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Chapter Introduction Section 1: The Opposing Sides Section 2: The Early Stages Section 3: Life During the War Section 4: The Turning Point Section 5: The War Ends Visual Summary Big Ideas Geography and History The Union hoped to seize the Mississippi River valley and cut the Confederacy in two. Content Vocabulary • bounty • blockade runner Academic Vocabulary • assemble • crucial People and Events to Identify • “Stonewall” Jackson • David G. Farragut • Ulysses S. Grant • George B. McClellan • Emancipation Proclamation Do you agree that the government should have the right to force people to fight in a war? A. Agree B. Disagree A. A B. B 0% A 0% B Mobilizing the Troops To fight the war successfully, it became clear to leaders on both sides that they would need conscription to ensure the necessary number of troops. Mobilizing the Troops (cont.) • In the first months of the Civil War, President Lincoln was under great pressure to strike quickly against the South. • However, during a fight along the Bull Run River near Manassas Junction, “Stonewall” Jackson proved that this war would not be a short one. Mobilizing the Troops (cont.) • Fewer young men volunteered as the war dragged on, and both governments had to resort to conscription. • The North tried to encourage voluntary enlistment by offering a bounty to individuals who promised to serve three years in the military. • Congress finally introduced a draft in 1863 to raise necessary troops. Which type of person was not exempt from being drafted in the South? A. Key government workers B. Teachers 0% D 0% C A B0% C D B D. Planters who held at least 20 enslaved African Americans A. B. 0% C. D. A C. Doctors The Naval War Although the Union had experienced setbacks on land, its naval forces successfully blockaded Southern ports and took control of the mouth of the Mississippi River. The Naval War (cont.) • In April 1861, President Lincoln proclaimed a blockade of all Confederate ports. • Although the Union blockade became increasingly effective as the war dragged on, Union vessels were thinly spread and found it difficult to stop all of the blockade runners. • At the same time, Confederate ships operating out of foreign ports attacked Northern merchant ships at sea. The Naval War (cont.) • In February 1862, David G. Farragut took command of a Union force of 42 warships and 15,000 soldiers led by General Benjamin Butler. − On April 25, 1862, Farragut arrived in New Orleans. − Six days later, General Butler’s troops took control of the South’s largest city, and a center of cotton trade. Where were the Confederate ships Florida and Alabama built? A. Germany B. New Orleans C. Great Britain D. Boston 0% A A. B. C. 0% D. B A B C 0% D C 0% D bounty money given as a reward, as to encourage enlistment in the army blockade runner ship that runs through a blockade, usually to smuggle goods through a protected area