Civil War Plans and Early Battles Chapter 11 Section 1.

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Civil War Plans and Early Battles Chapter 11 Section 1

Transcript of Civil War Plans and Early Battles Chapter 11 Section 1.

Page 1: Civil War Plans and Early Battles Chapter 11 Section 1.

Civil War Plans and Early BattlesChapter 11 Section 1

Page 2: Civil War Plans and Early Battles Chapter 11 Section 1.

• Contrast the resources and strategies of the North and South.

• Describe the outcomes and effects of the early battles of the Civil War.

Objectives

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Northern Advantages

• Population 22 Million, South 3.5 Million whites, 5.5 million slaves

• 85% of the nation’s industry. NY alone out-produced the entire south

• Southern slave system slowed industrial development

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• The north had 20,000 miles of railroad track while the south had 9,000

• The north had the U.S. Navy, while the south had no Navy to start the war.

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Southern Advantages

• They only had to play defense

• They had excellent military leadership

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Southern Plan for Victory

• Capture Washington, D.C.

• Strike through the Shenandoah Valley

• Gain European support

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Anaconda Plan

• Union plan for victory:• 1: Capture Richmond,

the Confederate capital.

• 2: Gain control of the Mississippi River

• 3: Institute a naval blockade of the south.

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Lincoln’s War Strategy

• was initially to preserve the Union

• was aimed at keeping the four border states in the Union, even though they allowed slavery. He thought this was crucial to winning the war

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The border states did not join the Confederacy. They stayed in the Union.

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• The East—Manassas and later Richmond, Virginia

• The Mississippi Valley—western Kentucky, Tennessee, and then Shiloh and the port of New Orleans

• The Southwest—New Mexico

Early battles of the Civil War occurred in three areas of the North American continent.

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First Battle of Bull Run

• Lincoln ordered his troops to march on the Confederate capital of Richmond

• They were met by Confederate troops at Manassas Junction about 30 miles from D.C.

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• The Confederates held the high ground and were able to send the Union troops running back

• Bull Run convinced people the war was not going to be a quick and easy affair

• Both sides began to train and prepare more seriously

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The Battle of Shiloh

• General Grant defeated the Confederates at Fort Henry and Fort Donelson, giving the North control over Tennessee and Kentucky

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Grant was marching towards Mississippi when he met up with

Confederate General P.T. Beauregard

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• Grant was surprised by the attack and his troops were forced back

• They were able to regroup the next day and their counterattack was able to defeat the southerners

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New Orleans

• Union control of the Mississippi River depended on taking New Orleans

• Admiral David Farragut attacked and took the city

• The loss of its largest and most profitable city was a blow to southern morale

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• Both the North and the South were shocked by the large number of dead and injured from the battles.

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• Contrast the resources and strategies of the North and South.

• Describe the outcomes and effects of the early battles of the Civil War.

Objectives