Map: The Anaconda Plan and the Battle of Antietam Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Civil War USHC Outline the course and outcome of the Civil War, including the role of African American military units; impact of the Emancipation.
Advertisements

16.3-A Call to Freedom 16.4-Life During the Civil War
1862: Antietam and Emancipation
Review Ch. 11 Section 2 for Quiz
Chapter 11 Section 2 Life Behind the Lines.
Total War & the Republic Chapter 16.  1861 Union blockade proclaimed Significant Events Battle of Bull Run Chapter 16 First Confiscation Act  1862 Monitor.
CIVIL WAR ADVANTAGES/DISADVANTAGES NORTH ADVANTAGES Larger population More industry More resources Better banking system More railroad mileage Better leader.
Baltimore Polytechnic Institute December 13, 2011 A.P. U.S. History Mr. Green.
CIVIL WAR ADVANTAGES/DISADVANTAGES UNION (NORTH) ADVANTAGES Larger population More industry More resources Organized banking system More railroad mileage.
1862: Antietam and Emancipation. Antietam & Emancipation On your notes worksheet, answer the following question: What does “emancipation” mean?
SWBAT:  Read UpFront article about the Emancipation Proclamation and identify 5 things you LEARNED from the reading. Do Now:  Describe the impact of.
+ Life during the War 19.4 Notes. + Freeing the Slaves Ending Slaves Lincoln supported ending slavery if it would assure a Northern victory. Some northerners.
11.2 THE POLITICS OF WAR OBJECTIVES: A. WHAT DIVIDED AMERICANS ABOUT HOW TO FIGHT THE WAR?
{ “War Between the States” Chapter 11 The American Civil War.
Chapter 11, The Opposing Sides
People More People Battles More Battles Random Civil.
The Politics of the Civil War. Old King Cotton is Dead Britain is no longer dependent on cotton. o WHAT DOS THIS MEAN FOR THE SOUTH? Britain had found.
THE HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES Lecture 9 The Civil War.
Lee with his son after the surrender After opposing secession, General Robert E. Lee accepted a commission in the Confederate army and commanded the Army.
Chapter 17: The Civil War Vocabulary. Battle of Bull Run battle won by the Confederates and Stonewall Jackson.
FIGHTING THE CIVIL WAR. Hundreds of military officers resigned from the U.S. army to fight for the South. Robert E. Lee had been offered a command of.
American Studies I CP Politics in the South Set up like Union Problem: States rights over federal government, made it difficult to organize a war.
CIVIL WAR ADVANTAGES/DISADVANTAGES NORTH ADVANTAGES Larger population 22 million v. 5.5 million More industry 91.7% v. 8.3% More resources Fast rivers.
Politics During the Civil War. What you need to know CSA – British relations Trent Affair Emancipation Proclamation Suspension of habeas corpus Conscription.
THEME: The North effectively brought to bear its long term advantages of industrial might and human resources to wage a devastating total war against.
Chapter 17 Sections 1&2 THE TIDE OF WAR TURNS.  Abolitionists demand action  As Union sweeps through South, thousands of slaves escape  Supporters.
The British Position The Emancipation Proclamation Dealing with Dissent.
CHAPTER 14 Descent into War, Web. War Begins: April 1861 to July 1861 Lincoln calls for troops to quell “rebellion” States make decision on.
26.2 Emancipation Proclamation
11.2 The Politics of War By issuing the Emancipation Proclamation, President Lincoln makes slavery the focus of the war. NEXT.
Fort Sumter: April 12, 1861.
Causes of the Civil War? The Union and Confederacy in 1861.
The Politics of War Chapter 11 Section 2. Britain Remains Neutral For many years, the South had supplied Britain with much of its cotton. When the Civil.
Civil War Events APUSH Chapters 20 & 21 Essential Question: How did President Lincoln increase the Power of the presidency in order to win the Civil War?
The Politics of War Chapter 11 Section 2. Proclaiming Emancipation.
Essential Question Essential Question: –What factors led to the outbreak of the Civil War? Warm-Up Question: Warm-Up Question: –If the Union had more troops,
The Civil War Begins Chapter 4 Section 2. Taking sides Southern States takes sides – 1861 Fort Sumter in SC falls to confederates – Lincoln calls for.
Civil War Notes. Unit 6– Identify political and military turning points of the Civil War and assess their significance to the outcome of the Civil.
Opening Question  How did sectional differences (i.e. economic, social and political) lead to tensions that ultimately caused the Civil War?
11.2 The Politics of War Objectives: A. To explain why Britain remained neutral B. To explain Lincoln’s motives for issuing the Emancipation Proclamation.
Politics of War Chapter 11.2.
11.2 The Politics of War Britain and the Confederacy
The Politics of War Section 11-2 pp
Politics of War.
Jeopardy Battles Odds and Ends Q $100 Q $100 Q $100 Q $100 Q $100
Daily life during the war
Southern Hopes in the Civil War
11.2 The Politics of War By issuing the Emancipation Proclamation, President Lincoln makes slavery the focus of the war. NEXT.
Chapter 15, Section 2 Early Years of the War.
The Politics of War Chapter 11 – Section 2
Essential Question: What factors led to the outbreak of the Civil War?
CIVIL WAR ADVANTAGES/DISADVANTAGES
Civil War Vocabulary.
Life Behind the Lines Ch. 11-2; Pp
Unit 4 African-Americans During the Civil War and Reconstruction Era
America’s History Sixth Edition
Terms and People habeas corpus – constitutional protection against unlawful imprisonment draft – a system of required military service income tax – tax.
Chapter 16 Vocabulary.
Unit 4 African Americans in the Civil War and Reconstruction Era
The War Begins:
Chapter 16 Vocabulary.
Part VI Impact of the War
A Call for Freedom Chapter 15, Section 3
The Civil War
Chapter 15, Section 2 Early Years of the War.
The Civil War
This is section Pay attention. Moran’s back.
The Civil War
WARM UP - MAY 11 GRAB THE GUIDED NOTES AND HANDOUTS FROM THE FRONT TABLE ANSWER THESE REVIEW QUESTIONS ON TODAY’S GUIDED NOTES 1. Who was President of.
Ch 16. Study Guide Part 1.
Presentation transcript:

Map: The Anaconda Plan and the Battle of Antietam Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.

