The Tide of the War Turns Chapter 11 Section 3 The Tide of the War Turns
Battle of Fredericksburg December 1862 Union charges several times at Confederates Some Union army units lose more than half their men Union- 13,000 casualties Confederates- 5,000 casualties
Battle of Chancellorsville May 1863 Confederates divide their forces and surround Union forces General Lee’s most brilliant victory Also most costly Stonewall Jackson dies due to being wounded
Battle of Gettysburg July 1863 Day 1- Union established position on the high ground of the battle field
Battle of Gettysburg Day 2 Confederates attack Union positions Attack vulnerable spots on the Union line of defenses If Confederates successful they could bombard Union lines anywhere on the battlefields
Battle of Gettysburg 350 soldiers from Maine stop repeated Confederate charges Maine was led by Joshua Lawrence Chamberlain
Battle of Gettysburg Day 3 150 Confederate cannons open fire on Union positions Lee ordered an all out infantry charge at the center of the Union positions 15,000 Confederates charge
Battle of Gettysburg Pickett’s Charge Confederate Troops (5,000 serving under General George Pickett) marched across about a mile of open ground Union cannons shooting at them Only a few hundred Confederates reach their destination
Battle of Gettysburg Less than half the Confederates returned Union: 23,000 casualties Confederates: 28,000 casualties The Confederates then retreat back to Virginia
Gettysburg Address 2 minutes speech written and delivered by Lincoln Reminds listeners as to why the North was fighting
Summarize the main points of the Gettysburg address. Preserve the Country’s commitment to the principles of freedom, equality and self-government
Why was the Battle of Gettysburg a turning point in the war? It decided how each side would be able to operate for the rest of the war The North was now in charge in the east Lee was restricted to acting defensively only in the South
Siege A tactic in which an enemy is surrounded and starved in order to make it surrender
What were 3 effects of Grant’s siege of Vicksburg? Confederate residents had to move into underground dwellings Reduced supplies and soldiers rations Forced a Confederate surrender