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Transcript
 Essential
Question:
– What factors led to the
outbreak of the Civil War?
 Warm-Up
Question:
– If the Union had more troops,
industry, & transportation when
the Civil War began, what
should their war strategy be?
A Nation Goes to War
Video (4:00)
When
Lincoln was
elected
in 1860,
4
more
Southern
states
seceded
in
1861
The
Start
of
the
Civil
War,
1861
7 Southern
seceded
the Union &
whenstates
Lincoln
calledfrom
for military
formed
the Confederate
States
America
volunteers
to “preserve
theofUnion”
The Civil War began when Fort Sumter
was fired upon by Confederate soldiers
Strategies & Advantages
 The
Union strategy during the war
was called the Anaconda Plan:
–Blockade the coast, seize the
Mississippi River to divide the
South, & take Richmond
–Exploit South’s dependency on
foreign trade & its inability to
manufacture weapons
–Relied on Northern advantages
in population, industry, & military
Take the CSA capital
Take control of the
at Richmond
Mississippi River
Ulysses
Grant in the
West
Divide the West
from South
Blockade the
Southern coast
George
McClellan
was in
charge of
Army of the
Potomac
Strategies & Advantages
 The
Confederate strategy during
the war was an Offensive Defense:
–Protect Southern territory from
“Northern aggression” but attack
into Union territory when the
opportunity presents itself
–Get Britain & France to join their
cause because of European
dependency on “King Cotton”
–Drag out the war as long as
possible to make the North quit
Political Leadership During the Civil War
During the Civil War,
President Jefferson Davis
During the Civil War,
had a difficult time:President Lincoln used
•The CSA Constitution“emergency powers” to
protect “national security”:
protected states’ rights
so state governors •Suspended
could
habeas corpus
refuse to send him money
(Laws requiring evidence
orThe
troops
before citizens
can &
beCSA
national government
in the USA
jailed)
•CSA
currency
inflated
relied
on volunteer
armies in the beginning,
by
•Closed down
newspapers
but7,000%
soon needed conscription
(draft)
to supply
that with
did not
support the war
their armies
troops
New York City Draft Riots
Fighting the Civil War
1861-1865
Fighting the Civil War: 1861-1865
 From 1861 to mid-1863, the Confederate
army was winning the Civil War:
–Defensive strategy carried out by
superior Southern generals like
Robert E. Lee & Stonewall Jackson
–Disagreements among military &
political leaders in the North
Civil War Battles: 1861-1862
Bull Run & the Seven
Days Campaign (1.50)
Antietam &
Chancellorsville (1.12)
Bull Run (Manassas), 1861:
The 1st battle of the Civil War;
Stonewall Jackson kept the
Union army from taking the
CSA capital at Richmond
Seven Pines,
1862 (CSA)
Seven Days,
1862 (CSA)
Shiloh,
1862 (USA)
2nd Bull Run,
1862 (CSA)
From 1861-1862, the CSA
had success in the East,
but the USA had success
in the West
New Orleans,
1862 (USA)
Antietam, 1862:
General
Lee’s 1st attempt to invade
outside the CSA was halted
by McClellan
Read
“A Brief Narrative on the
Battle of Antietam, 1862”
Antietam, 1862
 Even
though the Battle of Antietam
ended without a clear winner, it
had important effects on the North:
–The battle convinced Britain &
France not to support the
Confederacy in the war
–The battle convinced Lincoln that
the time was right to make the
emancipation of slaves the new
focus of the war for the North
Emancipation Proclamation
 After Antietam,
Lincoln issued the
Emancipation Proclamation:
“…all persons
as slaves within
Stateall
or
–Thisheld
executive
orderany
freed
designated
part ofina State,
the people territories
whereof
slaves
Confederate
shall then be in rebellion against the United States,
didthenceforward,
not free slaves
in thefree; and
shall be–It
then,
and forever
border
states but
it United
gave States,
the
the Executive
Government
of the
includingNorth
the military
andreason
naval authority
a new
fight thereof,
will recognize and maintain the freedom of such
–Inspired
to such
persons,
and will doSouthern
no act or actsslaves
to repress
which
Southern
persons,escape
or any of them,
in forced
any efforts
they may
make forwhites
their actual
freedom...”
