170 likes | 274 Views
Lincoln and Slavery. Question for today: How did a war to preserve the Union turn into a war against slavery?. 1. Lincoln-Douglas debates, 1858 2. 1860 Election 3. Confederate States of America 4. First battle at Bull Run (VA), 1861 5. General George McClellan 6. Antietam Creek (MD)
E N D
Question for today: How did a war to preserve the Union turn into a war against slavery? 1. Lincoln-Douglas debates, 1858 2. 1860 Election 3. Confederate States of America 4. First battle at Bull Run (VA), 1861 5. General George McClellan 6. Antietam Creek (MD) 7. Emancipation Proclamation 8. Gettysburg, 1863
1. Stephen Douglas Abraham Lincoln(Democrat) (Republican)
3. Confederate States of AmericaPresident Jefferson Davis • States’ rights • Protection of slavery
22 million people INDUSTRY (weapons, railroads, textiles, shoes) 9 million people (of whom 3 million were slaves) DEFENSIVE war Brilliant military leadership Food production Cotton (hope for English and French allies) Prospects for the War:North South
4. First Battle at Bull RunGeneral Thomas “Stonewall” Jackson • Federal troops retreated • 5,000 casualties in one afternoon
5. General George McClellan • Seige of Yorktown • Lee’s army attacked; Battle of Seven Days • McClellan retreats
6. Battle at Antietam Creek, Sept 1862 • 70,000 Union troops vs. 40,000 Confed. troops • 20,000+ casualties • McClellan failed to press Lee
7. Preliminary Emancipation Proclamation • On January 1, 1863, slaves in rebellious states will be declared free • U.S. gov’t will not enforce fugitive slave law • Purpose: weaken the South; hinder European alliances • Effect: changed the war’s purpose to liberation
Nearly 200,000 African American soldiers served in segregated regiments
Battle at Gettysburg, July 1-3, 1863 • 90,000 Union soldiers vs. 75,000 Confederate soldiers • July 4: Lee’s retreat; Union army did not pursue • 8000 dead bodies in the July heat
The Gettysburg Address, 1863 • “…a nation…dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal” • Four score and seven=87 (1776, not 1787) • Lincoln’s redefinition of the founding has lasted to this day