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First Modern War Why Was It So Deadly? • Time of military transition – Officers still thought that the idea of forming large masses and using a lot of firepower was the best way to fight. • Weapons were becoming more accurate • Neither side was fully prepared for war • Spies gathered information on both sides Weapons Used • • • • • Small Arms Artillery Ironclad Ships Edged Weapons Hand Grenades Small Arms • Many different types of guns were used in the war. • Muskets – Old muskets were not accurate so having long lines of soldiers was not a problem – New muskets were much more accurate. • Rifles – shoulder guns with grooves – Example: Whitworth Rifle • Very Accurate • Telescopic lens • Handguns – Example – Colt Revolver • Often used by cavalry Artillery • Howitzers – lower muzzle velocity and arc their shots in the air • Mortars – have a very pronounced arc of flight and were not very accurate http://members.tripod.com /~ProlificPains/arty.htm Artillery Ammunition • Fuses – Shell wrapped around a fuse – Paper fuse - The paper fuse could be cut to burn for the desired time. • Paper fuses were common but often unreliable and easily damaged by moisture • Solid shot – Used against long range fixed targets such as forts • Grape shot – Consisted of two or more balls connected by a chain • Looked like grapes – Used mostly in naval battles to knock down masts and rigging Ironclad Ships • Ironclad ships were used to fight and more importantly for a naval blockade – Blockade - Set up of ships used to block off ports and cut off supplies • Examples: – USS Monitor • Usually consisted of a crew around 7 – CSS Virginia • Slightly bigger, consisted of a crew around 8 Edged Weapons • Included weapons such as bayonets, sabers, swords, cutlasses, Bowie knives, pikes, and lances. – Bayonet – sharp tip at the end of a rifle – Saber – cavalry swords • These weapons were used only when handto-hand combat was engaged in. Other Weapons • Hand Grenades – Lit by hand and thrown at the opposing side • Airships – Similar looking to blimps – Filled with air and dropped bombs • Charvaux-de-frise – 10 to 12 foot logs attached to wooden stakes – Used to slow down the enemy • Minie Ball – Created by Captain Claude Minie (a Frenchman) – Expanded with rifled grooves and spun from the muzzle of the gun – Allowed the ball to be 5 times more accurate than any other weapon New Technology • Railroad – Used to move men and ammunition to the front line • Telegraph – Sent cryptic messages about locations of troops • Land Mines • Early Trenches • Balloons – Used to locate other troops Union Spies • Pauline Cushman – Actress who entertained Confederate troops and gathered information for the Union • Lafayette Curry Baker – Caught several times but lied his way out of trouble • Allan Pinkerton – His detective agency interrogated slaves and others for information – His information was often misinterpreted and he told McClellan several times that the Confederate army was much larger than it actually was. Confederate Spies • Nancy Hart – Excellent rider and carried messages • Henry Thomas Harrison – Scout on the Potomac River • Sam Davis – Part of a group called “Coleman’s Scouts” – Caught by the Union and hung – Called the Confederate’s Nathan Hale African American Spies • The Dabney’s – Mrs. Dabney served as a laundress for the Confederates – Signaled to her husband using the clothesline • John Scobell – Best known black Pinkerton agent • W.H. Ringgold – Riverboat worker who provided information for the Union