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The North and Industry The Industrial Revolution – A period of rapid growth in using machines for manufacturing. Technology & Inventions • Eli Whitney – Interchangeable parts: Parts of a machine that are identical. This made assembly easier and replacement of parts easier. • This would led to mass production. The efficient production of large numbers of identical goods. Transportation Revolution • Steamboat – invented by Robert Fulton made riverboat travel quick and cheap on the rivers. • Railroads – Peter Cooper and the Tom Thumb led America into the age of the locomotive. 1840 = 2800 miles of track, 1860 – 30,000 miles of track. • Every major city on the East Coast is linked. Commerce and people begin to move with great ease. Communication • The telegraph: Invented by Samuel Morse was a device that could send information over wires across great distances. • Morse Code: Different combinations of dots and dashes that represent each letter of the alphabet. Farming • John Deere: Designed the first STEEL Plow. This changes farming forever. • Cyrus McCormick: Invented the mechanical reaper to harvest wheat. • Farm production increases rapidly because of these two inventions. The South • The South chooses a path of agriculture. • Specifically a cash only crop. (Cash Crop) • The crop that will drive their economy is COTTON! Eli Whitney • The single most important invention to the continuing of slavery is the Cotton Gin. • It was invented by Eli Whitney (1793). • It made cotton 1000 times more profitable then before. • It removed the seeds from the cotton with a series of combs. Plantation Society • The cotton gin would change southern society. • Large farms (Plantations) were developed which produce huge quantities of cotton for large profits sprang up in the deep south. Know as the cotton belt. • Plantations required a large labor force, which increase the demand for slaves. Abolitionists Movement • Abolition – Complete end to slavery. • Abolitionist – An individual that works for the end of slavery. • William Lloyd Garrison – He published the most famous abolitionists newspaper the Liberator. African American Abolitionists • Fredrick Douglass – He spent most of his life lecturing, lobbying and publishing material on the evils of slavery and racism. • Sojourner Truth – She lectured across the country about slavery and women’s rights. Underground Railroad • This was an organization of people who arranged transportation and hiding places for fugitives or escaped slaves. • Harriet Tubman – She was one of the most famous conducts on the railroad. She assisted in the freeing of several hundred run aways. Dred Scott • Roger B. Taney – Chief Justice of the Supreme Court. • He ruled that Dred Scott was not a citizen of the US because he was AfricanAmerican. • “A black man had no rights which a white man was bound to respect.” • Free soil did not change the status of a slave. • He declared the Missouri Compromise unconstitutional. Abraham Lincoln is elected • In 1860, Abraham Lincoln is elected president. • Lincoln became president without winning a single Southern State. • The southern states felt that this was the last straw and that Lincoln would design an agenda that would eliminate slavery and the Southern way of life. The Civil War • The question of Secection! • Can a state quit the United States? • Abraham Lincoln does not believe in Sectionalism, therefore the Union can not be dissolved because of individual states needs. Fort Sumter The Battle of Bull Run • Bull Run was the first major battle of the Civil War and the South (Confederates) had won. • This was the beginning of a long war not a short one as hoped by both sides. • Thomas “Stonewall” Jackson – He received his nickname at the Battle of Bull Run because he refused to fall back and ordered his men to hold their line. George McClellan • He was the leader of the Union Army during the beginning of the war. • He was arrogant and inefficient as a leader. • He was at odds constantly with the President. Battle of Antietam September 17, 1862 • This battle took place in Maryland. • It was the bloodiest single day in US History. (Over 25,000 soldiers died that day.) • It was a union victory. Control of the Mississippi • Ulysses S. Grant – He was the commander of Northern (Union) forces in the west. • The goal was to take control of the Mississippi. Battle of Shiloh • This was a surprise battle for Grant because he did not believe the South would attack him until he moved on Vicksburg. • Two-days of fighting led to a union victory and set the stage for an attack on Vicksburg. (Mississippi) Battle of Vicksburg • Admiral David Farragut captured the city of New Orleans leaving only Vicksburg in the way of Northern control of the Mississippi. • Grant decided to lay siege on the city instead of attacking. • Siege – This means to surround a city and not let anything in or out, while bombarding it daily. Vicksburg’s Importance • The North now controled the Mississippi River. • It is the first time that civilians are targeted in warfare on purpose. • This changes the war! And leads to Grant becoming the leader of the Union Army. Gettysburg “The Turning Point” • July 1-3 1863 • Over 150,000 soldiers involved • 53,000 dead Day 1 • General “Jeb” Stuart puts the confederates (South) at a disadvantage by leaving them blind (LEE) to what is out in front of them. • Because of his mistake the Union (North) gains the HIGH GROUND on the first day and the rest of the battle. The Argument Should the South fight at Gettysburg? • General Longstreet tries to convince General Lee not to attack at Gettysburg because the North had the advantage. • He wanted to move the army to a better location. • Lee decided against moving the army and attacked on the second day. VS Day 2 • The fight for the high ground is fierce. • The Little Round Top is where the deadliest fighting takes place. • Colonel Chamberlain (Union) holds off the confederates all day until he runs out of ammunition. • He ordered a bayonet charge at the end and caught the south by surprise. • He saved the day and possibly the union. Day 3 Pickett’s Charge • General Lee orders an attack on the union center. • General George Pickett will lead that charge. • General Longstreet argues against the attack but fails to convince Lee not to attack. • Half of Pickett’s men would die that day (7,500) General Grant orders Sherman’s March to the Sea • General William Tecumseh Sherman (Union) is given orders by Grant to march through the south to Atlanta then turn North and meet him at Richmond. • He is to destroy anything the Confederate Army could use for war along with civilian and economic resources. “Total War” April 9, 1865 • On this date the civil war will end with General Robert E. Lee surrendering to General Grant at Appomattax Courthouse. Lincoln Assassination • Lincoln is assassinated on April 15, 1865 at Ford’s Theater by John Wilkes Booth.