11.2 The Politics of War Objectives: A. What divided Americans about how to fight the war?

THEME: The North effectively brought to bear its long term advantages of industrial might and human resources to wage a devastating total war against the South. The war helped organize and modernize northern society, while the South, despite heroic efforts, was economically and socially crushed.

Diplomacy Fails Trent Affair, late 1861 –US Navy boards British steamer and captures 2 Confederate diplomats Alabama raids: –British built ship, armed in Portuguese Azores (=British are technically not arming South) –Captured 60 US vessels, sinks 64 –Similar British built Confederate ships sink 250 Union ships –Britain pays $15.5 million in damages after war 1863: the Laird “rams”= Brinkmanship with UK –Would have broken Union blockade and probably resulted in Union invasion of Canada

The South’s Strategy Fails: Britain stays Neutral BUT, IT ALMOST DID WORK!! 1.Southern diplomats are captured by US Navy on board the British ship Trent almost leads to war between the US & GB (especially in Canada). 2.Britain does build warships for the South. One, the Alabama sinks 64 Union ships.

The South’s Strategy Fails: Britain stays Neutral Britain did not rush to the South’s aid. Why? 1.Britain and new sources for cotton 2.Britain is relying on Northern grain imports 3.British people did not want to support slave-society (Uncle Tom’s Cabin impact)

The Blockade Union extends blockade (Anaconda Plan) Begins to have success by targeting cotton ports Risks war with Britain by seizing British merchants, uses “ultimate destination” as legal cover to avoid war Blockade Runners earn profits of up to 700% 3/9/1862: Monitor v. Merrimack  end of wooden- hulled warfare, beginning of the “Ironclads”

Virginia rams Cumberland

Monitor v. Merrimack (Virginia)

Monitor after the battle with the Virginia

Fording the Rappahannock River When federal troops came close enough those slaves who could do so fled behind Union lines. These Virginia fugitives, lugging all their possessions, move toward freedom in the summer of 1862, after the Second Battle of Bull Run. (Library of Congress) Fording the Rappahannock River Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.

Contraband slave group A group of "contrabands" (liberated slaves) photographed at Cumberland Landing, Virginia, May 14, 1862, at a sensitive point in the war when their legal status was still not fully determined. The faces of the women, men, and children represent the human drama of emancipation. (Library of Congress) Contraband slave group Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.

Emancipation Proclamation MYTH: Lincoln “freed” the slaves FACTS: look at the actual dates and words of the proclamation. Where did the Proclamation apply? TRUTH: Lincoln saved the Union, so that the Union, eventually, might free the slaves.

Emancipation Proclamation January 1, 1863 CAUSES: Lincoln does NOT believe govt. can abolish slavery HOWEVER, Union army can seize “contraband”= to hurt South’s war effort Antietam’s “victory” gives Lincoln the “opportunity” to issue preliminary proclamation on Sept. 23, Emancipates only those slaves in states still in rebellion, NOT IN THE BORDER STATES!!!

“... on the first day of January... all persons held as slaves within any State, or designated part of a State, the people whereof shall then be in rebellion against the United States shall be then, thenceforward, and forever free.“ President Abraham Lincoln, preliminary Emancipation Proclamation, September 22, 1862

Emancipation Proclamation EFFECTS: Settles the “contraband” question. Many slaves escape North to join Union Ends the possibility of a negotiated settlement Unpopular in Sections of North, Copperheads gain support QUESTION: Did the Emancipation Proclamation “ennoble” the cause of the North?

ARGUMENTS OVER THE EMANCIPATION PROCLAMATION FORAGAINST ACTION/DECISION TAKENEFFECTS/REACTION TO THE ACTION/DECISION

DISSENT Lincoln suspends rights and freedoms: –Sends federal troops to occupy MD, and arrests hundreds of MD’ers, including most of the politicians –(DC could not survive if MD went over to South) –Suspended habeas corpus = holding people in jail w/o trial, up to 13,000 were so held –Copperheads was name given to Northern Democrats who wanted peace with South, many arrested –seized control of telegraph offices NOTE: Jefferson Davis also suspended liberties in South.

12/collectionnavigator?cuecard=464

ARGUMENTS OVER LINCOLN’S HANDLING OF DISSENT FORAGAINST ACTION/DECISION TAKENEFFECTS/REACTION TO THE ACTION/DECISION

CONSCRIPTION (=DRAFT) NORTH: Started in 1863 Ages for 3 years Substitutes allowed Commutations for $300 Bounties paid to volunteers 92% of army volunteered SOUTH: Started in 1862 Ages Exemptions for slaveholders with 20 slaves or more Substitutes allowed 80% of elegible men served

12/collectionnavigator?cuecard=577

DRAFT RIOTS: New York City draft riots in July African Americans lynched. Over 100 killed.

ARGUMENTS OVER CONSCRIPTION FORAGAINST ACTION/DECISION TAKENEFFECTS/REACTION TO THE ACTION/DECISION

11.3 Life During Wartime A.How did African-Americans participate in the war? B.How did women participate in the war? C.How were the economies of the North and the South changed by the Civil War?