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Mobilization, North and South. War Fever Fort Sumter: April 12, 1861 Lincoln mobilized state militias for 90 days Virginia, Arkansas, North Carolina, and Tennessee seceded from the Union. The general belief was that the war would be short
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Mobilization, North and South • War Fever • Fort Sumter: April 12, 1861 • Lincoln mobilized state militias for 90 days • Virginia, Arkansas, North Carolina, and Tennessee seceded from the Union. • The general belief was that the war would be short • War fever led many to volunteer for military service. • The initial enthusiasm for serving faded, leading to drafts by both the Union and Confederacy(first American draft) • Exceptions allowed by each side. In North, hire substitute. In South, planters with 20+ slaves exempt
Mobilization, North and South, cont’d. • The North’s advantage in resources • The North had human and economic advantages • RR, industry, people, banking, gov’t, Navy • North: 50% of military aged men fought • South: 90% of the eligible population served. • South: better leadership, defensive war
FIGURE 15–1 A Comparison of the Union and Confederate Control of Key Resources at the Outset of the Civil War
Mobilization, North and South, cont’d. • Leaders, governments, and strategies • Confederate President: Jefferson Davis, new gov’t not fully established • Union President: Abe Lincoln, established gov’t • Union: blockade South, take Richmond, control Mississippi River • Confederacy: defensive war, gain European ally, hold out until North quit
Awaiting combat, 1861: Union Soldiers from New York relax at camp awaiting orders to move to the front. Note the young African American with a broom sitting apart from the soldiers.
The War • The human toll • The heavy losses in battle changed the soldiers’ view of the war. The early bravado and enthusiasm was replaced by the sobering prospect of death. • The conditions of medical care did not improve a wounded soldier’s survival chances. Women on both sides played major roles in tending the wounded. • Disease was a major cause of death: twice as many died from disease as from wounds • Religion provided some solace to the soldiers.
Early Stages of War • Confederate victories (1st Bull Run, Peninsular Campaign, 2nd Bull Run) • Poor Union leadership: Irvin McDowell, George McClellan • Good Confederate leadership: Robert E. Lee and Stonewall Jackson • Union success in West due to Ulysses S. Grant
Turning Points, 1862 • Antietam: Bloodiest Day of War • Lee invaded Maryland in September 1862, hoping to cut railroad links in Pennsylvania. • Copies of Lee’s orders fell into Union hands and McClellan pursued Lee. • thousands of casualties, tactical draw, and forced Lee back into Virginia. • Britain and France abandon plans to recognize the Confederacy • allowed Lincoln to announce the Emancipation Proclamation
Emancipation Proclamation • At the start, war was to preserve Union, NOT to end slavery • Lincoln and others recognized military advantage of freeing slaves, freeing the slaves would also appeal to the British. • The Emancipation Proclamation freed all slaves in the states/areas still in rebellion against the Union. • The proclamation continued slaves running away to Union camps that had begun earlier. • Of the approximately 180,000 black soldiers and 20,000 black sailors who fought for the Union, over 80 percent were from the South.
War Transforms the North • Wartime legislation and politics • Lincoln used executive authority to silence opposition • suspended the writ of habeas corpus(imprisoned dissenters w/o cause or charges). • The draft aroused conflicts including the New York Draft Riot that began with an Irish mob protesting the draft. • The northern economy • wages increased during the war, prices rose higher • Labor unions revived • The northern economy fed, clothed, and armed the Union soldiers, kept people employed
The Confederacy Disintegrates • Southern politics • States’ rights was a major obstacle to the development of central authority. • Dissent increased as war continued • Calls for peace arose as early as 1863. • Southern economy • By 1863, the South experienced difficulty feeding its population. Inflation occurred, bread riots broke out. • As the war progressed, Southern soldiers had threadbare uniforms with many garments and arms taken from the Union. Their families suffered under similar conditions. • Many slaves stopped working and abandoned the plantations. • Cotton exports down
Women in the War. • Northern women • worked in industry. • worked as nurses.(Clara Barton) • The new economic opportunities opened up women’s options, including admission to higher education. • Southern women • managed plantations, working in fields alongside slaves. • worked in factories making uniforms and munitions,. • As the war continued, many women helped their deserting husbands and relatives elude Confederate authorities.
Other roles Spies • Rose O'Neal Greenhow - leader in Washington society • Sent secret message to General Beauregard which caused him to win the battle of Bull Run. • Jefferson Davis credited her with winning the First Battle of Bull Run. • imprisoned • Still got messages to the Confederacy by means of cryptic notes which traveled in unlikely places such as the inside of a woman's hair. • After her second prison term, she was exiled to the Confederate states Coconspirator in Lincoln assassination: • Mary Surratt
Frances Clalin served with Federal forces in Missouri. Soldiers in disguise -Female remains found at Gettysburg and Shiloh -female soldiers discovered when wounded, usually sent home
End of the War • Union wins: April 1865 • Grant leadership • Sherman’s March to Sea • Confederates lack supplies, men, support • The Toll of War • Over 600,000 dead • #1 in American deaths • Destruction: especially in South • Cotton trade ruined • North economic boom • Country torn apart • 4 million freed slaves • Abe Lincoln dead