Social Studies Quick Write Homework None Reminder

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 11 Study Guide. What was Lincoln’s Emancipation Proclamation? Legislation freeing enslaved people in states still fighting the Union.
Advertisements

Political Leaders of the Civil War
A Summary of the American Civil War
The American Civil War – Beginnings
Part I: The Beginning and Major Battles
Chapter 4 Civil War and Reconstruction
Chapter 16 “The Civil War Begins” 1861 – 1862
Think about it. WarDeathsYears Afghanistan2,31614 Iraq4,2625 American Revolution25,0008 Vietnam War58,22011 World War I116, World War II416,800 4.
The American Civil War.
Strategy and Battles of the Civil War
The Civil War Union: President – Abe Lincoln Generals – Grant, McClellan, Sherman Confederacy: President – Jefferson Davis Generals – Lee, Jackson.
Directions Use pages in your spiral to write the notes Some pages you will not write. There is a symbol like this to let you know.
Goal 3: Crisis, Civil War, and Reconstruction
Open text book to chapter 11
TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. Civil War Plans and Early Battles.
War Erupts The Secession of the Southern States quickly led to armed conflict between the North and the South.
Civil War Vocab. Ft. Sumter 1 st official battle of the Civil War Fought over important ft. in SC No casualties.
$2 $5 $10 $20 $1 $2 $5 $10 $20 $1 $2 $5 $10 $20 $1 $2 $5 $10 $20 $1 $2 $5 $10 $20 $1 PeopleBattles Vocabulary Factors ??????????
Chapter 1 Lesson 5 North vs. South (Union vs. confederacy)
Chapter 16.1 and 16.2 American Civil War.
Key Characters of the Civil War. _______________.
The Civil War.
Unit 4: A Nation Divided Lesson 4: Civil War Leaders and Battles part 1.
Chapter 6: Civil War and Reconstruction
CHAPTER 7, SECTION 1 Resources, Strategies and Lesser-known Battles.
THE CIVIL WAR : YEAR BY YEAR ( ) – A slow start In the East (Atlantic Ocean) The C.S.A. took over Ft. Sumter in South Carolina The U.S.A.
Chapter 13 Lesson 1- A Nation at War
Civil War Battles and Strategies Miss Springborn~ Team 6.
Jeopardy PeoplePlaces Battles Vocabulary Misc. II Q $100 Q $200 Q $300 Q $400 Q $500 Q $100 Q $200 Q $300 Q $400 Q $500 Final Jeopardy.
The War Ends. Quick Review What is a secession? When part of a country leaves or breaks off from the rest Why did the Fugitive Slave Law upset some people.
Please write the following questions in your notebook. Which side had the advantage in terms of industrial production? What do these data suggest about.
Chapter 15-1 The Call to Arms Aydin Matney Preston Nanninga.
The Civil War Chapter Ch 17.1 The Conflict Takes Shape.
The First Year THE SOUTH SECEDES – January Abraham Lincoln is elected to be the President of the United States of America - A state convention.
The Civil War The Call to Arms Early Years of the War Civil War American Life Decisive Battles Odds and Ends $200 $400 $600 $800 $1000.
The Major Battles of the Civil War VS.. Battle of Fort Sumter.
Chapter 16 Review. Pick one 1. Which side fired first at Fort Sumter to begin the Civil War - (Union or Confederacy)? Confederacy 2. Who was president.
Union vs. Confederacy EQ: What advantages did each side have in the war?
THE CIVIL WAR Chapter 10 Section 1 PREPARING for WAR Chapter 10 Section 1 PREPARING for WAR.
CHAPTER 15 Fighting the Civil War People to Know Abraham Lincoln- U.S. President Ulysses S. Grant- Union General Robert E. Lee- Confederate.
The Civil War A Nation Divided. Strategies North 1.Blockade ports 2.Cut confederacy in 2 at the Mississippi river 3.Capture capital of Richmond, VA ***
Civil War. Secession of Southern States South Carolina first, followed by Mississippi, Florida, Alabama Georgian Alexander Stephens encouraged Georgia.
Three Turning Points of the Civil War. Pattern of the War From the beginning of the war, a pattern emerges. The Confederates have most of their success.
The Fighting Begins Chapter 4 Lesson 1. Why is it sometimes difficult to choose sides in a disagreement?
Secession and The Civil War Chapter – 1865.
Civil War: War Begins. Choosing Sides Border States—slave states of strategic importance to both the North & South (Delaware Kentucky Maryland Missouri)
1.Who was the President of the United States during the Civil War? 2.Which side had the strategy of blockading the ports of their enemy? 3.What term refers.
The Civil War Begins Contrast the resources and strategies of the North and South. Describe the outcomes and effects of the early battles of the Civil.
4.2 The Civil War Begins How did the Civil War become the conflict that divided the nation?
The Civil War What causes the Civil War? Confederate States of America Dec. 1860: S. Carolina secedes from the Union followed by MS, FL, AL, GA, LA &
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.
Studyguide Review Chapter 6 lesson 1-3
Unit 4: A Nation Divided Lesson 4: Civil War Leaders and Battles part 1 Standard 9 and 10 Vocabulary was due last week Coach Readings and Questions Page.
The Civil War Begins Get ready to fight!.
Civil War Plans and Early Battles Essential Question: How did each side’s resources and strategies affect the early battles of the war?
Chapter 13 Lesson 1- A Nation at War
Journal- What was the first battle of the Civil War. Who Won
The Civil War.
The Civil War What causes the Civil War?.
The American Civil War.
Chapter 6 Lesson 1 “A Nation At War” pgs
Daily Quiz Who was the commander of Union forces in the West?
The Civil War.
Civil War.
Battles of The Civil War
The Civil War What causes the Civil War?.
I. Secession A minority of Americans wanted to leave the Union
The American Civil War
Civil War.
Civil War Goals, Strategies, People, and Events
Presentation transcript:

