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Battle of Bull Run st (1 Manassas), July, 1861 The Battle of the Ironclads, March, 1862 The Monitor vs.the Merrimac War in the East: 1861-1862 Emancipation in 1863 African-Americans in Civil War Battles This bas-relief by famed sculptor Augustus Saint-Gaudens stands today in front of the Massachusetts Statehouse in Boston. It commemorates the allblack volunteer regiment, led by the white Boston patrician Robert Gould Shaw, that suffered heavy casualties during the Union siege of Fort Wagner, South Carolina, in 1863. The Fabled 54th Massachusetts Infantry Regiment The War in the West, 1863: Vicksburg The Road to Gettysburg: 1863 General Ulysses S. Grant Trained at West Point, Grant proved to be a better general than a president. Oddly, he hated the sight of blood and recoiled from rare beef. General Robert E. Lee Lee, a gentlemanly general in an ungentlemanly business, remarked when the Union troops were bloodily repulsed at Fredericksburg, “It is well that war is so terrible, or we should get too fond of it.” Sherman’s March through Georgia to the Sea, 1864 The Final Virginia Campaign: 1864-1865 McClellan as Mediator, 1865 This 1864 poster shows Presidents Lincoln and Davis trying to tear the country in half, while former general George McClellan, the candidate of the Democratic party, attempts to mediate. A Leg Amputation on the Battlefields of Virginia surgeon wearing a hat and a sword amputates the leg of a wounded soldier, while an anesthetist (facing the camera) holds a sponge dipped in chloroform over the patient’s nose. A surgical assistant ties a tourniquet to stem the flow of blood. Other soldiers, dressed in Zouave uniforms modeled on North African designs, which were popular among some Northern and Southern regiments, watch closely, likely aware of the dangers accompanying such crude surgery. An estimated 30 percent of amputees died from postoperative complications, most often infections. Deeply committed to his responsibilities as commander in chief, President Lincoln visited Union forces on the battlefield several times during the war. With him here at Antietam are the detective Allan Pinkerton (on the left), who provided intelligence to the Union army, and General John McClernand, who often accompanied the president on his travels Lincoln at Antietam (also known as Sharpsburg), October 1862 Booth at the Sanitary Fair in Chicago, 1863 The Chicago Sanitary Fair was the first of many such fairs throughout the nation to raise funds for soldier relief efforts. Mainly organized by women, the fair sold captured Confederate flags, battle relics, handicrafts like these potholders (right), and donated items, including President Lincoln’s original draft of the Emancipation Proclamation (which garnered $3,000 in auction). When the fair closed, the Chicago headquarters of the U.S. Sanitary Commission had raised $100,000, and its female managers had gained organizational experience that many would put to work in the postwar movement for women’s rights. Civil War Casualties in Comparison to Other Wars “The Better Angels of our Nature” A. Lincoln March 1865, Lincoln, in his second inaugural address “malice toward none.” Phrase carried a promise of forgiveness of former slaveholders in the South, but implied reliance on their benevolence to provide for the welfare of their former slaves“ We are not enemies, but friends. . . The mystic chords of memory will yet swell the course of the Union when again we are touched by the better angels of our nature.” Inaugural Address, 1861 The McLean family, who had moved from Manassas Junction after two major battles destroyed their farm in northeastern Virginia, started a new life in the quiet western Virginia town of Appomattox Court House. They still could not escape the war. On April 9, 1865 . . . Lee’s hungry men were allowed to return to their homes and farms to face an uncertain future. President Lincoln visited captured Richmond and was greeted as an emancipator by former slaves (Freedmen) and free blacks alike. There were refugees all over the South, black . . .and white The South lay in ruins to its few factories, and its churches and public buildings. In Washington, D.C. people were thankful that the war was over and hopeful for Reconstruction. However, on Good Friday evening, 1865, at Ford’s Theater . . . while watching the play, Our American Cousin, President Abraham Lincoln was assassinated John Wilkes Booth, Lincoln’s assassin, was killed resisting arrest in northern Virginia. His co-conspirators, such as this man Lewis Powell, who had attacked Secretary of State Seward, were rounded up and brought to trial. In May of 1865 the Union Army came to Washington, D.C. for a grand review before returning home. Washington, D.C. - Execution of four conspirators in Lincoln's assassination – Lewis T. Powell, Mary E. Suratt, David E. Herold and George A. Atzerodt. Original photo by Alexander Gardner. Historical photo: Library of Congress “The First Vote” Harper’s Weekly November 16, 1867 “Franchise, And Not This Man?” Harper’s Weekly. August 5, 1865, p. 489 Under Congressional Reconstruction the Freedmen were given the right to vote in the South. Military Reconstruction, 1867 (five districts and commanding generals) For many white Southerners, military Reconstruction amounted to turning the knife in the wound of defeat. An often-repeated story of later years had a Southerner remark, “I was sixteen years old before I discovered that damnyankee was two words.” However, some southerners had other ideas for the Freedmen. Harper’s Weekly 1874 The Ku Klux Klan, Tennessee, 1868 This night-riding terrorist has even masked the identity of his horse. After Reconstruction ended in 1877, many whites sought a return to preCivil War social structures. Under the Jim Crow system Freedmen lost many rights, such as suffrage, and they were forced into low-paying jobs, such as tenant farming and sharecropping. In effect they were treated as second-class citizens. . . This discrimination and segregation continued into the 1950’s and 1960’s. The Civil Rights Movement resumed the quest for freedom and equality begun during Reconstruction. Rosa Parks’ civil disobedience triggered the Montgomery, AL, bus boycott. Who generated the ideology of Civil Disobedience?