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The US Civil War in less than 80 powerpoint slides An incomplete and basic survey of the causes and conflicts that reshaped these United States into The United States Dissonance 1850-1862 The Divide • Social division was complete by 1861 between the regions. • Edmund Ruffin, Robert Rhett, Louis T. Wigfall, and William Lowndes Yancey were members of the deep southern contingent agitating for secession and southern independence. • Davey Atchison (Senator, D-MO) actively agitated in the border regions. • Northerners had an exclusively regional political party in the Republicans since 1856. • Radical agitators in the north were far less influential than their counterparts in the south. – John Brown – Pottawattamie Massacre – William Lloyd Garrison – The Liberator – “Radical” Republicans - Emancipationists Conflicts short of wholesale war • • • • Bleeding Kansas Brooks-Sumner Affair Dred Scott v. Sanford Missouri “neutrality” and constitutional convention Delusion • Whites believed slaves were happy and born to serve. The image of the dependant and eager slave was just that – an image. – “Cuffee” was a figment of the imagination. The white south believed deeply in the paternalism of slavery. • Slaves who challenged the white conception were seen as being ill. Dr. Samuel Cartwright explained these diseases and proposed cures. Dr. Cartwright’s “scientific” diagnoses • African-American brains were 9/10ths the size of white brains, but had the same amount of nerves. This made blacks more prone to “sensuality at the expense of intellectuality” • African-Americans had inferior lung capacity and “molasses-like blood.” This caused maladies such as – Drapetomania – the unquenchable propensity toward fleeing – Dysaesthesia – insatiable appetite for sloth • The cure was to get the blood moving and oxygenated. This was best done with the lash. More “science” • Josiah Nott, Louis Agassiz, George Gliddon were proponents of the theory of polygenesis – They based this conclusion on skull sizes (capacity) and temperatures at various latitudes. If the US had constant compromises and the ability to mediate differences, why did the US suddenly split and go to war with itself in 1861? The Civil War The Prewar Assessment Motives for Secession • Lincoln’s Election in 1860 – Within days, S. Carolina seceded. Buchanan did VERY little to stop this. – Before Lincoln was inaugurated, six more states quit the union • These states are considered “the Lower South” – Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, S. Carolina and Texas • Joined by four more by the start of the war – Virginia, Arkansas, N. Carolina, Tennessee Motives for Secession • Northern Domination – The south felt overpowered by northern political, industrial, banking and manufacturing interests • Economically, they were an internal COLONY. Politically, they were “on the ropes” – Lincoln represented the new Republican north. He won without carrying a single southern state. Race and Baiting • To the South, Lincoln represented emancipation. – Culturally, this threatened the Herrenvolk society. Fears of miscegenation were widespread. – Economically, they were weaker (as you will see). They held only four strengths going into the war. Southern Advantages • • • • Fear of Black Citizenship (and racial equality) Cotton The Threat of Secession Possible home-field advantage if a war should break out with the best military leadership and a well-armed society (due to fear of slave rebellions!) Northern Strengths • 23 States – Including California, Oregon and four slave-holding “border” states (Missouri, Kentucky, Delaware, Maryland), PLUS seven territories and the Western part of Virginia. – Population: 22 Million (4 million men combat age) – Economy: 100,000 factories • 1.1 million workers • 20,000 miles of railroad (70% of US Total, 96% of all railroad equipment Northern Strengths • 23 States – Economy: 100,000 factories • 1.1 million workers • 20,000 miles of railroad (70% of US Total, 96% of all railroad equipment • $189 million in bank deposits (81% of all money in banks) • $56 million in gold reserves Southern Comparisons • 11 States • Population: 9 million (3.5 million slaves, 1.2 million men of combat age) • Economy: 20,000 factories – – – – 101,000 workers 9,000 miles of railroad $47 million in bank deposits $27 million in gold reserves • OUTPRODUCED IN EVERYTHING EXCEPT MULES AND COTTON! • Military Leadership and familiarity with battlefields would prove essential Why did they lose? The Confederacy fought a defensive war, much like the American Revolution. How did they manage to lose? A draw would be a win for the CSA (Survival is Victory), but the Union would need to annihilate! THIS IS THE SAME ISSUE FACED IN THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION, but the outcome will be much different. WHY? Civil War Part 1 Politically Fractured • Two versions of Republicanism destroy the two party system. • There are no National parties after 1856. • Democrats