The Civil War (1861-1865) BLUE V. GRAY YANKEE V. REBEL BROTHER V. BROTHER UNION V. CONFEDERATE.

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The Civil War (1861-1865) BLUE V. GRAY YANKEE V. REBEL BROTHER V. BROTHER UNION V. CONFEDERATE

Transcript of The Civil War (1861-1865) BLUE V. GRAY YANKEE V. REBEL BROTHER V. BROTHER UNION V. CONFEDERATE.

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TheCivil War

(1861-1865)

TheCivil War

(1861-1865)BLUE V. GRAY

YANKEE V. REBELBROTHER V. BROTHER

UNION V. CONFEDERATE

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The South Secedes• The force of events moved very

quickly upon the election of Lincoln. South Carolina acted first, calling for a convention to secede from the Union. State by state, conventions were held, and the Confederacy was formed.

• Within three months of Lincoln's election, seven states had seceded from the Union.

• Confederate soldiers took over federal institutions such as post offices, courthouses and forts

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Abraham Lincoln Jefferson Davis

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The Union & Confederacy in 1861

The Union & Confederacy in 1861

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The President’s first dilemma• The day after the inauguration, Lincoln gets a message from

Major Anderson who is Fort Sumter’s (S. Carolina) commander that the Confederacy was demanding surrender or attack

• Lincoln knew his actions would set the tone for a possible upcoming war

• A smart political maneuver- Would not abandon the Fort nor would he reinforce it.

• Sent in food for the “hungry men”• Leader of the Confederate Army, Jefferson Davis, choose to initiate war. 4/12/1861 first shots were fired• After 4000 rounds, Anderson and his men surrendered

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Strength of the UnionTwice the population. 20 million in North only 9

million in South.

Twice as much other stuff too… (Railroads, factories, guns, food, communication, etc..)

A functioning government.

Strong beliefs about ending slavery and preserving the Union.

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Strength of the ConfederatesBetter military leaders because most (7 out of 8) of the

military schools were in the South… so better military leadership with Generals too.

King Cotton and the money it made in the world market

They only had to be defensive. They were not having to go into the North and attack…they just needed to wear the Union troops out.

Strong beliefs about their own right to independence.

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Rating the North & the South

Rating the North & the South

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Railroad

Lines

1860

Railroad

Lines

1860

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Resources: North & the South

Resources: North & the South

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Men Presen

t for Duty in the Civil War

Men Presen

t for Duty in the Civil War

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Recruitment and Conscription

• Conscription- Required all white men aged 18 to 35 to serve in the military for three years

• Certain job could make a man exempt-If you owned more than 20 slaves

• Well off Southerners could hire substitutes

• They try to get help from Britain and France

• North original had many volunteers.

• Enrollment Act also allowed exemptions and substitutes.

• Paid volunteers $300 and punished “bounty jumpers”

• “POOR MAN’S FIGHT

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Financing the War

• Both sides turned to war bonds (loans from citizens)• Legal tender Act-authorized $150 million

greenbacks (paper money)• Union made greenbacks legal tender which gave

the public confidence and helped control inflation• Lack of confidence in Southern greenbacks led to

more printing and an inflation rate of over 90%• National Bank Act of 1863-national bank notes

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Americans Expect a short war

• The fall of Fort Sumter united the North• President Lincoln called for 75,000 volunteers for three

months. In Iowa 20% states quota rushed to enlist• Virginia, not willing to fight against other Southern states,

succeed.• The next month Arkansas, Tennessee and North Carolina

follow• Northerners and Confederates both expected a short

glorious war. • Troops left with bands playing and crowds cheering

– **** Both sides felt the right was on their side

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STRATEGIES

The Northern strategy• Union navy would create a

naval blockade on southern ports,

• a plan to split the Confederacy by going down the Mississippi river,

• and capturing the Confederate capital city of Richmond, Virginia

• NICKNAMED:THE ANACONDA PLAN

The South strategy• ** Goal was survival as their

own nation• Came up with a defensive

plan• Encouraged generals to

attack and invade the North anytime the opportunity arose.

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Overviewof

the North’s

Civil WarStrategy

:

“Anaconda”Plan

Overviewof

the North’s

Civil WarStrategy

:

“Anaconda”Plan

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THE BATTLE OF BULL RUN• First major bloodshed of

the war occurred at Bull Run near Washington, D.C. – Summer 1861

• This battle made Confederate General Thomas Jackson famous

• Nicknamed “Stonewall Jackson” he inspired the Confederates to hold firm

• Confederate victory boosted moral

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THE CLASH AT ANTIETAM• Now Lee moved towards the

enemy’s capital.• After finding Lee’s army orders,

McClellan ordered an immediate attack in Antietam, Maryland

• The single bloodiest day in American history --- 26,000 died

• Lee and the Confederates retreated, McClellan did not follow- Lincoln fires him

