* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Civil War
Battle of Fort Donelson wikipedia , lookup
Battle of Antietam wikipedia , lookup
Battle of White Oak Road wikipedia , lookup
Battle of Appomattox Station wikipedia , lookup
Battle of Cumberland Church wikipedia , lookup
Texas in the American Civil War wikipedia , lookup
Lost Cause of the Confederacy wikipedia , lookup
First Battle of Lexington wikipedia , lookup
Anaconda Plan wikipedia , lookup
Battle of Shiloh wikipedia , lookup
East Tennessee bridge burnings wikipedia , lookup
Battle of Roanoke Island wikipedia , lookup
Battle of Seven Pines wikipedia , lookup
Battle of Port Royal wikipedia , lookup
Battle of Big Bethel wikipedia , lookup
Battle of Wilson's Creek wikipedia , lookup
Red River Campaign wikipedia , lookup
Fort Sumter wikipedia , lookup
Battle of Fort Sumter wikipedia , lookup
Galvanized Yankees wikipedia , lookup
Battle of Namozine Church wikipedia , lookup
Economy of the Confederate States of America wikipedia , lookup
Battle of Gaines's Mill wikipedia , lookup
Tennessee in the American Civil War wikipedia , lookup
Battle of New Bern wikipedia , lookup
Confederate privateer wikipedia , lookup
Battle of Lewis's Farm wikipedia , lookup
First Battle of Bull Run wikipedia , lookup
Capture of New Orleans wikipedia , lookup
Commemoration of the American Civil War on postage stamps wikipedia , lookup
Pacific Coast Theater of the American Civil War wikipedia , lookup
Fort Fisher wikipedia , lookup
Conclusion of the American Civil War wikipedia , lookup
Baltimore riot of 1861 wikipedia , lookup
Virginia in the American Civil War wikipedia , lookup
Hampton Roads Conference wikipedia , lookup
Alabama in the American Civil War wikipedia , lookup
South Carolina in the American Civil War wikipedia , lookup
Opposition to the American Civil War wikipedia , lookup
Georgia in the American Civil War wikipedia , lookup
United States presidential election, 1860 wikipedia , lookup
Battle of Fort Pillow wikipedia , lookup
Border states (American Civil War) wikipedia , lookup
Issues of the American Civil War wikipedia , lookup
Union (American Civil War) wikipedia , lookup
United Kingdom and the American Civil War wikipedia , lookup
Military history of African Americans in the American Civil War wikipedia , lookup
Civil War United States History Mrs. O’Shea 1860 Presidential Election • • • • Abraham Lincoln won 39% popular vote 180 electoral votes not a single electoral vote from South Name did not appear on many southern ballots 1860 ELECTION RESULTS Southern Secession South Carolina seceded in Dec. 1860 6 others states followed = Texas Louisiana Mississippi Alabama Florida Georgia Created Confederate States of America Fort Sumter • Federal fort outside Charleston, SC • Federal supply ship shot at by Confederates • Lincoln wanted to preserve Union – must protect fort • April 12, 1861 – Confederates seize fort Strengths – p.382 North South Strategies – p.383-384 North South Review • • • • • Lincoln elected President - 1860 Southern states secede Fort Sumter – beginning of war North – Preserve the Union South – Federal government no longer represents our interests. We voluntarily joined United States, we choose to leave it. Battle of Bull Run • Union troops – not prepared • Sent by Lincoln to capture Richmond – Confederate capital city • Met with 32,000 Confederate troops outside of Manassas. • Union troops were sent running back to Washington, D.C. IMPORTANCE • Boosted Confederates morale • Signaled to Union that they needed to prepare for a real war CASUALTIES • Heavy casualties on both sides – killed, wounded, captured, or MIA • Disease (typhoid fever, dysentery, salmonella, gangrene, malaria) Casualties (deaths) Revolutionary War = 4,400 Mexican American War = 13,000 Civil War = 600,000 WWI = 115,000 WWII = 407,000 Korean War = 33,000 Vietnam War = 58,000 War in Iraq = 4,244 (as of February 13, 2009) Really rough estimates – Mrs. O’Shea Casualties (deaths) 700,000 600,000 600,000 500,000 400,000 300,000 200,000 115,000 100,000 4,400 13,000 33,000 58,000 4,244 M ex ic an II Ko re an W ar Vi et na m W ar W ar in Ira q W W I W W il W ar Ci v W ar an er ic Am tio na ry W ar 0 Re vo lu Deaths 407,000 GROUP 1 GROUP 2 GROUP 3 GROUP 4 Lincoln and Slavery • “Preserve the Union” • Personally opposed to slavery • Came to regard abolishing slavery as a strategy for winning war • Slave working in field = one more Southerner fighting in fields Emancipation Proclamation p. 396 Who was freed? slaves under Confederate control Some Northerners feared … freed people would increase unemployment Abolitionists criticized Lincoln for … not going far enough by freeing all slaves Southerners … condemned it African Americans in War • July 1862 – Congress allows African-Americans to join military • January 1, 1863 – Emancipation Proclamation – encouraged freed slaves to fight • By 1865 – 180,000 African Americans had enlisted (10% of troops) • Less pay • Black regiments – white officers • 54th Massachusetts Infantry – bravery in attack on Ft. Wagner – first medal of honor (Sergeant William Carney) GLORY Plans to Win!!! • Union – attacked from West and East – Anaconda Plan (choke them) • Confederacy – attacked Union through Virginia (scare Northerners – fuel anti-war movement in North) North – Strategy Gettysburg • 3 days – July 1-3, 1863 • Greatest battle ever fought in North America • Bloodiest battle of war Union = 23,000 casualties Confederacy = 28,000 casualties IMPORTANCE • Union victory ended Lee’s invasion of North • Referred to as “turning point of war” Gettysburg Address • • • • Dedication of cemetery Honors Union soldiers Expresses grief of nation Necessity of preserving the Union http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php ?storyId=1512410 “War is cruelty. The crueler it is, the sooner it will be over.” Sherman’s March p. 412 • Union General William Sherman’s total war • GOAL = destroy the Confederacy's ability to wage further war • 300 mile path of destruction – destroying railroads, bridges, factories, livestock, crops, etc. • Most likely speed up the ending of the war South Surrenders Lee surrenders to Grant at Appomattox Court House, Virginia (private home – not a court building) -take horses and go home -obey laws April 9, 1965 Lincoln Assassinated • April 14, 1865 • John Wilkes Booth – wanted to kidnap in exchange for Confederate prisoners. • Changed plans – killed Lincoln • Ford’s Theater