are Subdivided between FREE SOIL and FIREATERS. • Whigs split as Cotton and Union Whigs (the latter becomes the Republican Party) • 4 separate sectional parties vie for election in 1860. John Brown • Represented the personification of white southerners’ worst nightmare. • Attempted to take a federal armory to arm slaves and abolitionists • Gave ammunition to fireeaters and put Republicans on the defensive Stakes in the War “Upon the course of our arms, all else depends” – A. Lincoln • In 1861, the CSA has the heavy advantage – A defensive war means you just have to stretch out the invaders and attack weaknesses. A draw is good enough – At the time of the split, CSA had the most experienced military officers. Most field grade officers above the rank of major joined the CSA. – COTTON DIPLOMACY – If CSA could get foreign help, they were sure they would win (American Rev). – COTTON DIPLOMACY – If CSA could get foreign help, they were sure they would win (American Rev). South believed their cotton employed hundreds of thousands of British and French textile workers. This could be used as leverage. – Seamless Society – United in a common war effort, desire to maintain slavery/white supremacy, a way of life, a vision of republicanism. USA is disunited and this is a partisan war Democrats do not support – LEADERSHIP – Jefferson Davis • By far, the most qualified war-time president ever to serve. War hero, West Point graduate. Colonel in Mexican American War (with citations), senator and secretary of war. The best possible leader (on paper). DAVIS v. LINCOLN • Davis was a militaristic politician, centered on building an army to defend a “new nation”. • Lincoln served for a month in a minor Indian war in the 1830s. In 1861, he was concerned with patronage and politics, not the military. THIS IS WHY THE SOUTH FELT THEY COULD WIN. THEY HAD FIVE SOLID ADVANTAGES. They had the North beaten in almost every aspect. Civil War outbreak Phase 1 of 4 April 1861-Dec 1862 SUMMARY: Confederacy has its best chance to win on the battlefield. US is unprepared, but all apparent southern advantages turn into liabilities. The war is essentially a stalemate at the end of 1862 Jefferson Davis Not a strong wartime leader and a poor politician. • He has some serious leadership flaws. – – – – Cannot accept criticism Stubborn Alienates “united people” INDECISIVE! • He has a political paradox in his lap, never solves this issue The Confederate Paradox This government is built on State Supremacy in a loose confederacy. HOWEVER, they are fighting a much stronger enemy with a strong central organization. • To defeat the US, the CSA needs to have a strong, decisive federal command in Richmond, yet not assail the “States’ Rights” • Davis attempts to walk this line at his own peril Southern Military Split Gen. Joseph E. Johnston – Virginian in command of the Western Theater – Believes the war will be won or lost in the Ohio Valley – His troops invade Kentucky, causing Kentucky to remain in the Union. Gen. Robert E. Lee – Virginian in command of the Eastern Theater – Believes war will be won or lost in 90 mile corridor between Richmond and DC – Lee tries to force CSA wins, but battles are indecisive. Antietam was his attempt for a Saratoga. Davis’s attempts • As military commander, he MUST mediate and decide to back Lee OR Johnston. He never does. – Confederates have NO UNITED STRATEGY to win the war militarily. As long as the union is invading, they win. • When he is decisive, he creates more problems. – Set quotas for farm and factory production • If/When quotas were not met, the government took over the factory or farm – Established wage controls and suspended free market economy. Necessary but INCREDIBLY unpopular. Cotton Diplomacy Fails • CSA NEEDS Britain. They never get their “Saratoga” and Britain will not risk supporting them. (Antietam was the failed attempt at great costs) • England does not need southern cotton because they stockpiled it before the war. • England is making lots of $$ supplying both sides with weapons and other goods (English rifles are the best in the world) MONEY • CSA was too weak to run a wartime nation. – Passed Sales Taxes but that did not raise enough. – Could not effectively sell bonds – no investment capital and people are reluctant to buy them (fear if CSA loses, they lose their money!) – Hyperinflation results. By 1865, a confederate dollar is worth $0.03. Money is worthless. Class Conflict • The latency of class conflict becomes manifest and very real during the war. – Farmers resent fixed prices and crop quotas – Poor resent entire program of taxation and hyperinflation. – BIGGEST RESENTMENT was to the Draft of March, 1862. • 20 slave exemption ignites class conflict Institution of Slavery • Originally thought of as an asset, quickly becomes a liability. – US invasions create abilities for slaves to flee • Half a million slaves run away in 1862 • Another 186,000 joined the Union Armies • THE CONFEDERACY WAS SUPPLYING UNION TROOPS IN THE FORM OF RUNAWAYS! • By 