominee who stayed true to his free-soil principles Lincoln won every free state except for New Jersey SECESSION BEGINS South Carolina is the first state to secede By February 1st, 1861, six more states leave the Union Viewed it as the same as the Revolutionary War FOUNDING THE CONFEDERACY On February 8th, delegates from the Seceding states declared the Confederate States of America Wrote a similar Constitution Independence of each state Guaranteed slavery Banned tariffs 1-6 year term of presidency Jefferson Davis is the first president FORT SUMTER FALLS Lincoln intended to resupply Fort Sumter in Charleston Harbor Most vital harbor in the South Jefferson Davis requested the surrender of the Fort After 33 hours of bombardment Major Robert Anderson surrendered The Upper South begins to secede HOLDING THE BORDER STATES Lincoln imposed martial law to keep Maryland in the Union State citizens lost their rights Kentucky tried to remain neutral until the Confederacy stationed troops in their state Missouri votes to stay in the Union THE OPPOSING SIDES Robert E. Lee was offered the position of leading the Confederacy Hundreds of military officers resigned to join the Confederacy The South could quickly mobilize troops The Navy is mostly in the North THE OPPOSING ECONOMIES North had about 22 million people Had 90% of the factories South had about 9 million people Half the miles of railroad tracks FINANCING THE WAR North The national treasury and big banks were in the North Large reserves of cash sold as bonds Legal Tender Act created a national currency and allowed the government to issue paper money South Southern planters were in debt and could not borrow money Raised tax on trades Printed their own paper money THE POLITICAL SITUATION Lincoln still did not want to end slavery Focused on preserving the Union In 1862, Congress passed a conscription law for states that could not raise enough soldiers Lincoln also suspended writs of habeas corpus Jefferson Davis struggled to gain support due to state rights THE SOUTH’S STRATEGY Southern generals would pick their battles sparingly Believed that the Union would eventually grow tired of war The South struck quickly in eight battles suffering 20,000 more casualties than the North THE UNION’S ANACONDA PLAN Winfield Scott suggested that the Union blockade Confederate ports and send gunboats down the Mississippi River Lincoln adopted this plan and believed only a long war would lead to victory SECTION 2: FIGHTING THE CIVIL WAR THE EARLY STAGES President Lincoln approved a battle against Confederate troops near Manassas, Virginia The Union was winning until reinforcements under Thomas “Stonewall” Jackson arrived The day after the battle Lincoln signed a bill for 500,000 more men Offered bounties to enlistments THE NAVAL WAR Lincoln issued a blockade of all confederate ports The South created blockade runners to send goods to Europe Admiral David G. Farragut was sent south to capture New Orleans THE WAR IN THE WEST General Ulysses S. Grant began to seize control of the Cumberland and Tennessee Rivers Then headed to take over the railroads The Confederates launched a surprise attack known as the Battle of Shiloh Union victory at a cost THE WAR IN THE EAST The Union shifted its tactics towards taking over the capital General Lee launched a series of attacks known as the Seven Days Battle 30,000 casualties At the Second Battle of Bull Run, Lee is able to force a retreat of Union soldiers 20 miles from DC BATTLE OF ANTIETAM On September 17th, 1862 Lee’s forces met Union troops at Antietam Bloodiest one-day battle in American history 6,000 deaths and 16,000 wounded This Union victory kept the British out of the war LIFE DURING THE CIVIL WAR The South’s economy suffered tremendously The North had an economic boom Life as a soldier was never easy Prison camps always suffered food shortages AFRICAN AMERICANS AND WOMEN DURING THE WAR The Emancipation Proclamation officially permitted African Americans to enlist in the Union arm and navy Thousands quickly joined the fight One of the most important position that women held during the was nursing Started the nursing profession THE TURNING POINT Three major Union victories put the Confederacy on the defensive In May 1863, Grant launched two assaults on Vicksburg Lost both battles Put the city of Vicksburg under siege BATTLE OF GETTYSBURG General Lee had been gaining large victories and started another invasion in the north On July 2, Lee attacked but the Union troops held their ground Pickett’s charged caused 7,000 casualties in less than half an hour This becomes the turning point for the war in the east GRANT VS. LEE Grant was relentless in his attack south