1 / 16

CH. 11-2 FIGHTING ERUPTS

CH. 11-2 FIGHTING ERUPTS. AMERICAN HISTORY. THE MAJOR BATTLES BEGIN. Generals warned Lincoln that people were still green (not ready to fight). Lincoln said the South was green also and that army must attack July 16, 1861—General McDowell’s 35,000 man Union army marches into VA

shelly
Download Presentation

CH. 11-2 FIGHTING ERUPTS

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. CH. 11-2 FIGHTING ERUPTS AMERICAN HISTORY

  2. THE MAJOR BATTLES BEGIN • Generals warned Lincoln that people were still green (not ready to fight). • Lincoln said the South was green also and that army must attack • July 16, 1861—General McDowell’s 35,000 man Union army marches into VA • 22,000 Confederates waited for them at Manassas Junction, VA by a stream called Bull Run • It took the Union 2.5 days to march 25 miles from Washington, DC to VA • This allowed 11,000 more Confederates to join in • ***Bull Run Battlefield is now a national park. There are 384 battlefields designated as national historic sites***

  3. FIRST BATTLE OF BULL RUN • Both sides has careful plans for battle but inexperienced troops couldn’t care out the plans • It became a chaotic free-for-all • By late afternoon, the Union troops began to fall back • Confederate INFANTRY (foot soldiers) forced the Union troops to drop everything and retreat.

  4. Casualties (killed, wounded, MIA)—South—2,000; North—2,900 • If the south had pursued the north, they might have destroyed the Union army. Instead they stayed on the battlefield not sure what to do. • Hopes for a short war faded • Lincoln replaced General McDowell with General George McClellan • His first task was to get 100,000 individuals to function as a real army

  5. TACTICS AND TECHNOLOGY • Instruction was based on wars conducted by Napoleon • Muskets—1840s-range of 250 yds and accurate to about 80 yds; projectile was a ball; 25 seconds to load • 1850s-accurate to 500 yds; projectile was a bullet; fire about 10 times per minute • Artillery-cannon balls were replaced by shells that exploded upon impact or above the target spreading shrapnel • Some historian call the Civil War the last old-time war and the first modern war

  6. NEW DEVICES OF WAR • Balloons were used to direct artillery fire • Camouflage used to disguise tents and guns • Limited use of machine guns, wire entanglements, flame throwers, stink bombs • Telegraphs allowed generals to communicate quickly with government leaders • Railroads were used to move large numbers of troops

  7. THE FIGHT FOR THE MISSISSIPPI VALLEY • One of the most successful new weapons was the Union’s IRONCLADS (armored gunboats) • 3 inch metal plate made ship almost immune to Confederate cannon fire • GRANT MOVES SOUTH • February 1862—Gen. Grant led 7 gunboats and 15,000 troops up the Tennessee River • The captured Fort Henry, KY and Fort Donelson • Grant demanded unconditional surrender • This made him famous and a Union hero

  8. THE BATTLE OF SHILOH • April 6, 1862—Confederate soldiers surprise Union soldiers at Shiloh Church outside Pittsburg Landing, TN • Union soldiers wanted to retreat but instead Grant attacked at daybreak • By 2:30 pm Confederate army was in retreat • Casualties—Union 13,000; Confederacy 10,000 • Grant: “The only way to save the Union is complete conquest”

  9. THE MISSISSIPPI RIVER CAMPAIGN • April 24, 1862--Union forces under Admiral David Farragut attacked forts surrounding New Orleans • They slipped past the forts under cover of darkness • Lead ship sustained heavy damage • April 25th—City of New Orleans surrenders • General Grant would be needed to take other towns upriver

  10. THE WAR IN THE EAST • General McClellan has a plan to move down the Potomac River and attack Richmond from the east because the defenses were weaker • However, McClellan seemed reluctant to move, Lincoln lost patience • THE PENINSULA CAMPAIGN • McClellan encountered confederates outside Yorktown, VA (near Richmond) • He waited a month before attacking • Confederate troops retreated to Richmond and didn’t offer resistance

  11. McClellan’s delay allowed Confederates to get more troops • May 31—Confederates attack—heavy casualties on both sides by no real victor • Robert E. Lee takes over Army of Northern Virginia • Lee and Stonewall Jackson’s Confederates joined forces and attacked McClellan in late June 1862 in 5 separate battles. McClellan won 4 of 5 but retreated

  12. THE SECOND BATTLE OF BULL RUN • General John Pope started a new union army near Washington • Lincoln ordered McClellan to renew his attack on Lee to trap him between the two union armies. McClellan did nothing. • Lincoln ordered McClellan to withdraw and join Pope’s troops • August 29th—Lee lures Pope’s troops into battle at Manassas and defeated Pope • Lincoln put McClellan back in command despite protests from his cabinet

  13. THE UNION IS INVADED • Union morale low after several defeats • Lee suggested to Pres. Jefferson Davis that this would be a good time to enter Maryland • Davis agreed • Sept. 1862—Lee’s army crossed the Potomac into western MD with McClellan’s army in pursuit • A union soldier found a copy of Lee’s marching order lost by a careless soldier • McClellan informed Lincoln • Lincoln responded “Destroy the rebel army, if possible”

  14. THE BATTLE OF ANTIETAM • McClellan caught Lee near Sharpsburg, MD • Union outnumbered Lee’s army 70,000-40,000 • McClellan waited 16 hours before attacking • Sept. 17, 1862—battle waged • The bloodiest single-day battle in Civil War and US History • Combined casualties numbered 23,000 • Lee lost 1/3 of his army • McClellan had 25,000 troops in reserve but did not use them

  15. McClellan had a chance to follow Lincoln’s order to “destroy the rebel army” but did not. • Lincoln relieved McClellan of his command for good. • THE BATTLE OF FREDERICKSBURG • McClellan was replaced by Ambrose Burnside • Dec. 13, 1862—Burnside ordered his troops to charge Lee’s army 14 times • Only darkness and pleas to stop ended the slaughter. • Union army lost nearly 13,000 men—more than twice the confederate losses

  16. Upon learning of the results, Lincoln said, “If there is a worse place then Hell, I am in it.” • THE END

More Related