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Download Union Victories in the South (cont.)
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Vicksburg Falls • Union forces wanted to capture Vicksburg, Mississippi, in order to gain control of the Mississippi River and cut the South in two. • To distract the Confederate forces defending Vicksburg, General Grant ordered Benjamin Grierson to take a troop on a cavalry raid through Mississippi. • This enabled Grant to land his troops south of Vicksburg. Click the mouse button to display the information. Vicksburg Falls (cont.) • As the Union troops marched toward Vicksburg, General Grant ordered his troops to live off the country by foraging– searching and raiding for food. • Grant’s troops captured the town of Jackson and proceeded west. • The march ended by driving Confederate troops back into their defenses at Vicksburg. Click the mouse button to display the information. Vicksburg Falls (cont.) • Grant and his Union forces put Vicksburg under siege–cut off its food and supplies and bombarded the city–until the Confederate troops surrendered on July 4, 1863. • The Union victory cut the Confederacy in two. Click the mouse button to display the information. Vicksburg Falls (cont.) Why was the capture of Vicksburg an important part of the Union’s strategy? By capturing Vicksburg, the Union forces gained control of the Mississippi River and cut the South in two. Click the mouse button to display the answer. Gettysburg • President Lincoln fired General McClellan because he did not destroy Robert E. Lee’s army at Antietam. • Lincoln gave command of the Union army to General Ambrose Burnside. • Burnside ordered his troops to attack Lee’s troops entrenched on the hills south of Fredericksburg, Virginia. • The Union troops suffered enormous casualties. Click the mouse button to display the information. Gettysburg (cont.) • Lincoln replaced Burnside with General Joseph Hooker. • General Lee’s troops marched into Pennsylvania. • When Hooker failed to stop Lee, Lincoln removed Hooker and replaced him with General George Meade. • General Meade and his troops headed north to stop Lee. • Some of Lee’s troops went to Gettysburg. Click the mouse button to display the information. Gettysburg (cont.) • There they met the Union cavalry. On July 1, 1863, the Confederates pushed the Union troops out of Gettysburg and into the hills to the south. • The main troops of both armies went to the scene of the fighting. • On July 2, Lee attacked. • The Union forces held their ground. Click the mouse button to display the information. Gettysburg (cont.) • On July 3, Lee ordered 15,000 men under the command of General George E. Pickett and General A. P. Hill to attack the Union troops. • This became known as Pickett’s Charge. • The Confederate troops marched across open farmland toward the ridge where Union forces stood. • In less than half an hour of fighting, the Union forces used cannons and guns to inflict 7,000 casualties on the Confederate force. Click the mouse button to display the information. Gettysburg (cont.) • The Union forces had 23,000 casualties at Gettysburg. • The Confederates had 28,000 casualties– more than one-third of Lee’s army. • The Battle of Gettysburg was the turning point of the war in the east. • Lee’s forces remained on the defensive, the Republicans were strengthened, and the battle ensured that the British would not recognize the Confederacy. Click the mouse button to display the information. Gettysburg (cont.) • President Lincoln came to Gettysburg in November 1863 to dedicate part of the battlefield as a military cemetery. • Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address became one of the best-known speeches in American history. Click the mouse button to display the information. Gettysburg (cont.) Why was the Battle of Gettysburg a turning point of the Civil War in the east? The Battle of Gettysburg cost General Lee more than one-third of his Confederate forces. For the rest of the war, Lee’s forces remained on the defensive, slowly giving ground to the advancing Union army. The Union’s victory strengthened the Republicans politically and ensured that the British would not recognize the Confederacy. Click the mouse button to display the answer. Grant Secures Tennessee • The Union wanted to capture Chattanooga in order to control a major railroad running south to Atlanta, Georgia. • In September 1863, Union general Rosecrans forced the Confederates to evacuate Chattanooga. • When Rosecrans’s forces advanced into Georgia, Confederate general Bragg and his forces attacked them at Chickamauga Creek. • The Union forces retreated to Chattanooga. Click the mouse button to display the information. Grant Secures Tennessee (cont.) • Lincoln sent General Meade and his forces to Chattanooga to help Rosecrans. • Grant and his troops joined Rosecrans and Meade, and Grant took charge at the Battle of Chattanooga. • The Union forces attacked and defeated the Confederates on Lookout Mountain. Click the mouse button to display the information. Grant Secures Tennessee (cont.) • Grant ordered General William Tecumseh Sherman to attack Confederates north of Missionary Ridge. • This attack failed, so Grant