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Lincoln takes oath of office March 4, 1861 Lincoln declared secession impractical- geographically, the South and the North are permanently bonded Issues regarding the South’s secession proposal: -Sharing of national debt? -Sharing of nationally claimed territories? -Slave laws?
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European imperialism could take advantage of the disunited nation, seizing U.S. territories The South took public property behind its borders during its secession Fort Sumter: -Expedition to provision the garrison -South opened fire (April 12, 1861) -Many believed after that the Southern states should just be let go
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Lincoln ordered blockade of Southern seaports (April 19 and 27) 11 states formed the Confederacy- Richmond, Virginia made the capital Border states included Missouri, Kentucky, Maryland, Delaware, and West Virginia- they had the Ohio River, the Cumberland River, and the Tennessee River- making Kentucky especially a valuable asset
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Lincoln declares fighting the war is solely to preserve the Union- the proposal of fighting for slavery could have driven away the border states Cherokees, Creeks, Choctaws, Chickasaws, and Seminoles sided with Confederacy- earned delegates in the Confederate congress Southern military had General Robert E. Lee and his chief lieutenant Thomas J. “Stonewall” Jackson
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The South was “bred to fight”, and seized federal weapons as well as developed their own ironworks to get artillery Union attacks on transportation resulted in supply shortages in the South The Union’s advantages were their thriving economy and their control of the seas/trade British, Irish, and German men joined the North, creating a larger army than the South
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Lincoln discovered Ulysses S. Grant after many trial-and-error attempts at finding army commanders European aid was essential in winning the war, and they favored the North -Cotton overproduction (1857-1860) led British buyers to depend less on cotton and ultimately the South itself -Corn and Wheat production in the North led Britain to depend on the North for supplies
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Trent affair (1861)- Union warship stopped a British mail steamer, The Trent, to forcibly remove two Confederate diplomats British naval forces intervened, supplying the Confederacy with naval bases and hunting down other Union ships Laird rams (1863)- Confederate warships were built with iron rams meant to tear down Union ships- they were later bought by the British Navy
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Invasions of Canada (1866 and 1870) by Irish Americans Dominican of Canada established (1867) Breaking the Monroe Doctrine- Napoleon III occupied Mexico City (1863) The Confederate States of America had a flawed Constitution, and states began seceding from the secession
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Lincoln suspended the writ of habeas corpus, so that anti-Unionists might be summarily arrested “Supervised voting” was imposed and newspaper editors were arrested for “obstructing the war” Congress passed a federal conscription; a draft (1863)- rich men could hire subsitutes New York Draft Riots broke out (1863)- mobs pillaged and lynched
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Confederates forced to resort to conscription in 1862- had less man power North profited heavily from taxes during the war Morrill Tariff Act (1861)- boosted tariffs to a moderate rate Currency was supported by gold, and the value fluctuated with the fortunes of Union arms National Bank System established (1863)- included buying government bonds
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The Confederacy had a crashing economic status, increasing taxes and poorly backing treasury notes The Union built new factories with new machines and had protective tariffs, skyrocketing their economy Petroleum discovered in 1859 Homestead Act (1862) Women worked for the government and in factories- some fought alongside the men or were spies
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U.S. Sanitary Commission established- trained nurses, collected supplies, and equipped hospitals -Clara Barton and Dorothea Dix were nurses in the Union South deeply suffered from the blockade- their income less than half of those in the Union, leading to less transportation
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The North’s capitalism overruled the South, and they were now on their way to a new industrial age, with “King Cotton” put down
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