to worry
about their farms
States Impacted by the
Emancipation Proclamation
Lincoln,
“The
Great
Emancipator”
Escaped slaves in NC coming into Union lines
Fredericksburg, 1862
(CSA)
Chancellorsville, 1863
The Confederates won, but
Stonewall Jackson was killed; Lee
said of Jackson: “He has lost his left
arm, but I have lost my right arm”
After Antietam, the
Confederates continued
to win in the East
Despite being outnumbered &
But, the Union Army
wasdominated
having the
under-equipped,
the CSA
success
in the
West
under
the
fighting
in the
East
from
1861-1863
due
leadership
of
Ulysses
S
Grant
to better generals & a defensive strategy
Conclusions:
1861-1863
By mid-1863, the weight
of the Northern population
& industrial capacity will
begin to turn the tide of the
war in favor of the Union
Emancipation Proclamation Activity
 Read Documents A-E on “Lincoln’s
Changing Views on Emancipation”
& answer the questions provided
 If Lincoln’s emancipation did not free
any slaves, is it more important than the
fact that the battle of Antietam led to the
failure of “King Cotton” diplomacy?
 Examine the transparency (Hum12) &
identify 3 impacts of the Emancipation
Proclamation for African-Americans
 Essential
Question:
– What factors helped the Union win
the Civil War by 1865?
 Warm-Up
Question:
– Why was the Confederacy able to
win the majority of Civil War battles
from 1861 to mid-1863?
– Why was Antietam such a “turning
point” in the Civil War?
– Examine the transparency (Hum12)
& identify 3 impacts of the
Emancipation Proclamation for
African-Americans
Fighting the Civil War: 1861-1865
 When
the Civil War began, most
expected the fighting to end quickly,
but the war lasted until 1865 due to:
–The commitment of the Union &
Confederacy to “total war”
–Excellent Southern generals like
Robert E. Lee & Stonewall Jackson
–Improved, industrial weaponry
New Weapons but Old Tactics
 New
weapons:
–Long-range artillery & the
Gatling gun (1st machine gun)
–Cone-shaped bullets & grooved
barrel rifles for more accuracy
–Ironclad naval ships like the
USS Monitor & CSS Virginia
 Old tactics such as massed
formations & frontal assaults
 Led to huge casualty rates
Dead on the Battlefield
The Tide of the War Turns in 1863
 By
1863, the Confederacy was having
difficulty sustaining the fight:
–Attempts to lure Britain & France into
the war had failed
–The Union blockade, limited Southern
manufacturing, & lack of grain fields
left CSA soldiers ill-supplied
–To pay for the war, the CSA printed
money leading to massive inflation
Civil War Battles: 1863-1865
Video (4.16)
Gettysburg,
Vicksburg,1863:
1863:
In July,
Robert
Lee decided
to
Grant
cut offESouthern
access
take
his victory
at
toadvantage
MississippiofRiver
& divided
Chancellorsville
attack
Northern
the South &
into
two halves;
soilGrant
to end
thethen
war promoted
quickly byto
was
crushing
Union Union
moralearmy
lead the entire
Gettysburg proved to be the
turning point of the war; Lee was
halted, the CSA never again
attacked Union soil, & the Union
army began winning the war
Now
we
are
engaged
in
a
The
world
will
little
—that
we here highly
Gettysburg
Address
great civil war, testing
But,or
in long
a larger
sense,
note
remember
resolve
that
these
dead
whether
that
nation,
or
any
ItFour
is
rather
for
us
to
be
score
and
seven
we can
not
dedicate,
what
we
say
here,
but
shall
not
have
died
in
nation
so conceived
and
soit
here
dedicated
to
the
years
ago
our
we
not
consecrate,
dedicated,
canforget
longnation,
endure.
cancan
never
what
vain—that
this
great
task
remaining
forefathers
brought
We
are
met
on
a
great
battlewe
can
not
hallow
this
they
did
here.
