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Chapter 11. The Civil War. North (Union & Yankees) = Preserve the Union Uncommitted States Delaware Kentucky Missouri Maryland * . South (Confederacy & Rebels) = Independence. Goals. North Less than 17,000 soldiers 1/3 of officers fought for Confederacy ½ of Naval Ships usable.
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Chapter 11 The Civil War
North (Union &Yankees) = Preserve the Union Uncommitted States Delaware Kentucky Missouri Maryland * South (Confederacy & Rebels) = Independence Goals
North Less than 17,000 soldiers 1/3 of officers fought for Confederacy ½ of Naval Ships usable South No army or navy Solely dependent on state militias Preparations
North More states Larger population Manufacturing Army, navy, and merchant marine South Military tradition “King Cotton” = European support Short war would benefit the South Resources
North- Lincoln stretches presidential powers Martial law imposed Opening of private mail Arrests war protesters Suspends writ of habeas corpus Opposition to Lincoln - Copperheads- Peace Democrats - Radicals- aggressive war to end slavery South Confederation of sovereign states No power to tax Could not interfere with state activities Could not interfere with slavery Legislative = Confederate Congress Judicial = Supreme Court Executive = One six year term (Jefferson Davis & VP Alexander Stephens) Governments
North Wheat #1 export Railroad system Manufacturing (helped North become wealthy during the war) South Tobacco had little value Cotton used only as a bargaining chip Food production Industrial expansion (Tredegar Iron Works-Richmond, VA) Economies
North Borrowing – sold war bonds to the public Taxation – income tax, excise tax on whiskey, business tax, Morrill Tariff Act- raised import duties by 25% Paper $ = Greenbacks National Banking Act - created and protected $ - Eliminated state banks South Taxation = less than 1% Loans = $150 million in bonds Paper $ - $700 million in currency notes Inflation rates N – 80% S – 9000% Raising $
North Population = 22 million Manufacturing and food production Railroad Civilian leadership South Defense of home soil Leadership of officers Experience with guns and horses “King Cotton” – 80% of European cotton came from South Advantages
A War of Firsts • Railroad • Ironclad Ships (Monitor and Merrimac) • Machine Gun • Repeating Rifles • Trenches and Fortifications • Landmines • Naval torpedoes • Portable Telegraphs • Balloon Reconnaissance missions • 1st US draft • Use of Black Troops (54th Massachusetts) • 1st photo • 1st medal of honor = led to massive casualties
Battles • Fort Sumter – April 12, 1861 - first shots fired to start the Civil War - Symbol of Union power result: Confederate victory, but united the North
Bull Run (Manassas Junction) • Union victory = capture Richmond, VA • “Picnic Battle” • Thomas “Stonewall” Jackson turns tide Result: Confederate victory and proves to Lincoln he will need a large well trained army
Anaconda Plan-Winfield Scott • Army of Potomac led by “Tardy” George McClellan • Eastern Campaign – take Richmond, VA • Western Campaign – Drive Confederacy from Mississippi using gunboats = split the South • Blockade Confederate coast – cut off commercial lifeline with Europe
Monitor v. Merrimac • March 1862, off coast of VA near Hampton Roads • First battle between ironclad ships in American history • Result: Draw
Shiloh • April 6, 1862 • Ulysses Grant invades western Tennessee in February & captures Fort Henry and Fort Donelson (“Unconditional Surrender” Grant) • Ambushed at the crossroads • Result: Union victory and Confederacy unable to hold onto Mississippi Valley • Lessons Learned 1. Need for divisional commanders, trenches and forts 2. People give up any hope for a quick victory
Naval Blockade • Spring 1862 David Farragut (N) captures New Orleans and Baton Rouge • Result: Confederacy only holds onto Vicksburg and Port Hudson in the west
Peninsula Campaign • Robert E. Lee (S) prevents McClellan from capturing Richmond • Lincoln replaces McClellan with General John Pope
2nd Bull Run • August 1862 • Lee defeats Pope at Manassas Junction • Result: Confederate victory and Pope replaced by McClellan
Antietam* Turning Point? • September 17, 1862 • South shifts to offensive strategy • McClellan finds Lee’s secret plans • McClellan cuts Lee off at Sharpsburg, MD near Antietam Creek • Bloodiest single day battle in US History • Result: Union victory, McClellan fired and replaced by Ambrose Burnside, Britain and France postpone recognizing the Confederacy, Lincoln issues the Emancipation Proclamation
British Neutrality? Trent Incident 1861 • British diplomats (James Mason & John Sidell) captured by Union warship • British send 8,000 troops to Canada Confederate Warships Built in England • Alabama – caused $419 million in damage to Union Disliked Slavery
Lincoln Changes Cause of War • Bloody Fighting • Slavery Helped Confederacy War Effort • Diplomatic Relations with Britain
Emancipation ProclamationJan. 1, 1863 • Slaves behind Confederate lines set free • Broadened base of war • Gained support from Britain • Recruitment of African Americans soldiers (54th & 55th regiments)
Prisons • Andersonville, GA – Confederate • Camp Douglas (Elmira, NY) - Union
Fredericksburg • Dec. 13, 1862 • Result: Ambrose Burnside defeated by Confederates • Burnside replaced by Joseph Hooker
Chancellorsville • May 1863 • Stonewall Jackson fatally wounded by one of his own men • Result: Confederate victory, Hooker replaced by George Meade • Lee moves into Pennsylvania
Gettysburg • July 1-3, 1863 “Turning Point” • Union – Cemetery Ridge and Little Round Top • Confederates – Seminary Ridge • “Shoe Battle” • “Pickett’s Charge” (General George Pickett) • Result: Union victory, Lee never poses a threat to the Union, and Meade is replaced by Ulysses S. Grant in March 1864
Gettysburg Address • Nov. 19, 1863 • Lincoln gives speech dedicating a national cemetery to the fallen soldiers of Gettysburg (2 minutes long)
Vicksburg • July 4, 1863 • Result: Grant takes Vicksburg, MS cutting the Confederacy in half • Named commander of the Union Army • “Butcher Grant”
Sherman’s March to the Sea • Fall 1863 (Tennessee to Savannah, GA) • William T. Sherman changes the history of modern warfare by attacking civilian centers • “War is hell.” “To realize what war is, one should follow in our tracks.”
Lincoln’s Re-election 1864 • Lincoln (National Union Party) VS. • George McClellan (Democrat) • Lincoln changes name of Republican Party for more support • Re-elected and Andrew Johnson elected VP
Lee’s Surrender • April 9, 1865 • Appomattox Courthouse Richmond, VA • “Let them have their horses to plow with, and, if you like, their guns to shoot crows with. I want no one punished.” - President Lincoln
Lincoln’s Assassination • April 14, 1865 • Shot by John Wilkes Booth while watching the play Our American Cousin at Ford’s Theater • Mourned by all in the country