ordered forces under General George Thomas to launch a limited attack on Missionary Ridge. • The quick, surprise charge on Missionary Ridge caused the Confederates to retreat. • The Union army gained Missionary Ridge and Chattanooga. Click the mouse button to display the information. Grant Secures Tennessee (cont.) • Lincoln appointed General Grant general in chief of the Union forces as a result of Grant’s important victories at Vicksburg and at Chattanooga. Grant Secures Tennessee (cont.) Why was General Grant appointed general in chief of the Union forces? He had captured Vicksburg, which gave the Union control of the Mississippi River, and he had captured Chattanooga, which secured eastern Tennessee and cleared the way for an invasion of Georgia. These were two crucial objectives for the Union. Click the mouse button to display the answer. Grant Versus Lee • In 1864 General Grant started a campaign against General Robert E. Lee’s forces. • Grant told Lincoln that the warfare would continue until the South surrendered. • The first battle was fought in the Wilderness near Fredericksburg, Virginia. • Next, Grant and his forces battled the Confederates near Spotsylvania. Click the mouse button to display the information. Grant Versus Lee (cont.) • Grant was unable to break the Confederate lines there, so he headed toward Cold Harbor, an important crossroads northeast of Richmond. • Grant launched an all-out assault on Lee’s forces. Lee stopped Grant, whose army had suffered heavy casualties. • General Grant ordered General Philip Sheridan and his cavalry to raid north and west of Richmond. Click the mouse button to display the information. Grant Versus Lee (cont.) • Grant then headed south past Richmond to cross the James River. • Grant ordered his troops to put Petersburg under siege. Click the mouse button to display the information. Grant Versus Lee (cont.) How did the Union strategy change under the command of General Grant? He decided to relentlessly attack Lee’s forces until the South surrendered. Click the mouse button to display the answer. Union Victories in the South • On August 5, 1864, the Union navy led by David Farragut closed the port of Mobile, Alabama. • It was the last major Confederate port on the Gulf of Mexico east of the Mississippi River. • Union General Sherman marched his troops from Chattanooga toward Atlanta in late August 1864. • To avoid being trapped in the city, Confederate General John B. Hood evacuated Atlanta on September 1. Click the mouse button to display the information. Union Victories in the South (cont.) • Sherman and his troops occupied Atlanta. • His troops burned everything in the city of military value. • The fires quickly spread and burned down more than one-third of Atlanta. Click the mouse button to display the information. Union Victories in the South (cont.) • On November 15, 1864, Sherman began his March to the Sea. • His troops cut a path of destruction through Georgia, during which they ransacked homes, burned crops, and killed cattle. • They reached the coast and seized Savannah on December 21, 1864. Click the mouse button to display the information. Union Victories in the South (cont.) • After reaching the sea, Sherman and his troops turned north toward South Carolina. • The Union troops pillaged, or looted, almost everything in their path. • They burned at least 12 cities, including South Carolina’s capital–Columbia. Click the mouse button to display the information. Union Victories in the South (cont.) What was Sherman’s March to the Sea? His troops cut a path of destruction through Georgia, during which they ransacked homes, burned crops, and killed cattle. Click the mouse button to display the answer. The South Surrenders • The capture of Atlanta came in time for Lincoln’s re-election. • Lincoln considered his reelection a mandate, a clear sign from the voters, to end slavery by amending the Constitution. • The Thirteenth Amendment to the Constitution, banning slavery in the United States, passed the House of Representatives on January 31, 1865. Click the mouse button to display the information. The South Surrenders (cont.) • General Robert E. Lee surrendered to General Grant at Appomattox Courthouse on April 9, 1865. • The terms of surrender guaranteed that the United States would not prosecute Confederate soldiers for treason. • Lincoln gave a speech in which he explained his plan for restoring the Southern states in the Union. Click the mouse button to display the information. The South Surrenders (cont.) • On April 14, 1865, John Wilkes Booth shot and killed Abraham Lincoln at Ford’s Theater. • The Civil War saved the Union and strengthened the power of the federal government over the states. • It changed American society by ending the enslavement of African Americans. • The South’s society and economy were devastated. Click the mouse button to display the information. The South Surrenders (cont.) What were the effects of the Civil War? The Civil War saved the Union and strengthened the power of the federal government over the states. It changed American society by ending the enslavement of African Americans. The South’s society and economy were devastated. Click the mouse button to display the answer.