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Lessons Review Maps Graphic Organizer What are some things people are willing to fight for? Slavery and Emancipation Unit 6: Slavery and Emancipation Lessons Review Maps Graphic Organizer Lesson 1 King Cotton and the Spread of Slavery Lesson 2 Heading Toward War Lesson 3 The Nation Divided by War Lesson 4 The Union Moves Toward Victory Lesson 5 The War Ends Lesson 6 Reconstruction and After Lessons Lessons Lesson 1 Vocabulary free state Missouri Compromise Reading Skill Fact and Opinion Maps Graphic Organizer King Cotton and the Spread of Slavery slave state tariff Review How did the South affect the nation’s economy and politics? Lessons Review Maps Graphic Organizer King Cotton and the Spread of Slavery Why did the demand for slaves grow? Growth of cotton as a cash crop Movement to the west Congress passed a law that no enslaved peopled could be brought into the U.S. after 1808. Why did the enslaved population continue to grow? Children of enslaved people were also enslaved. Planters brought enslaved people from Caribbean islands. Lessons Review Maps Graphic Organizer King Cotton and the Spread of Slavery Missouri Compromise Missouri applied to join the Union as a slave state. Already 11 slave states and 11 free states Another slave state would upset the voting balance in Congress. Compromise: Missouri joined as a slave state. Maine joined as a free state. Slavery would not be allowed in any states north of Missouri. Lessons Review Maps Graphic Organizer King Cotton and the Spread of Slavery Complete the Venn diagram to compare and contrast the differences between the North and the South. South pro-slavery dependent on cotton opposed tariffs Alike part of the same country supported westward expansion North anti-slavery industrialized favored tariffs Lessons Lesson 2 abolitionists debate treason secede Reading Skill Fact and Opinion Maps Graphic Organizer Heading Toward War Vocabulary civil war Review How did the issue of slavery divide the country in the 1800s? Lessons Heading Toward War What was the Underground Railroad? It was a secret network of trails, river crossings, and hiding places to help enslaved people escape to the North. What was the importance of the Kansas-Nebraska Act? This act overturned the Missouri Compromise. It was based on used popular sovereignty—people would vote to accept or ban slavery. What did the Dred Scott case determine? It determined that enslaved workers could be taken anywhere, even free states, and remain enslaved. Review Maps Graphic Organizer Lessons Review Maps Graphic Organizer Heading Toward War Complete the graphic organizer about the Lincoln-Douglas debates. Fact Douglas said Lincoln was an abolitionist. Opinion Lincoln only opposed expanding slavery into the territories. Douglas tried to win votes by hiding his opinion about slavery. Lincoln was true to his principles. At first, Douglas was more popular than Lincoln. Lincoln’s honesty earned people’s respect. Lessons Heading Toward War Why were Southerners upset by John Brown’s raid? John Brown, an abolitionist, attacked an army arsenal at Harpers Ferry, Va., to get weapons for enslaved people so they could revolt against plantation owners. What event prompted South Carolina and six other states to secede from the Union? Abraham Lincoln, who took a stand against slavery, won the presidential election of 1860. Where did the Civil War begin? Confederate guns fired on Fort Sumter in Charleston, South Carolina, on April 12, 1861. Review Maps Graphic Organizer Lessons Lesson 3 Vocabulary Anaconda Plan Reading Skill Fact and Opinion Maps Graphic Organizer The Nation Divided by War draft total war Review What were the challenges for each side in the Civil War? Lessons Review The Nation Divided by War Why did both the South and the North think they would win the war? Southerners believed they would win because they had a stronger military tradition than the North. Northerners believed they would win because they had more people, industry, and money than the South. Battle of Bull Run first major battle near Manassas, Virginia Union soldiers could not break through Confederate line Stonewall Jackson South won Maps Graphic Organizer Lessons Review Maps Graphic Organizer The Nation Divided by War Strengths of the South Strengths of the North • It planned a defensive war, which is easier for the military to win. • The North had more than twice the population of the South. • A third of the nation’s officers joined the Confederate army. • Most of U.S. Navy officers came from the North, and most of the Navy stayed with the North. • It had a strong military tradition. • Southerners were more skilled in shooting, hunting, and riding. • Soldiers began preparing for war before the attack on Fort Sumter. • 80% of U.S. factories were in the North. • The majority of railroads were in the North. • Almost all firearms were manufactured in the North. • Northern farms grew more food than Southern farms. Lessons Review Maps Graphic Organizer The Nation Divided by War Weaknesses of the South Weaknesses of the North • It had less than half the population of the North, and one-third were enslaved people. • Union troops fought mostly in the South, where people were defending their homes. • It had less money to support the war effort. • Long