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What You Need to Know about the American Civil War for STAAR L. Petersen
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Dates: 1861 - 1865
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Names for the Union Yankees United States of America Blues Federals The North
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Names for the Confederacy Confederacy Confederate States of America Grays Rebels The South
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Presidents US – Abraham Lincoln Capital – Washington, DC Confederacy – Jefferson Davis Capital – Richmond, VA
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Views of Civil War South – states’ rights was their justification Union – First - To preserve the Union Much Later – to free slaves
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Northern Advantages Larger population (North – 22 Million, South – 9 million including 3.5 million slaves)
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Northern Advantages Most of the nation’s mineral deposits – iron, coal, copper, and other precious metals More factories - 86% of nation’s factories located in the North
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Northern Advantages More Railroads – The North had 2.5 times the railroad mileage as the South U.S. Navy – Almost 90% of the U.S. ships stayed with the Union.
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Northern Advantages Leadership of Abraham Lincoln - Lincoln pulled the nation through the most difficult time in its existence. A lesser man would not have been able to do that.
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Southern Advantages Generals – many West Point trained 1/3 of the career officers in the U.S. Army resigned to join the Confederacy
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Southern Advantages Fighting a Defensive War; didn’t have to invade North, just not lose Northern troops did not know the territory Northern troops far away from supply lines
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Southern Advantages Fighting for a Cause they believed in. Southerners believed that they were fighting for liberty based on the ideas in the Declaration of Independence.
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Southern Advantages Leadership of Robert E. Lee - Inspired Confederate soldiers to fight on, despite the odds
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Military Commanders Union – Ulysses S. Grant Confederacy – Robert E. Lee
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Northern Strategy - Anaconda Plan – seize railroads & Mississippi River to split Confederacy, cut off supplies blockade ports capture Richmond
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Southern Strategy – fight a defensive war, hold on until the North gave up capture Washington, DC.
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Abraham Lincoln’s Speeches Emancipation Proclamation - freed slaves in rebelling states, NOT in border states Added abolition of slavery to war aims After Antietam
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Abraham Lincoln’s Speeches Gettysburg Address – at dedication of Gettysburg battle site as national cemetery; said they were fighting to save the Union and democracy
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Gettysburg Address Read the text at http://showcase.netins.n et/web/creative/lincoln/ speeches/gettysburg.ht m
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Abraham Lincoln’s Speeches 2nd Inaugural Address -encouraged everyone to think of the Union, wanted to bring the country back together peacefully
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2 nd Inaugural Address Read the text at http://www.bartleby.co m/124/pres32.html http://www.bartleby.com/124/pres32.html
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Important Events & Battles: Ft. Sumter - First battle Antietam - Emancipation Proclamation issued after this battle; new emphasis on fighting to free slaves keeps European nations out of the civil war
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Important Events & Battles Vicksburg – Union captured the last Confederate stronghold on the Mississippi River; Union controls Mississippi River
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Important Events & Battles: Gettysburg - turning point of the war, North slowly gets the advantage as Southern casualties grow; Gettysburg Address follows it
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Important Events & Battles: Appomattox Courthouse, VA- Lee surrenders to U.S. Grant, ending the war South loses
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Important People: Thomas “Stonewall” Jackson – Confederate officer under Lee; died from wounds at Chancellorsville
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Important People William Tecumseh Sherman – Union officer; burned Atlanta in his “March to the Sea” campaign
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Important People Julia Ward Howe – wrote “The Battle Hymn of the Republic”; marching song of the Union army describing life in army, and poem “John Brown’s Body”
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Important People William Carney – 1 st African American soldier awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor
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Important People Philip Bazaar – 1 st Hispanic-American awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor
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Important People Clara Barton – founder of the Red Cross; Civil War nurse
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Important People John Wilkes Booth – assassinated Abraham Lincoln
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Reconstruction 1865-76 The period of rebuilding and reuniting the nation after the Civil War: after Lincoln’s assassination the process is much harder on the South; Congress (Radical Republicans) wanted Military Reconstruction
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Important People Hiram Rhodes Revels – 1 st African American elected to Congress
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Homestead Act Government offered public lands to settlers out west, growing crops and homes
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Morrill Act Set western land aside to fund agricultural and mechanical colleges (how Texas A&M got started)
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Dawes Act Sold Indian land and sent Indians to reservations; put Native American children in schools that virtually eliminated their culture
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Compromise of 1877 Ended Reconstruction Federal government would give more aid and leave the South alone; South promised to maintain rights for African American
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Reconstruction The period of reuniting the country after the Civil War. Much bitterness felt by the South – lasted for generations
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Lincoln Assassinated John Wilkes Booth – Southerner Made Reconstruction harder on the South Lincoln had wanted peace People wanted to punish the South after his death
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Reconstruction Seceding states had to go through a process to be formally readmitted into the Union Confederate officers lost citizenship until pardoned
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Reconstruction Amendments 13 – freed slaves 14 – gave former slaves citizenship (also had details about citizenship for former Confederates)
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Reconstruction Amendments 15 – right to vote guaranteed to all races (aimed at African Americans) Free Citizens Vote
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Reconstruction Amendments 13 th – freed slaves 14 th – gave former slave citizenship 15 th – gave African Americans the right to vote
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