Social Studies Quick Write Homework None Reminder What does the following idiom mean? He has reached a turning point in his life. Reminder ITBS next Tues. and Wed.

A Nation at War Pages 176-181

North Against South 11 southern states seceded and formed the Confederacy. Four other slave states, Missouri, Kentucky, Maryland, and Delaware, stayed in the Union (Border States).

Advantages for the North 22 million people lived in the North, 9 million lived in the South. 1/3 of them were enslaved so they could not be soldiers. More factories for making weapons. More Railroad lines

Advantages for the South Most fighting took place in the South. Excellent military leaders Ex: Gen. Robert E. Lee

Union’s Strategies for Fighting Block southern seaports so the Block them from trading with other countries took control of the Mississippi River.

Confederate’s Strategies for Fighting To fight off northern attacks until the Confederacy could survive as a separate nation. Hoped that many northerners would switch sides Britain and France would help them because of cotton.

The War in the East At the start of the war, both sides expected a quick, easy victory. July 1861, a Union army marched south from Washington to try to capture the Confederate capital of Richmond, VA.

Bull Run July 21, 1861, the two armies fought at a stream called Bull Run near the town of Manassas. At this battle, General Thomas Jonathan Jackson led Confederate troops from the top of a hill (Stonewall Jackson). The Confederate army won this battle but it was worse than expected.

The War’s Leaders 1862, General Robert E. Lee defeated two Union attacks on Richmond. In Virginia’s Shenandoah Valley, Stonewall Jackson beat several Union armies. He kept thousands of enemy soldiers away from Richmond.

Battle of Antietam Lee decided to invade Maryland. A Union army stopped him at the Battle of Antietam. It was the deadliest day of the war. The two armies suffered at least 23,000 casualties. Lee’s weakened army returned to Virginia.

The War in the West General Ulysses S. Grant led a Union army south from Illinois into Tennessee. He captured several Confederate forts along the way.

Battle of Shiloh Grant defeated a large of Confederate Army.

The War in the West The Union navy sailed up the Mississippi River and attacked New Orleans. They wanted to capture Vicksburg to take control of the Mississippi River from the Confederates.

The Governments Responds The Union blocked the ports so the Confederates could not get enough food, water, or money to fight. Jefferson Davis could also not find people to fight in the army so he started a draft. President Lincoln had to convince people that the war was still necessary. He also had to start a draft. (Rich people could pay to get out of the draft which caused riots.)

Turning Points In 1862, President Lincoln ended slavery. This would help to weaken the Confederacy. The Emancipation Proclamation declared that slaves in the Confederacy were free. It did not end slavery in the border states. The North would have to defeat the South to free the slaves.

Vicksburg and Gettysburg The Union shot cannons in Vicksburg for six weeks. On July 4th, Vicksburg surrendered and the Union took over the Mississippi River. The Union also won the battle in Gettysburg. The heavy fire killed or wounded about half of the Confederate soldiers.

Gettysburg Address Later that year, President Lincoln gave a short speech at Gettysburg. He declared that the Union was fighting to make sure that American democracy would survive. (Gettysburg Address)

Lesson Summary At first, the Confederacy won most battles in the East, while the Union won battles in the West. However, victories at Vicksburg and Gettysburg gave the Union the advantage in the war.