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The American Civil War What Do We Call It? The War for Constitutional Liberty The War for Southern Independence The Second American Revolution The War for States' Rights Mr. Lincoln's War The Southern Rebellion The War for Southern Rights The War of the Southern Planters The War of the Rebellion The Second War for Independence The War to Suppress Yankee Arrogance The War of Secession The Great Rebellion The War Against Northern Aggression The Late Unpleasantness The War for Nationality The War for Southern Nationality The War Against Slavery The War Between the States The War of the Sixties The Yankee Invasion The War for Separation The War for Abolition The War for the Union The Confederate War The Brothers' War The War for Southern Freedom The War of the North and South The Lost Cause http://www.civilwarhome.com/civilwarnames.htm What is a civil war? When brother fought brother… A civil war is a military conflict what arises from a desire for usually radical change in society as a result of either cultural, social, religious, political or economic disputes due to diametrically opposed and uncompromising ideas about the leadership, administration and management of the population and territory it occupies, and which is resolved through use of weapons. What is a Civil War? A civil war is a military conflict what arises from a desire for usually radical change in society as a result of either cultural, social, religious, political or economic disputes due to diametrically opposed and uncompromising ideas about the leadership, administration and management of the population and territory it occupies, and which is resolved through use of weapons. The opponents are usually representatives of the same culture, society or nationality, and contest the right for the control of political power, and with it the right to formulate policy for future administration of the population and resources of the territory where the dispute takes place. Causes of the Civil War Sectionalism Culture differences Lingering issues over constitution: States rights Legality of secession Slavery Economic differences SECTIONALISM Placing the interests of one’s own region ahead of the interests of the nation as a whole. Causes of the Civil War Different cultures Agricultural - Industrial Lingering Issues Over Constitution Compromises no longer working Slavery Missouri applied to become a state in the United States, WITH SLAVERY BEING LEGAL. Why is that a problem? Congress agreed and passed the Missouri Compromise in 1820 Fought for months in Congress Henry Clay tried to make both regions happy by admitting Missouri as a slave state and Maine as a free state. Maine enters union with MO. Missouri Comp also banned slavery north of the 36°30’ line. Economic changes created divisions in the US – and particularly the North and South North depended on manufacturing and trade. South depended on agriculture and slavery. Southern Population Sequence of Events November 6, 1860 December 20, 1860 January 9, 1861 January 10, 1861 January 11, 1861 January 19, 1861 January 26, 1861 February 23, 1861 March 4, 1861 April 13, 1861 April 17, 1861 May 6, 1861 May 20, 1861 June 8, 1861 Lincoln elected President South Carolina secedes Mississippi secedes Florida secedes Alabama secedes Georgia secedes Louisiana secedes Texas secedes Lincoln inaugurated Fort Sumter falls Virginia secedes Arkansas secedes North Carolina secedes Tennessee secedes Home of the American Civil War http://www.civilwarhome.com/timeline.htm Choosing Sides Objectives Union Preserve the Union … by force if necessary Confederacy Protect lifestyle Don’t lose How could the protagonists obtain their objectives? Strategy Definitions Strategy A plan to employ all available resources to achieve a goal or objective. [working definition] Definitions Strategy “the employment of the instruments (elements) of power (political/diplomatic, economic, military, and informational) to achieve the political objectives of the state in cooperation or in competition with other actors pursuing their own objectives. “ US Army War College Quoted by H. Richard Yarger “Toward a Theory of Strategy” Definitions Strategy “the employment of the instruments (elements) of power (political/diplomatic, economic, military, and informational) to achieve the political objectives of the state in cooperation or in competition with other actors pursuing their own objectives. “ US Army War College Quoted by H. Richard Yarger “Toward a Theory of Strategy” Definitions Strategy “the employment of the instruments (elements) of power (political/diplomatic, economic, military, and informational) to achieve the political objectives of the state in cooperation or in competition with other actors pursuing their own objectives. “ US Army War College Quoted by H. Richard Yarger “Toward a Theory of Strategy” Elements of National Power Diplomacy Communication Military Economic Resolve Elements of National Power Diplomacy Union • Established relationships • Experienced diplomatic corps • Abolitionist stand favored by European nations Confederacy • Sympathy of revolutionary countries (France) • Support of trading partners (France and Britain) Elements of National Power Communications Union • Extensive rail system • Telegraph Confederacy • Extensive river system • Telegraph Elements of National Power Military Union • Established organization ( + / - ) • Strong central control • Larger manpower pool ( 22 million vs. 6 million [free] ) • Stronger navy Confederacy • Best generals • Interior lines • Easier task Elements of National Power Economics Union • Established industrial base • Manpower pool • Financial strength • Merchant shipping Confederacy • Trading Relationships with Europe Elements of National Power Resolve Union • Strong abolitionist feelings, but … not universal • Strong resolve to preserve Union Confederacy • Very strong beliefs in their cause • Fighting on their own ground to protect way of life Elements of National Power (Pre-war assessment) Union Diplomacy X Communications x Military x Economics X Resolve Confederacy X Elements of National Power A Contemporary Assessment The North can make a steam-engine, locomotive or railway car; hardly a yard of cloth or a pair of shoes can you make. You are rushing into war with one of the most powerful, ingeniously mechanical and determined people on earth--right at your doors. You are bound to fail. Only in your spirit and determination are you prepared for war. In all else you are totally unprepared. . . . At first you will make headway, but as your limited resources begin to fail, and shut out from the markets of Europe by blockade as you will be, your cause will begin to wane. William Tecumseh Sherman To a Southern acquaintance prior to the war Elements of National Power Grand Strategies Union Confederacy • Isolate the South • Defend territory • Subdue the rebellion with minimum animosity • Gain international legitimacy • Rebuild the Union to preclude future dissolution • Wear down the Union Military Strategies Union The Anaconda Plan Proposed by General Winfield Scott • Blockade the Confederate ports & coast • Split the Confederacy along the Mississippi and Tennessee Rivers • Capture the Confederate capital Military Strategies Union The Anaconda Plan Wikipedia (public domain) Union Strategy Public Broadcasting System Military Strategies Confederacy ? Military Strategies Confederacy Use advantage of interior lines to defend home territory Interior Lines Military Strategies Confederacy Use advantage of interior lines to defend home territory Employ commerce raiders to disrupt Union shipping Defeat the Union army in a decisive battle And so, the war began … The last war of the 18th century … … or the first war of the 20th century? Petersburg VA 1865