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The Civil War (1861-1865). CHA3U. Jefferson Davis. February 4 th 1861 – Confederate States of America S.C., Mississippi, Florida, Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana and Texas Jefferson Davis – President. The Aftermath of Fort Sumter. Virginia, N.C., Arkansas and Tennessee join Confederacy
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Jefferson Davis • February 4th 1861 – Confederate States of America • S.C., Mississippi, Florida, Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana and Texas • Jefferson Davis – President
The Aftermath of Fort Sumter • Virginia, N.C., Arkansas and Tennessee join Confederacy • Richmond, Virginia named capital • Northwest portion of Virginia seceded from Virginia and joined the Union creating West Virginia • Missouri and Kentucky were divided having both a pro-Northern and pro-Southern government
Blockade • Union General Winfield Scott, Commander of U.S. Army, devises The Anaconda Plan • Effort to win war with minimal bloodshed • Union blockade of main southern ports would weaken Confederate economy • Capture and control the Mississippi River would split the South • South believed “Cotton was King” • Believed that cotton was so essential to Europe, European powers would intervene in the war on their behalf
Battle of the Ironclads • ironclad – steam warship protected by steel or iron plates of armor • March, 8th- 9th, 1862 • CSS Virginia – an ironclad of the Confederate Navy built from the burned out hull of the USS Merrimack
Battle of the Ironclads • Virginia attacked blockade • Battle took place near the mouth if Hampton Road, Virginia • March 8 – Virginia wreaks havoc on Union wooden warships • Rams and sinks the USS Cumberland, shells and destroys the USS Congress
USS Monitor vs. CSS Virginia • March 9, Virginia pursues badly damaged USS Minnesota • Encounters USS Monitor – Union ironclad • Furious battle lasts hours ending in a draw as Virginia retreated • Both sides claimed victory • South unable to end blockade • Ushers in new era of navl warfare
First Battle of Bull Run • First major battle of the war • Fought near Manassas, Virginia on July, 21 1861 • “You are green, it is true, but they are green also; you are all green alike." – Winfield Scott • Union forces routed and forced to retreat to Washington • Alarmed at casualties and to prevent more states from leaving the union, Congress passes the Crittenden-Johnson Resolution
General “Stonewall” Jackson • One of the great tactical commanders in U.S. history • Revered Confederate General • Earned nickname and fame at Bull Run • “There is Jackson standing like a stone wall”
First Battle of Bull Run • No more 90 day enlistments for Union soldiers • Lincoln asks for 3 year enlistments • Winfield Scott out – General George McClellan in • 34 years old and had never tasted defeat
General Robert E. Lee • Privately denounced Confederacy • Turned down Lincoln’s offer for command in Union Army • Would fight only in defense of Virginia • Virginia secedes • Assumes command of the Army of Northern Virginia
The Seven Days Battle • Series of 6 major battles in June/July 1862 where Lee drives McClellan’s Army of the Potomac away from Confederate capital Richmond • McClellan was outfought and outthought • Confederate victory but costly • (casualties: C - 20 000/U - 16 0000) • Northern morale crushed by McClellan’s defeat • There would be no quick end to the war • With Richmond safe, Lee can look towards invading the North (Maryland Campaign)
Antietam • September, 18th 1862 • Bloodiest day in U.S. history (24 000 casualties) • Fought near Sharpsburg, Maryland • First major battle to take place on Northern soil • Lee (45 000 – Army of Northern Virginia) vs. McClellan (90 000 men – Army of the Potomac) • Special Orders No. 191
Antietam • Lee deploys men in defensive position along low ridge near Antietam Creek • Series of attacks/counter attacks amid the cornfields and woods • General Burnside captured stone bride and advanced against Confederate flank • General A.P. Hill arrived at last second and drove Burnside back • McClellan refused to commit his entire force, allowing Lee to fight him to a draw
Aftermath of Antietam • Tactical draw, but South left battlefield • End of Lee’s Maryland Campaign • Much needed strategic victory for the North • Lincoln dismisses McClellan for not pursuing Lee’s army, General Ambrose Burnside in • Ends the possibility of European recognition of the Confederacy • Provided Lincoln the opportunity to announce The Emancipation Proclamation
Road to Freedom • March, 1862 – Lincoln forbids Union Army officers from returning fugitive slaves • April, 1862 – Frees slaves in the District of Columbia and compensates slave owners • June, 1862 – Congress outlaws slavery in the territories – in conflict w/ Dred Scott ruling that Congress could not regulate slavery
The Emancipation Proclamation • Lincoln issues executive order feeing all the slaves in the Confederate States of America that did not return to the Union by January 1 1863 • Acceptance of blacks into Union Army and navy • War for the Union must become a war for freedom • Added moral force to Union cause
Emancipation Proclamation • Applied only to states that had seceded from the Union • Left slavery untouched in the loyal border states • Exempted parts of South that were under Northern control • Freedom dependent on Union military victory
Gettysburg • Union Army revolving door leadership – no one can defeat Lee • Burnside -- Maj. Gen. Joseph Hooker replaced by Gen. George Meade 3 days before battle • Meade left to stop Lee’s second invasion of the North • Gettysburg, Pennsylvania July 1-3, 1863
