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Road to Civil War, Civil War and Reconstruction Chapter 2 I. Mexican War II. Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo 1. 2. 3. 4. Feb. 1848—Ends Mexican War CA, NM (including UT, NV, AZ) Rio Grande River the southern boundary Mexico gets $15 million III. 1850s—Decade of Crisis 1850s—Decade of Crisis (cont’d) 1. 2. 3. 4. 1849—80,000+ flood CA CA a free or slave state? CA a slave state? Extend the Missouri Line? IV. Compromise of 1850 Compromise of 1850 (cont’d) 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. CA free state Slavery unrestricted in UT & NM territories TX gets $10 million for land Slave trade abolished in D.C. & MD Fugitive Slave Act V. Kansas-Nebraska Act 1. Republican Party—Opposed to the expansion of slavery & KS/NE Act. Roger Taney Dred Scott VI. John Brown 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Harper’s Ferry, VA Big slave rebellion? Failure Caught, tried, executed Confederate Army begins…. VII. The South Secedes 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Dec. 20, 1860—SC secedes Protect state’s rights, slavery, & way of life MS, FL, AL, GA, LA, TX followed. (Later VA, AK, NC) Feb. 1861—Confederate States of America Pres. Jefferson Davis The South Secedes (cont’d) 6. Fort Sumter, Charleston, SC 7. S. opens canon fire; Union gives up the Federal Garrison 8. Conf. celebrated their 1st victory; Civil War begins. (Bloodies war in U.S. history) VIII. Civil War Anaconda Plan 1. Union Plan--Gen. Winfield Scott—4 Phase Plan 1. 2. 3. 4. 1st Phase—Union Navy blockade ALL Southern Ports 2nd Phase—Control the Mississippi River 3rd Phase—March through GA; up to Carolinas 4th Phase—Capture capital at Richmond, VA Antietam 1. Antietam—Bloodiest day 2. 22,000 dead 3. Sept. 1862—TURNING POINT—Kept Confederates from getting foreign aid! Emancipation Proclamation 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Jan. 1, 1863. Gave N. moral justification England agreed; won’t help the S. Ex-slaves/free blacks joined Union 54th Mass. Infantry IX. 1863: Turning Point 1. 1863: War Tips to the North 2. 2. 1862-1863 Union loses at Battle of Fredericksburg and Chancellorsville 3. June 1863—Gettysburg, PA 4. Bloodiest overall battle of the war 5. Lee; never again try to attack the N. 6. Confederate fate sealed at Gettysburg 7. Won’t get European support; never win again 8. July 4, 1863—Vicksburg, MS 9. Union (Grant) got control of Miss. River 10. Gettysburg Address 11. Jan. 1864—Grant Commander of the Union Army Sherman’s March to the Sea X. Consequences 1.Generation lost; 620,000 2.Women: nurses, vet. hospitals, at home, etc. 3.1865: 4 million new Americans (13th Amend.) 4.Politics: preserving the Union; federal gov. supreme 5.American democracy survived 6. Reconstructionindustrialization XI. Reconstruction 1. 13th Amendment—Abolishes slavery 2. 14th Amendment, 1868 1. Protect Rights of all U.S. citizens 2. Due process & equal protection 3. No state/fed. office; Conf. officers 3. 15th Amendment 1868, 1. States can’t prevent citizens from voting based on: race, color, or previous servitude