1865, Black US soldiers alone will outnumber remaining CSA soldiers. • Destroys the illusion of the happy, servile slave Phase 2 Dec 1862- Aug 1864 Summary – Phase 2 The Union realizes potential strengths. US coordinates civilian and military command structure. Lincoln assumes a VERY powerful role at the top of the hierarchy. Phase 2 (continued) • Us neutralizes southern advantages of military manpower and leadership by finding leaders from within to wage TOTAL WAR. • US is able to pay for the war through an effective income tax and the sale of war bonds. • Northern Agriculture has REALLY good years • African Americans are recruited to fight, bringing a new morality to the war – Two reasons – Preserving the Union and Liberation! The Emancipation Proclamation Jan 1, 1863. This TECHNICALLY would not have freed any slave. It was a political move to agitate the south and appease the growing abolitionist sentiment. • This freed only slaves in states of open rebellion. These are Confederate states that saw Lincoln as a foreign president. • This did ABSOLUTELY NOTHING to free slaves in border states. The Emancipation Proclamation was not intended to be an anti-slavery revision to the constitution. It was a war powers declaration to take property! Phase 3 August 1864 – Middle of September 1864 Phase 3 Summary This is the LAST opportunity for a Confederate win, because the US may not have the WILL TO CONQUER and wage TOTAL WAR. • Grant invades Virginia, May 1864. Not one battle, but 8 months of constant warfare. – Trench Warfare is utilized. This is a preview for WWI. – The Battle of Cold Harbor is one of the bloodiest and costliest, as well as most decisive Phase 3 Summary • Grant’s regiments are approximately 1000 men each. Each one suffers between 20-60% casualties. – There are 60,000 casualties under Grant alone. • Public opinion in both the Union and Confederacy turns pacifistic. • Sherman captures Atlanta. First DECISIVE victory. Phase 4 Sept 1864 – Apr 1865 Phase 4 The war turns anti-slavery. There is a propagandized view that the Union had always held slavery was immoral. • March 1865. Lincoln’s second inaugural address said that the Civil War was God’s punishment for slavery. References that containment was not enough. Slavery must be destroyed. • The Confederates were starving, failing to unite, and lost their best military leaders. • Political heads such as Judah Benjamin were unable to keep the confederated states together with the staggering losses and poor supplies. • Confederate Secretary of War James Seddon (and his USA counterpart Edwin Stanton) operated POW camps of absolute starvation and desolation. Military morale was low for both sections, but lower in the South. Civil War The Southern Experience Social Upheaval The entire plantation system is fractured. • Slavery rested on order, discipline, control, authority. This broke down over war-time necessity • War causes a switch from cotton to food as people in an AGRICULTURAL society were starving. This war economically devastated the south. Almost all Confederate capital was destroyed. This costs the confederacy $12 billion in our money ($9 billion in lost slaves) • Britain’s cotton embargo made growing cotton temporarily obsolete for the moment – (although there was still SOME market for the good, demand and prices fell) • Slaves were forced to work independently and at their own pace in growing diversified crops – Mutual obligations are unfulfilled. Slave-owners send food and clothing to the Army, slaves go uncared for. Slaves work less. • White men are pressed into joining the army. – Surrogate “Masters” are less competent. Women, elderly men, even children. They do not have strong-handed tactics and slaves flee. Many stay on and ignore their authority. – This is why the 20 slave exemption was seen as necessary Life Outside of Plantations • Many skilled industrial jobs were only open to slaves, so many slaves were the most skilled factory workers. • BLACK CONFEDERATES = skilled slaves producing war goods. Industrial workers. Often worked without white management. They gained a sense of freedom, were promised freedom after the war. • Impressment – The CSA army seizes slaves to become soldiers. They are not armed, but do manual work (dig ditches, move logs, nurses, spies). They are promised freedom after the war. • The idea of black soldiers negates the core identity of the Confederacy, and of the honor of the Confederate military. Many CSA supporters become further disillusioned. Desperation • By 1865, the CSA was doomed. Once Sherman took Atlanta, a union win was assured. • Nov 1864. J.Davis asks congress to enlist black soldiers who will be paid in their own freedom. • March 1865. Davis makes a secret pact with Great Britain to abolish slavery in exchange for recognition. WHAT WAS UNTHINKABLE IN 1861 IS A NECESSITY IN 1865! • SLAVERY is a casualty of the war. Civil War The Union Experience Antebellum • The North differs from the South in that it has a two party system (corrupt as it may