Lee and the Confederates had no time to recover Towns were put under siege under the Confederate capital would be taken SHARMAN’S MARCH TO THE SEA Grant put his most trusted subordinate William Sherman in charge of the fight in the west Going through Georgia, Sherman eventually captured Atlanta and started fires They then headed towards the sea to show the South’s citizens what war was like APPOMATTOX COURTHOUSE In 1865 the 13th amendment to the Constitution was passed Lee’s attempt to escape Grant failed when his troops were surrounded at the Appomattox Courthouse Grant’s terms of surrender GUARANTEED no Confederate soldiers would be tried for treason The Union has won the was LINCOLN’S ASSASSINATION After the war, President Lincoln made a speech outlining his plan for the United States John Wilkes Booth assassinated Lincoln on April 14, 1865 at Fords Theater SECTION 3: RECONSTRUCTION Rebuilding after the Civil War RADICAL REPUBLICANS In December 1863, Lincoln proposed the Proclamation of Amnesty Wanted to pardon all Southerners who took an oath of loyalty Confederate government officials could not participate in state government Radical Republicans wanted to gain more power in the south Wanted African Americans to earn suffrage rights in the South WADE-DAVIS BILL Required the majority of the adult white males in a former Confederate state to take an oath to the Union Create a new state constitution They had to prove they never had an allegiance to the Confederacy Abolish slavery, reject all debts the state acquired, deprive all former Confederate government officials right to vote and hold office Lincoln stopped it with a pocket veto THE FREEDMEN’S BUREAU The Freedmen’s Bureau was established to feed and clothe war refugees in the South The Bureau also helped formerly enslaved people find work on plantations and negotiated contracts Land seized from plantation owners was given back to them ANDREW JOHNSON TAKES OFFICE Johnson believed in a moderate policy of reconstruction Forced Southern states to ratify the 13th amendment Southern states were passing black codes 14TH AMENDMENT A joint committee was created in order to develop their own program for rebuilding the Union Congress passed the Civil Rights Act of 1866 which granted citizenship to all persons born in the US except Native Americans Johnson veto’s the bill Congress fought back with an amendment Granted citizenship to all persons born or naturalized in the United States and no state could deny a person life, liberty, or property MILITARY RECONSTRUCTION BEGINS The Military Reconstruction Act of 1867 nullified Johnson’s programs Divided the former Confederacy into 5 military districts with a general in charge of each district All the states had to write a new constitution acceptable to Congress JOHNSON’S IMPEACHMENT Congress passes the Tenure of Office Act Senate to approve the removal of any official whose appoint was made by the Senate To challenge the ruling Johnson fired Secretary of War Edwin Stanton Senate voted 35-19 on impeachment THE 15TH AMENDMENT Ulysses S. Grant won in a landslide to become the 18th President Congress passed the 15th amendment in 1870 Right to vote “shall not be denied…on account of race, color, or previous condition or servitude” This changed politics and culture in the south CARPETBAGS AND SCALAWAGS During Reconstruction many Northerners traveled to the South to become a part of government Nicknamed Carpetbaggers by Democrats Southerners who supported Reconstruction were called scalawags Came from all parts of society AFRICAN AMERICANS Politics were now open to every male in society The Freedman’s Bureau established African American school Religion also became a large part of society REPUBLICAN REFORM AND SOUTHERN RESISTANCE The Republican governments in the south instituted large reforms Repealed black codes Established state hospitals Built roads, railways, and bridges Provided the funds for all buildings projects The Ku Klux Klan was the largest and most violent form of resistance RECONSTRUCTION ENDS During Grant’s second term a series of scandals damaged his reputation The Panic of 1873 started after a large bank declared bankruptcy Lasted for 3 years COMPROMISE OF 1877 Democrats were starting to take over power in the south In the election of 1877 (Rutherford Hayes, R Vs. Samuel Tilden, D) twenty electoral votes were disputed Supposedly a deal was made for Republicans to pull federal troops out of the south A “NEW SOUTH” ARISES The south plans to create a strong industrial economy For many African Americans with the end of Reconstruction it meant a return to the “old south” Many turned to sharecroppers which led to high interest rate