supply lines made it difficult to move quickly. • It had only one factory making cannons. • Many soldiers had little military tradition. • It had half as many miles of railroad track, making it difficult to transport food, weapons, and other supplies. • Most Union soldiers had little military training. • Union armies would have to take control of most of the South to bring it back into the Union. Lessons Review The Nation Divided by War What was the goal of the Anaconda Plan? The goal was to make it difficult for the South to get the supplies it needed for the war. The Anaconda Plan had three parts. Blockade Southern seaports so Southerners could not buy weapons and supplies. Take control of the Mississippi River to divide the South and prevent Confederates from using the river to move supplies. Invade the South, squeezing the region from both east and west. Maps Graphic Organizer Lessons Lesson 4 Vocabulary Reading Skill Fact and Opinion Maps The Union Moves Toward Victory Emancipation Proclamation Gettysburg Address Review How did people participate in the Civil War? Graphic Organizer Lessons Review Maps The Union Moves Toward Victory What was the Emancipation Proclamation? The Emancipation Proclamation stated that all enslaved people in the Confederacy were emancipated, or free, and changed the ideas about the reasons for fighting the war. Why was the Union victory at Vicksburg important? A win at Vicksburg gave the Union control of the Mississippi River and split the Confederacy in two. Graphic Organizer Lessons Review Maps The Union Moves Toward Victory Citizens contributed to the war effort. Factory workers made weapons. Railroad workers transported troops and supplies. Young people helped on farms. Young boys served as buglers or drummers. Women supported the war effort. Worked in factories or ran family businesses Worked in shops, plowed fields, harvested crops Cared for wounded soldiers, sewed uniforms, and made tents and ammunition Spies and nurses Graphic Organizer Lessons Lesson 5 The War Ends Vocabulary malice assassination Reading Skill Fact and Opinion Review What events brought an end to the Civil War? Maps Graphic Organizer Lessons The War Ends Ulysses S. Grant commanded Union army. Two goals: destroy Lee’s army capture Richmond Huge number of dead and wounded Grant trapped Lee in Petersburg. Sherman’s March to the Sea Burned Atlanta Lee surrendered at Appomattox in Virginia. Less than a week later, Lincoln was assassinated. Review Maps Graphic Organizer Lessons The War Ends What were the effects of the Civil War on the South? The South had few farms left in working condition. Property was destroyed and a way of life ended. One of every four white men was killed. Two-thirds of its wealth was lost. Write About It! Describe Sherman’s March to the Sea and why his actions were so controversial. Review Maps Graphic Organizer Lessons Lesson 6 Vocabulary black codes sharecropping segregation Reading Skill Fact and Opinion Maps Graphic Organizer Reconstruction and After Reconstruction Jim Crow Laws Review What happened in the South after the Civil War? Lessons Review Reconstruction and After Reconstruction was a plan for rebuilding the South. The Freedmen’s Bureau was created to provide help to newly freed people. Three amendments to Constitution: 13th abolished slavery. 14th made African Americans citizens. 15th made it illegal for states to deny a man’s right to vote. Women were not included. Black codes restricted the rights of African Americans. Sharecroppers rented land and paid for it with a share of the crops. Maps Graphic Organizer Lessons Review Reconstruction and After Northerners who moved to the south were called carpetbaggers. More than 600 African Americans were elected to state office, and 16 to Congress. Ku Klux Klan terrorized African Americans. Segregation resulted in unfair treatment. African Americans were denied their constitutional rights. Jim Crow laws kept the races segregated. Maps Graphic Organizer Lessons Review Maps Graphic Organizer Review Compare the Southern and Northern economies. The Southern economy was based on farming and used many enslaved people. The Northern economy was based on industry and did not use enslaved people. What was the goal of the Anaconda Plan? The goal of the Anaconda Plan was to make it difficult for the South to get the supplies they needed to fight the war. What was the Underground Railroad? The Underground Railroad was a secret network of trails, river crossings, and hiding places to help enslaved people escape to the North. Lessons Review Maps Graphic Organizer Review Why was the Civil War considered a different kind of war? It reached beyond battlefields. Farms and cities were burned. It was the first total war because each side struck against the economic system and civilians of the other side. What three amendments were added to the Constitution during Reconstruction? 13th Amendment abolished slavery. 14th Amendment made African Americans citizens and guaranteed them equal legal rights. 15th Amendment made it illegal for states to deny a man’s right to vote. Lessons Maps Click on a map to enlarge the view. Review Maps Graphic Organizer Lessons Review Graphic Organizer Fact and Opinion Click on the graphic organizer to enlarge the view and enter content. Maps Graphic Organizer