It
is
fora
under God, shall have
before
us—that
field of
that
war.
Wefrom
have
forth
on
this
continent,
ground.
For
the
brave
us
the
living,
rather,
to
new
birth
of
freedom—
come
tohonored
dedicate
adead
portion
of
these
we
a
new
nation,
men,
living
and
dead,
be
dedicated
hereresting
to the
and
that
government
of
that
field,
as a final
take
increased
devotion
conceived
in
Liberty,
who
struggled
place
for
those
who
here
unfinished
work
which
the people,
byhere,
the
to
that
cause
for
which
and
dedicated
to
the
gave
their
lives
that
that
have
consecrated
it far
they
whoand
fought
here
people,
for the
they
gave
the
last
full
nation
might
live.
Itall
is
proposition
that
abovethus
our
poor
power
have
far
so
nobly
people,
shall
not
perish
altogether
fitting
andequal.
proper
measure
of
devotion—
men
are
created
tofrom
add
or detract.
advanced.
the
earth.
that
we
should
do this.
The to
principles
thatthat
ourthe
We need
make sure
government
upon
Union
wins thewere
Civilfounded
War in order
to preserve our form of gov’t
This Civil War is a test to see if
these principles will last, because
other republics have failed
Fighting the Civil War: 1863-1865
 Under
Grant’s leadership, the Union
army was more aggressive & committed
to destroy the South’s will to fight:
–Grant appointed William T. Sherman
to lead Southern campaign
–Sherman destroyed everything of
value to the South & emancipated
slaves during his “march to the sea”
Sherman considered
“total war” necessary
to defeat the South
The Battle of Atlanta was a huge victory
for the Union because it took out a major
Southern railroad terminus
Fighting the Civil War: 1863-1865
 The
election of 1864:
–Lincoln faced a tough re-election
campaign against George McClellan
–The North’s war failures were the key
election issue
–When Atlanta fell during Sherman’s
“March to the Sea,” Lincoln was
overwhelmingly reelected
In his 2nd inaugural address, Lincoln promised
a Reconstruction Plan for the Union with
“malice towards none & charity for all”
Appomattox, 1865:
Grant defeated Lee at
Appomattox ending the Civil War
On April 9, 1865, Lee surrendered
to Grant at Appomattox Courthouse,
ending the fighting of Civil War
The Death of Lincoln
Northern celebration was short lived;
On April 14, 1865, Lincoln was shot
by John Wilkes Booth
Effects of the War
 Effects
of the Civil War:
–618,000 troops were dead; More
than any other U.S. war
–The 13th Amendment was ratified
in 1865 ending slavery
–The war forever ended the states’
rights argument
–The South was destroyed; A plan
was needed to admit Southern
states back into the Union
What If? Activity:
For each of the following
“what if” prompts, create a
logical effect & explain how the
Civil War would have changed
What if…
Lincoln would have allowed
South Carolina to take
Fort Sumter in 1861?
What if…
the Confederacy
would have won a decisive
victory at Antietam in 1862?
What if…
Lincoln would have
emancipated all slaves in 1863,
including slaves in the border
states of Missouri, Kentucky,
Maryland, & Delaware?
What if…
the Southern war strategy
had been more offensive
than defensive?
What if…
Grant had lost at
Shiloh or Vicksburg?
What if…
Stephen Douglas won the
presidential election of 1860
instead of Abraham Lincoln?
What if…
the United States had lost the
Mexican-American War?
What if…
the cotton gin
had never been invented?