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Download THE AMERICAN CIVIL WAR
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1861-1865 Fort Sumter •Fort Sumter was a federal military base located on an island in the Harbor of Charleston, SC •The Federal troops holding it were in desperate need of supplies and food and the Confederacy was threatening to take the fort •What were President Lincoln’s options? What would be the outcome of each choice? Fort Sumter If Lincoln failed to supply the fort, the fort would fall to the CSA and a failure to act may be interpreted as a sign of weakness If Lincoln supplied the fort, this act would be looked upon by the CSA as a direct confrontation and a possible weakness on their part Lincoln decided to send provisions but NOT reinforcements. Why? Fort Sumter At 4:30 am on April 12, 1861 the fort was fired upon by the Confederacy The bombardment lasted 34 hours with 4,000 rounds fired and 1,000 fired in reply General Anderson surrendered Damage to the fort was extensive Now the Union knew where they stood and was relieved Sumter destroyed for the South the view that their independence would be won without a fight The Confederacy had fired upon the Union flag and Lincoln took this action as an act of rebellion and insurrection…… The Civil War had begun! Fort Sumter: Symbolic Value The Confederacy felt their case for recognition as an independent nation would be compromised as long as an armed power maintained its presence in one of its own harbors. It was a question of saving face Lincoln Faces the Crisis Lincoln exercised extraordinary power and at times exceeded the executive power in the Constitution In April 1861 he requested the Governors of the Northern states to provide 75,000 militia for 90 days to put down the rebellion In May 1861 he: Asked for volunteers to enlist for 3 years Enlarged the regular army Ordered a naval blockade of the confederate coast Ordered a suspension of habeas corpus- the right to be arbitrary arrested. Lincoln did this to prevent dissenters from damaging the war effort and if effect, damaging the preservation of the Union Aided the western part of Virginia Arranged for supervised voting Secured the B & O railroad and put down rioters War Aims: Goals CONFEDERACY Clearly Defined Self-determination: to win independence To govern themselves To preserve their way of life; slavery To defend their homes and families UNION Less Tangible To preserve the Union (1861) To free the slaves (after 1863) 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. The North retained control of more than 2/3rds of the states (19 free states and 4 slave border states) population - 22 million (800,000 immigrants entered during the war years) Manufacturing= 90% of U.S. industrial goods, esp. munitions (steel and iron factories) Efficient railroad system= 30,000 miles of railroad (mobility of troops and supplies) Possessed more than 75% of the nations finances Controlled the Navy, which could be used to blockade s. ports and shut down the s. eco. Superior leaders: Lincoln advised the generals but left the fighting up to them: Offensive warfare Capable military leaders= Ulysses S. Grant The Union George McClellan Irwin McDowell President Lincoln Ulysses S Grant Ambrose Burnside William T. Sherman The Union Strategy Offensive Warfare; Lincoln believed the Southern states were in rebellion 1. Blockade the Confederate Coast 2. Advance along and seize the Mississippi River and divide the Confederacy in half 3. Seize the interior railroad lines to cut off Confederate supply lines 4. Seize Richmond, the Confederate capital Overview of the North’s Civil War Strategy “Anaconda Plan” Advantages of the Confederacy 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. The South was geographically 11 compact states Defending is always easier than attacking - (familiar w/climate and territory, possible psychological advantages) Farmers made better foot soldiers than factory workers Southern boys could shoot better with more accuracy Confederates had excellent generals -Robert E. Lee and Thomas “Stonewall” Jackson Profitable economy based on cotton exports The South had many friends in Britain and Southern leaders expected their support South seized federal weapons, ran the blockade, and developed their iron works The Confederacy James Longstreet “Stonewall Jackson” Jefferson Davis George Pickett Robert E Lee The Confederate Strategy 1. 2. 3. Defensive warfare; Davis believed the South had seceded and was an independent nation To defend the South with an aggressive defense To drive North to demoralize and divert Union forces To seize Washington, DC Peninsula Campaign April to July 1862 First Bull Run July1861 Civilians showed up to “watch” the battle Showed the inexperience of the troops Many troops had different uniforms and fired upon their own men Stonewall Jackson earned his nickname Union troops panicked and began to flee towards DC Washington, DC was left open to attack but the CSA missed an opportunity to attack Confederate victory; boosts morale The Union decided to move against Richmond McClellan displayed weakness that would end his career McClellan delayed the attack and pushed too slow; he was in position to strike several times but surrendered the initiative Lee launched several surprise attacks and wins McClellan is replaced and the campaign abandoned Union Strategies: 1st Bull Run and the Peninsula Campaign