Political Cartoons Political cartoons express the cartoonist’s opinion on a current issue through images and words Cartoons contain some or all of the following artistic devices: –Important people –Symbols –Exaggerated details –Labels that identify parts of the cartoon –Voice or thought bubbles –A caption
Rail Splitter Cartoon Match each letter to one of the six artistic devices What do you think is the cartoonist’s message?
Lincoln’s Election This is the way the North views itThis is the way the South views it
Fight to Save the Union OLD ABE – “OH, ITS ALL WELL ENOUGH TO SAY, THAT I MUST SUPPORT THE DIGNITY OF MY HIGH OFFICE BY FORCE. BUT ITS DARNED UNCOMFORTABLE SITTING!”
Civil War Charts and Graphs The next four slides show important information about the North and South In your notes create a chart like the one on the following slide
North v. South at the Beginning NorthSouth Advantages?? Disadvantages?? *LIST ADVANTAGES / DISADVANTAGES EACH SIDE HAD AT THE START
Rating the North & the South
Railroad Lines, 1860
Resources: North & the South
North vs. South North –More resources –More people –Moral cause Preserve Union End Slavery? South –Better military leaders –Defense of Way of life State’s rights American ideals?
The Union and Confederacy in 1861
Overview of Civil War Strategy: “Anaconda” Plan Overview of Civil War Strategy: “Anaconda” Plan
Men Present for Duty in the Civil War
Immigrants as a % of a State’s Population in 1860
Battle of Bull Run (1 st Manassas), July, 1861
Emancipation Proclamation "That on the first day of January, in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and sixty- three, 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; and the Executive Government of the United States, including the military and naval authority thereof, will recognize and maintain the freedom of such persons”
Emancipation Proclamation Emancipation Purposes –Frees slaves only in the South? –Border states locked up –Moral rallying point for Union forces – appease abolitionists –Create problems for South –Create potential troops – large numbers of able bodied men Reactions –Northern democrats, border states protest –South uses it as diplomatic issue
Emancipation in 1863
The Southern View of Emancipation
African-Americans in Civil War Battles
The Massacre at Fort Pillow, TN (April 12, 1864)
Nathan Bedford Forrest (Captured Fort Pillow) 262 African-Americans 295 white Union soldiers. Ordered? black soldiers murdered after they surrendered! [many white soldiers killed as well] Became the first Grand Wizard of the Ku Klux Klan after the war. 262 African-Americans 295 white Union soldiers. Ordered? black soldiers murdered after they surrendered! [many white soldiers killed as well] Became the first Grand Wizard of the Ku Klux Klan after the war.
The War in the West, 1863: Vicksburg The War in the West, 1863: Vicksburg
The Road to Gettysburg: 1863
Gettysburg Casualties
Gettysburg Turning point of the Civil War –Last Offensive move by the South –South unable to recover from loss of troops, equipment, etc. –Begins Northern strategy of “total war”
The Progress of War:
Sherman’s March through Georgia to the Sea, 1864
Presidential Election of 1864
The Final Virginia Campaign:
Casualties on Both Sides
Civil War Casualties in Comparison to Other Wars