Download Choosing Sides (cont.) - History With Mr. Wallace

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Transcript
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
How Is Modern Warfare
Different?
The Civil War was in many respects
the first modern war. Both sides
fielded large armies equipped with
mass-produced weapons.
Railroads and the telegraph
ensured rapid communications and
troop movements. Hundreds of
thousands of soldiers were killed.
• Why was the North able to defeat
the South?
• How did specific battles affect
President Lincoln’s political
decisions?
The Opposing Sides
What advantages and
disadvantages did the
North and South have at
the start of the Civil War?
Big Ideas
Government and Society The Confederacy’s weak
central government had difficulty coordinating the war
effort.
Content Vocabulary
• greenback
• habeas corpus
• conscription
• attrition
Academic Vocabulary
• sufficient
• implement
People and Events to Identify
• Robert E. Lee
• Copperheads
• James Mason
• John Slidell
• Trent Affair
• Anaconda Plan
Do you feel that the president should
be able to change a law during
wartime?
A. Yes
B. No
A. A
B. B
0%
A
0%
B
Choosing Sides
The Union had economic advantages at
the start of the Civil War, but was
politically divided; if the Confederacy
could gain European support and wear
down the North, it had a chance at
victory.
Choosing Sides (cont.)
• Robert E. Lee—one of the most respected
senior officers in the U.S. Army—received an
offer from General Winfield Scott to
command the Union’s troops.
• Although Lee had spoken against secession,
he resigned from the army and offered his
services to the Confederacy.
• Although the South had many experienced
officers to lead its troops in battle, the North
had several economic advantages.
Choosing Sides (cont.)
• Some of the North’s advantages included
the following:
− larger population
− control of a navy
− almost 90% of the nation’s factories
− more miles of railroad track
− control of the national treasury
Resources of the Union and of the Confederacy
Choosing Sides (cont.)
− continued revenue from tariffs
− large reserves of cash in banks
• Congress passed the Legal Tender Act in
February 1862, which created a national
currency and allowed the government to
issue paper money, or greenbacks.
Resources of the Union and of the Confederacy
Choosing Sides (cont.)
• As the Civil War began, President Lincoln
had to contend with divisions within his own
party.
• The Democrats also split into different
factions—the War Democrats and the Peace
Democrats (also called Copperheads).
• One major disagreement between
Republicans and Democrats concerned the
use of conscription.
Choosing Sides (cont.)
• To enforce the militia law, Lincoln suspended
writs of habeas corpus.
• Although the South had no organized
opposition party, President Jefferson Davis
still faced many problems.
− The Confederate constitution limited his
ability to conduct the war.
Choosing Sides (cont.)
• The outbreak of the Civil War put the major
governments of Europe in a difficult position.
• The British and French met informally with
the Confederate representatives in May
1861.
• In late 1861, the Confederacy sent James
Mason to Britain and John Slidell to
France.
Choosing Sides (cont.)
• A Union warship intercepted a British ship
and took Mason and Slidell prisoner—later
known as the Trent Affair.
• They were released after a few tense weeks
and continued on their mission to seek
Confederate allies in Europe.
President Lincoln suspended the writ of
habeas corpus for which people?
A. Those who opposed the war
B. Those who openly supported
the rebels
C. Those who encouraged others
to resist the militia draft
D. A and B
E. B and C
0%
A
A. A
B. B
C. C
D.0% D0%
0%
E.C ED
B
0%
E
greenback
a piece of U.S. paper money first
issued by the North during the
Civil War
conscription
requiring people to enter military
service
habeas corpus
a legal order for an inquiry to
determine whether a person has
been lawfully imprisoned