Battle of Antietam September 17, 1862 Bloodiest 24 hours of the war Lee’s plans fell into Union hands; McClellan was confident Although it was a victory for the North, it could have been decisive if McClellan had begun an offensive the second day but he did not pursue Lee Lincoln went to the battlefield and fired McClellan for not taking action Strategically it was a victory for the Union because Lincoln used the news of the battle to issue the Emancipation Proclamation War in the East: Antietam Lincoln Visits the Battlefield It freed the slaves only in states that have seceded from the Union It did not free slaves in border states This ended the Confederate hopes of being recognized as a nation by Britain Lincoln really announced that slavery would die and the entire South would be a military target It aggravated racial prejudice in the South as millions of whites were horrified that the slaves might be freed War in the West: The Anaconda Plan Admiral David Farragut April 1862 Union fleet takes port of New Orleans Within two months most of Louisiana under Union control Only city of Vicksburg, Miss remained as a southern stronghold Fort Henry and Fort Donnelson Feb 1862 Forts on strategic points on the Tennessee and Cumberland river Captured by Grant’s Union forces Opened up the invasion of the Mississippi River and the Western Front Battle of Shiloh Tennessee April 6th 1862 U.S. Grant failed to send out cavalry scouts for recon South ambushes Union campsite Union forces dig trenches and fight off rebels 20,000 causalities Both sides learn the importance of scouts and trenches Lee realized that the South was in dire straits and decided that it was crucial to attack the North on its own territory July 1-3, 1863 - BATTLE OF GETTYSBURG, Pa. Confederate bombardment; Union held firm on July 3, General Pickett led 15,000 Confederate Troops across open fields - Union mowed them down (= "Pickett’s Charge") Lee was defeated and retreated to Virginia Gettysburg is the largest battle in the history of the Western Hemisphere. Over 100, 000 people died in 3 days It was the last time the South invaded the North. Pickett’s Charge at Gettysburg In the Gettysburg Address, Lincoln states: “…our fathers brought forth on this continent a new nation, conceived in liberty and dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal. Now we are engaged in a great civil war, testing whether that nation or any nation so conceived and so dedicated can long endure…we here highly resolve that these dead shall not have died in vain, that this nation under God shall have a new birth of freedom, and that government of the people, by the people, for the people shall not perish from the earth.” The Monitor Vicksburg July 4, 1863 Won by U.S. Grant, cut South in 1/2 and gave the Union control of Mississippi River Grant was then given control of all Union armies began a "scorched earth" policy to defeat the South General Sheridan decimated Va.'s Shenandoah Valley Union Victory in the West Sherman: Atlanta & His “March to the Sea” May- Dec. 1864 General Sherman given task of taking Atlanta which he captured Sept. 2 Lincoln needed this victory to secure his reelection Sherman cut himself/army from the supply base With 60,000 troops he led his "March through Georgia" saw total destruction from Atlanta to Savannah The path of destruction was 300 miles long and 60 miles wide= TOTAL WAR TOTAL WAR=Attacking Civilians Civilians were now military targets! Sherman’s Neckties “War is hell” William Tecumseh Sherman “If you kill the civilians will to resist, you kill the army’s will to resist” William Tecumseh Sherman William Carney After the Emancipation Proclamation blacks began to join the Union Army Initially they were only used for manual labor Eventually, Blacks saw live combat 54th regiment out of Massachusetts- Glory Election 1864 Democrats nominate George McClellan on a platform of negotiated peace Radical Republicans oppose Lincoln because they feel he will be too easy on the Confederacy Republicans who support and nominate Lincoln call themselves the National Union Party Election Results 1864 Lincoln’s Second Inaugural In his 2nd Inaugural address, Lincoln states: “Both parties deprecated war, but one of them would make war rather than let the nation survive, and the other would accept war rather than let it perish, and the war came.” The surrender at Appomattox Courthouse April 3, 1865 - Grant took Richmond Va. - final blow to Lee's army Lee surrenders on April 9, 1865 at APPOMATTOX COURTHOUSE All Confederate troops forced to take an oath of loyalty to U.S. otherwise, terms of surrender were lenient Lincoln didn't want a humiliated South and further conflict issue of states' rights now "solved"- federal government had asserted its status Appomattox Courthouse Over 618,000 military deaths during Civil War. EFFECTS OF CIVIL WAR creation of a single unified country abolition of slavery increased power to fed. gov't – killed the issue of states rights U.S. now an industrial nation a stronger sense of nationalism w. lands increasingly opened to settlement South was economically and physically devastated, w/ the plantation system crippled...thus Reconstruction (rebuilding the U.S.) - but a deep hatred of the North remained... Ford’s Theater Lincoln’s Assassination April 14, 1865 John Wilkes Booth shot President Lincoln Lincoln was attending a play Booth jumped on the stage during the play and broke his leg