be) and free labor (including the freedom to pay starvation wages). • John Brown was demonized in the North (and South); William Lloyd Garrison was a crackpot to most Northerners. After the War • The Republicans dominate political institutions for the next 40 years+. Democrats are the party of treason (Copperheads). Corruption persists and even increases. – Clement Laird Vallandigham (D-OH), Suspension of Habeas Corpus in the Border States • John Brown becomes a hero second to Lincoln and Garrison is widely accepted. The North transforms by 1864 into a culture of abolitionism. The Slavery Question At the Onset, this was not about SLAVERY, but about the expansion of slave society. THE US COULD HAVE: 1. Incited slave revolts 2. Encouraged runaways 3. Immediately accepted Black Volunteer troops All of these would send CSA soldiers home to battle slave insurrections. The war was 18 months old before Lincoln attacked slavery. He did so to hasten the end of the war. Had he done it earlier, the war effort would likely collapse due to economic support for slavery. • Attacking slavery also ensured England’s support and prevented a CSA alliance. • Morally, it proves Lincoln’s version of Republicanism and Free Soil. At any rate, it serves to remove the hypocrisy of a slave society believing in equality and freedom. “Equality” will have other challenges in the industrial north for several generations. 13th Amendment Slavery actually ends with a constitutional change to remove the protections of the “peculiar institution” of “involuntary servitude”. • Passed by Congress in 1865. States HAVE TO ratify it to regain admission to the USA • Part of Reconstruction • Slavery ends due to consequences of war SUMMARY This bloody and tragic conflict can be oversimply summarized as follows: The Civil War guaranteed “one nation, indivisible.” It ended the conflict of the centralizers/decentralizers. Sovereignty rests in the Federal Government. This left a wartime bitterness that still has not healed. Summary This war also set a precedent that Presidents have UNLIMITED powers in times of national emergency. -- there is an irony that the south feared the strength of the “abolitionist Lincoln” to such a degree that they caused Lincoln to be the strongest president in US History, and also made him into an abolitionist! What This Cruel War Was Over “The real war will never get in the books” -Walt Whitman “War is cruelty. There is no use trying to reform it. The crueler it is, the sooner it will be over.” -William Tecumseh Sherman Changes • American’s relationship to the government is fundamentally changed – Before the war, most Americans ONLY contact with the Federal Government was their local post office. – Serving in the war gave many veterans more exposure to different regions – The central government became more of an authority (and more authoritarian) during the war. This will continue after the war. – In the antebellum period, it was THESE UNITED STATES (plural). Afterwards, it is The United States (singular). • Death – Death was a personal, intimate family affair in the antebellum period – Hundreds of thousands dying far from home in anonymous graves creates several death industries – Photography shifts death remembrances from the personal to the collective • Political landscape – Democrats were painted as Copperheads – Republicans dominated the south in the postwar period – Southern states were divided into military districts and run accordingly – Southern women acted out “political ventriloquism” through commemoration – “Radical Republicans” controlled congress and a Southern Republican controlled the executive branch. • Redeemer Democrats were active in the south, but not openly. – Key people on the political landscape • • • • • • • Benjamin Butler Benjamin Wade Thaddeus Stevens Charles Sumner Andrew Johnson Edwin M. Stanton Abraham Lincoln • Industrialization and Agrarianism – The Northern victory was largely due to industrial output. Industrialization will speed up as a result of the war. – Many of the wealthiest Americans in the postwar 19th century earned their fortune directly or indirectly from the war. – The agrarian democracy of the CSA would be dormant until 1896. – Key people on the industrial landscape • • • • • • • John Pierpont Morgan John Davidson Rockefeller Andrew Carnegie Jay Gould Philip Armour George Mortimer Pullman Marshall Field • Abolition? – The war did not start about slavery, but ended as a war for emancipation. – The 13th amendment ended slavery, but not the conditions of slavery. • General O. O. Howard’s efforts were stymied by Andrew Johnson • Redemption and Reconstruction concerns sidelined the status of Freedmen. Post-war Conflict • Reconstruction is highly charged, both in contemporary politics of the 19th century and in the historiography. (see handout) • Dealing with the status of the southern states, Confederate soldiers, Confederate officers and other “treasonous” people would be a dominant theme in American politics for the following 13 years.