• Lincoln said McClellan had the case of “the slows”

• War becoming unpopular in the North

BLOODIEST DAY IN AMERICAN HISTORY 9/17/1862

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A Revolution in Warfare

• An ironclad ship could splinter wooden ships, withstand cannon fire and resist burning– Monitor Vs. the Merrimack

• Invention of the rifle and the minie ball• Rifles were more accurate and could be

loaded quicker• The minie ball was a soft lead bullet that was

more destructive than earlier bullets

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EMANCIPATION PROCLAMATION• As the war progressed, Lincoln

used his powers to end slavery• Many Northern believed that

just winning the war would not be enough if slavery still existed

• Emancipation was not just a moral issue; it became a weapon of war

• Ordered army to seize Confederate supplies and emancipate slaves

• Did not free slaves immediately because it applied only to areas behind Confederate lines, outside of Union control

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Emancipation in 1863Emancipation in 1863

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Reactions

• Gave the war a high moral purpose- Fighting to free the slaves!

• Free blacks quickly joined the Union Army and proved to be talented soldiers

• Many disagreed with the Emancipation Proclamation like the Democrats which thought it would only make “the South more mad”

• “most execrable (hateful) measure recorded in the history of guilty men” Jefferson Davis.

• Lincoln forced to suspend HABEAS CORPUS in Maryland to control dissenters.

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African Americans Fight for Freedom• 1862- Congress passed a law allowing

African Americans to serve in the military

• African Americans made up 1% of North’s population, but by the end of the year 10% of the Union’s army was African American

• Still suffered discrimination….had to serve in separate regiments, were paid less and received no clothing allowance for uniforms

• Confederates would not take African-American soldiers as prisoners and would often kill them on the spot

• **Fort Pillow

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Soldiers Suffer• Heavy casualties, poor living

conditions, horrible diet and lack of medical care

• Common food: “Cush” stew made up of small cubes of beef and crumbled cornbread mixed with bacon grease

• United States Sanitary Commission: formed to improve hygiene and to recruit and train nurses

• Clara Barton (angel of the battlefield) later forms the Red Cross

• Andersonville, GA- Confederate Prison

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Andersonville CemeteryWar Prison built to hold 10,000 prisoners…..Actually had 32,000 at one time

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Confederate Prison Camp

at Point Lookout, MD

Confederate Prison Camp

at Point Lookout, MD

Planned to hold 10,000 men.

Had almost 50,000 at one time.

Planned to hold 10,000 men.

Had almost 50,000 at one time.

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War impact on economy

North• Most industry boomed (cotton

slowed down)• Farmers bought machines to

compensate for the lack of manpower on the farms

• Inflation caused prices to rise, but wages did not

• Immigrants, free blacks, and women would be hired for less pay.

• Congress enacted a new tax law creating the nation’s first income tax

South• Food shortages• Loss of slaves to work the fields• Southern men left plantation life

to fight • Prices of food soared

– 1861- $6.65 a month on food– 1863- $63 a month

• Food riots• Union blockade of ports caused

shortages in ALL trade items

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Foreign Relations

• Britain buys cotton from India and Egypt, but still buys wheat and corn from the North.

• Decides to stay neutral• The Trent Affair- Confederates

sent two diplomats to ask for support from Britain and France

• Lincoln realizes the importance of fighting only one war at a time!

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Gettysburg• In a small town in

Pennsylvania, the most decisive battle of the war was fought

• Turning point of the war• Gettysburg was a three-day

battle fought in early July of 1863

• The Union had 90,000 troops under George Meade and the Confederates had 75,000 troops under General Lee

GETTYSBURG JULY, 1863

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• Day 1-looking for shoes and wanting to meet up with Lee and other Confederate troops, the army marched toward Gettysburg. Ran into Union troops, but end up taking the town

• Day 2-Confederates attack Union troops. Ran out of ammunition and launched a bayonet attack. Rebels exhausted from the day before did not break through Union lines

• Day 3-Lee orders another attack. Two hours of artillery was followed by an attack of the army. North waited and fired on the Confederates when they were close by

• Death total from both sides was over 50,000.

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The Gettysburg Address

• November 1863 a ceremony was held to dedicate a cemetery

• Lincoln talked for a little over two minutes • “Remade America”- historian Garry wills

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Four score and seven years ago our fathers brought forth on this continent a new nation, conceived in Liberty, and dedicated to the proposition that all men are

created equal. Now we are engaged in a great civil war, testing whether that nation, or any nation, so conceived and so dedicated, can long endure. We are met on a great battle-field of that war. We have come to dedicate a portion of that field, as a final resting place for those who here gave their lives that the nation might live. It is altogether fitting

and proper that we should do this.

