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RECAP: WHAT’S HAPPENING McClellan has been removed from command by President Lincoln Gen. Don Carlos Buell has also been removed from command in the West President Lincoln is working out the final preparations to pass the Emancipation Proclamation The Confederacy is fervently trying to secure European aid
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THE BATTLE OF FREDERICKSBURG In late 1862, Lincoln replaced McClellan with Ambrose E. Burnside (left). Burnside was a reluctant commander and had turned down this position in the past, but Lincoln had no other options at this point.
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THE BATTLE OF FREDERICKSBURG Burnside quickly moved the Army of the Potomac south, feinting towards the Orange and Alexandria RR while actually moving towards Falmouth. Burnside planned to move across the Rappahannock River and swiftly march on Richmond, just over 50 miles south of Falmouth. For once Lincoln believed he had found an able and dynamic general.
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THE BATTLE OF FREDERICKSBURG Unfortunately, Burnside’s pontoons did not arrive on time. This gave Lee and the Confederate army time to occupy Fredericksburg and the heights overlooking the town from the Southwest. Movie time
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AFTERMATH The Union suffered 12,600 casualties to the Confederacy’s sub- 5,000. The Union army retreated North once again in defeat and Burnside was quickly removed from command.
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THE WAR IN THE WEST During the final days of 1862, the Army of the Cumberland under William Rosecrans engaged the Army of Tennessee at Stones River, just outside of Murfreesboro, TN. On the night of Dec. 30 th, the bands of the two armies played popular songs back and forth to each other.
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THE BATTLE OF STONES RIVER Like most battles, the Confederacy struck early in the morning, surprised the Yankees, and appeared to have won the battle easily on the first day. And like most battles, the Union army rallied before the end of the day and was able to stall the Confederate attacks the next day. Union casualties: 31% Confederate casualties: 33% Highest combined rate of the war
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THE VICKSBURG CAMPAIGN During the debacle of Fredericksburg and the battle of Stones River, General Ulysses S. Grant was having troubles of his own in the Deep South. The Union army had taken control of most of the Mississippi River, with the exception of one major city; Vicksburg.
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THE VICKSBURG CAMPAIGN Vicksburg sat at the top of a tall bluff overlooking a bend in the Mississippi River. If the Union captured it, they would have complete control over the Mississippi River. For the first 4 months of 1863, Grant tried many different methods to bypass Vicksburg altogether. None worked. However, by late March, Grant had a risky plan that might finally succeed.
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THE VICKSBURG CAMPAIGN Grant moved his troops overland south of Vicksburg and sent his gunboats downriver past Vicksburg. Overall, the plan worked: the boats made it past with minimal casualties and were able to ferry Grant’s army across the river onto the east bank, on the side of Vicksburg. Grant struck out east, took Jackson, then turned around and headed for Vicksburg.
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THE VICKSBURG CAMPAIGN Once Grant reached Vicksburg, he had his troops surround the city on the land side and moved his gunboats in to cut the city off from the river. However, for the first time in months, the Rebels turned the Yankees away from Vicksburg in a series of frontal assaults ordered by Grant. In response, Grant settled down for a siege and waited for the Southerner’s food and supplies to run out.
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BACK EAST After Burnside was removed from command, General Joseph Hooker took his place. Hooker, a fiery man, took many steps to revive morale in the Army of the Potomac. Hooker boasted that he had created the finest army on the planet in late spring. And finally, he began to move.
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CHANCELLORSVILLE Like Burnside, Hooker started off great. He divided his forces, leaving 40,000 in front of Lee at Fredericksburg while taking 70,000 downriver and moving in on Lee’s flank. However, like Burnside and McClellan before him, when Hookers forces encountered Lee’s near Chancellorsville on May 1 st, he chickened out and pulled back. The following night, Lee found a way to outwit the Army of the Potomac once again.
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AFTER CHANCELLORSVILLE In the night following the battle, General Stonewall Jackson was mortally wounded by friendly fire and would die soon after. Grant was stuck in front of Vicksburg and Hooker limped back north toward Washington with his army.
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CONCLUSION In the east, the Army of the Potomac was broken multiple times by Robert E. Lee and the Army of Northern Virginia, due to incompetent generaling. In the west, General Grant was causing havoc and threatened to finally take control of the Mississippi and divide the Confederacy in two.
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