Gettysburg • Town critical as a dozen key roads converged there • Lee hoped to turn his attention toward Philadelphia or Baltimore or Washington • Lee – 75 000 men • Meade 97 000 men • Greatest battle the Western Hemisphere has ever witnessed
Day 3 – Pickett’s Charge • General George E. Pickett commanded 15 000 Confederate soldiers across open field at the centre of the Union lines • Pounded by artillery and rifle fire • Reached Union lines but failed to breach it • In less than 50 minutes the Confederacy had suffered 10 000 casualties • The failure of Pickett’s Charge marked the end of the battle
Aftermath • 51 000 casualties • Confederacy was spiritually and physically exhausted by battle • Retreat to Virginia, Meade criticized for not pursuing • Lee would never again attempt an offensive operation of such scale • Confederacy never recovered from losses at Gettysburg
The Gettysburg Address • Speech by Lincoln at the dedication of the National Cemetery at Gettysburg on November 17th 1863 • 269 words • Sought to redefine the purpose of the war • “…a new birth of freedom”
Ulysses S. Grant • A failure in everything except marriage and war • Calm under fire • Western Front - first Union victories at Forts Henry and Donaldson • 1862 – Shiloh – turned certain defeat into victory • July 4, 1862 - Vicksburg Campaign ends with the Confederate surrender at Vicksburg and Union control of the Mississippi
Ulysses S. Grant • “The greatest general of his age and one of the greatest strategists of any age.” • Lincoln puts Grant in charge of all Union forces • Promoted to Lt. Gen. – a rank last held by Washington • Command of 533 000 men – largest army in the world • Grant promoted Maj. Gen. William Tecumseh Sherman in charge of the western armies
William Tecumseh Sherman • Grant and Sherman believed in total war • Only utter defeat of Confederacy and their economy could end war • Sherman given orders to move towards Atlanta
Sherman’s March to the Sea • Sherman captured Atlanta, heart of Confederacy, in November of 1864 • Scorched earth policy • Goal was to end the South’s capacity for war • Wanted to add pressure on Lee and break the stalemate w/Grant
Sherman’s March to the Sea • Six week march • Freed 10 000 slaves • Wrecked 300 miles of railroad tracks - “Sherman’s Neckties” • Seized over 20 000 horses, mules and heads of cattle • Destroyed cotton mills and burned the fields • Destroyed South’s capacity to wage war • Controversial and memory still lives in minds of Southerners
1864 – The Wilderness • Grant called for 4 simultaneous blows at the heart of the Confederacy • Meade was to lead the Army of Potomac South against Lee near Richmond • Grant would accompany Meade • The Overland Campaign (Wilderness campaign) – series of battles fought in Virginia against Lee’s Army of Northern Virginia • Lost several battles and 55 000 men, but Grant refused to allow Lee to retreat • Strategic victory for the Union, leaving Lee in a desperate position
The Overland Campaign • Fighting was ferocious • Union soldiers would pin their names inside their uniforms so there bodies could be identified • Final entry of Union diary found - “June 3 1864: Cold Harbor. I was killed.”
The Election of 1864 • First election every held during a civil war • Lincoln believed he had little chance of being re-elected, “the people were wild for peace” • Lincoln ran under the banner of the National Union Party • Democratic opponent was former General George McClellan – nominated on a peace platform he personally rejected • Democrats campaigned on a “negotiated peace” • An end to the war, with or without victory • “Don’t change horses in the middle of a stream!”
The Election of 1864 • With Sherman on the move outside Atlanta and Grant closing in on Richmond, the possibility of Union victory grew • Soldiers were allowed to vote in the filed for the first time • 70% voted for Lincoln • The Confederacy had hoped to earn independence by out-lasting Lincoln • All hope of a political victory for the South was gone
Appomattox • Early 1865, Lee’s army thinned by casualties and desertion, Petersburg and Richmond fell • Lee could no longer tactically or logistically wage war • April 9, 1865 Lee surrendered Army of Northern Virginia to Grant at Appomattox Court House • Grant’s respect for Lee and his desire to fold Confederacy back into the Union, Lee was allowed to keep his saber and his horse “Traveler”
Lincoln’s Second Inaugural Address • March 4, 1865 • End of war was a mere formality • Slavery was at end • Speech is inscribed on Lincoln Memorial • Confederate spy from Maryland named John Wilkes Booth watches address
John Wilkes Booth • Popular stage actor • Confederate sympathizer • Opposed Lincoln’s plan to extend voting rights to former slaves • Gathered a group of conspirators and plotted to kill Lincoln, V.P. Andrew Johnson and Sec. of State William Seward
Ford’s Theatre • April 14, 1865, - Lincoln and wife Mary Todd Lincoln attended Our American Cousin at Ford’s Theatre in Washington • Booth knew theatre and play well • Slipped into President’s box at 10:15
Sic Semper Tyrannis • Booth shot Lincoln in back of head • President collapsed • Booth leapt from balcony • “Sic semper tyrannis” – “Thus always to tyrants” or “The South is avenged” • Booth escaped
The Death of Lincoln • Lincoln died next morning • Sec. of War Edwin M. Stanton – “Now he belongs to ages.” • Andrew Johnson was sworn in as17th President • First president to be assassinated • Lincoln’s funeral procession from Washington to Springfield Illinois viewed by millions • Booth killed 12 days later
Abraham Lincoln 1861-1865 • Martyr • Considered greatest presidents in U.S. history • He saved Union, freed slaves, and presided over second founding of America • OP Baseball.