But, in a larger sense, we can not dedicate—we can not consecrate—we can not hallow—this ground. The brave men, living and dead, who struggled here, have

consecrated it, far above our poor power to add or detract. The world will little note, nor long remember what we say here, but it can never forget what they did here. It is for us the living, rather, to be dedicated here to the unfinished work which they who fought here have thus far so nobly advanced. It is rather for us to be here

dedicated to the great task remaining before us — that from these honored dead we take increased devotion to that cause for which they gave the last full measure of devotion — that we here highly resolve that these dead shall not have died in vain

— that this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom — and that government of the people, by the people, for the people, shall not perish from the

earth.

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Confederacy Wears down

• After the defeat of Gettysberg and having no supplies the South hoped to hold on long enough to destroy Northern morale and call an armistice

• Southern farmers were angry about the tax on their livestock and produce

• Many soldiers deserted and headed home or even joined the Union cause

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GRANT AND LEE…..ONE LAST STANDOFF

• Grant’s plan was to immobilize Lee’s army in Virginia while Union Commander Sherman raided Georgia

• Grant threw Union troops into battle after battle

• *He knew he could afford the loss and could replace the soldiers. The South could NOT

• Newspapers called GRANT a “butcher”.• He knew there was NO turning back

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Sherman’s March• Marched Union troops throughout Georgia creating a wide

path of destruction.• Goal, “to make the Southerners so sick of war that

generations would pass away before they would again appeal to it.” “Make it as cruel as possible so it will be over sooner.”

• For three monthes Union troops destroyed Georgia before turning North to meet up with Grant.

• Destruction continued, homes were burnt and Union troops marched on to destoy Lee and the rest of the Confederate troops.

• North Carolina spared. Troops near the end of the war was near. They were also the last to secced

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Sherman’s

“Marchto theSea”

throughGeorgia,

1864

Sherman’s

“Marchto theSea”

throughGeorgia,

1864

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Lincoln’s running mates

• Democrates nominate George McClellan with hopes of an immediate armistice

• Radical Republicans nomatate John C. Fremont and lay out a strict propsal of readmiting the Confederate states

• National Union Party (Republican) choose Andrew Johnson as Lincoln’s running mate. Being pro Union and from the South gave hope to the ticket.

• Lincoln is pessimistic about winning the election

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End of war in sight and a second presidential terms

• August 1864, Union shut down major southern port in Alabama than move on to Atlanta

• By the end of September, Fremont withdraws from the race

• October- General Sheridan chases the Southern troops from Northern Virginia

• With the victories in the North and absentee ballots from the Union troops, Lincoln wins a second term

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Presidential Electio

n Result

s:

1864

Presidential Electio

n Result

s:

1864

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Surrender at Appomattox

• 3/1865 Grant and Sheridan were approaching Richmond from the West and Sherman was approaching from the South

• 4/1865 President Davis and his government leave the capital and burn it to the ground

• 4/9/1865 Confederate surrender in a Virginia village called Appomattox

• All Southern Troops were paroled and sent home

• After four years of fighting the Civil War was OVER

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Surrender at Appomattox

April 9, 1865

Surrender at Appomattox

April 9, 1865

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The Union armies had from 1,600,000 men. Their losses, by the best estimates:

Battle deaths:110,070Disease, etc.:250,152Total Dead = 360,222

The Confederate strength, known less accurately because of missing records, was from 750,000 to 1,250,000. Its estimated losses:

Battle deaths:94,000Disease, etc.:164,000Total Dead = 258,000

Combined Union and Confederate deaths = about 620,000 American deaths.

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Civil War Casualtiesin Comparison to Other

Wars

Civil War Casualtiesin Comparison to Other

Wars

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The War Changes the Nation

Political Changes• Federal government

assumed supreme national authority

• Increased Federal governments power and involvement in citizens life

• -Income taxes• -draft• -required use of national

currency

Economic Changes• Established the National Bank

Act of 1863• Economy of Northern states

boomed- had $ to invest after the war

• Large-scale agriculture **thanks to machines

• Devastated the South- Took away cheap labor- SLAVERY

• Destroyed over half of Southern livestock, railways and farms

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Freedom for the First Time!• The Emancipation

Proclamation only freed slaves behind Confederate lines

• Amendment #13 introduced to the house in January 1865.

• “Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as a punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted, shall exist within the United States”

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Assassination

After several failed attempts at kidnapping Lincoln, John Wilkes Booth assassinates the President.

President was watching a play while Booth walked up and shot Lincoln in the back of the head.

First President to be assassinated… nation in shock, massive funeral/ceremony.

Country begins to wonder… What do we do next?

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Ford’s Theater (April 14, 1865)

Ford’s Theater (April 14, 1865)

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The AssassinationThe Assassination

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Lieutenant Luther Baker (a detective) yelled, "Surrender, or we'll fire the barn and smoke you out like rats! We'll give you five minutes more to make up your minds.“

Booth yelled, "Well, my brave boys, you can prepare a stretcher for me! I will never surrender!"