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Chapter 15: Section 1 The Civil War

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1 Chapter 15: Section 1 The Civil War
?How did people, places, and things affect the outcome of the Civil War? Chapter 15: Section 1 The Civil War

2 Section 1: The Call to Arms
Why it Matters Both sides believed this would be a quick war. North thought the South did not have the ability to fight a long war. South thought the North would not fight against them when they realized the South would fight back. Both were wrong

3 Taking Sides in the War Pres. Lincoln declares a state of rebellion in the South. He called for 75,000 troops which made 4 more states to secede

4 More States Secede Many states eagerly sent soldiers after the call to arms Many young man eagerly signed up for service Tennessee, Kentucky and Missouri refused to send a single man “to fight against our southern brothers” Maryland and Delaware did not even respond

5 Virginia secedes 50 counties of Western part of Virginia did not want to secede and asked to be admitted into the Union as the state of West Virginia Virginia was slow to secede. Why

6 The Border States Slave states that did not secede
Delaware, Kentucky, Missouri and Maryland favored the South but did not secede. Why? Missouri and Kentucky were important because they controlled the Ohio and Mississippi River Delaware had few slaves

7 The Border states: Missouri
Lincoln reacts to border states with care and patience. Careful to not to upset them Lincoln acted with force to hold Missouri and Maryland He backed an overthrown “south supported” government in Missouri and supported the new “North supported” state government

8 Maryland Southern sympathizers destroyed railroad and telegraph lines to Washington, DC Lincoln declares martial law ( military is in charge and citizens’ rights are suspended) Why is this necessary to keep Maryland?

9

10 States take Sides South Carolina North Carolina Virginia Tennessee
USA: North Csa: South Vermont New Hampshire Maine Massachusetts Pennsylvania Iowa Minnesota Michigan Kansas Wisconsin Indiana Ohio New York New Jersey Rhode Island West Virginia Connecticut California **Border states: Delaware, Missouri, Kentucky and Maryland South Carolina North Carolina Virginia Tennessee Arkansas Louisiana Mississippi Florida Alabama Georgia Texas

11 North against South Military leaders tradition
Southern Advantages Northern advantages Military leaders tradition Fighting on own territory Offense More factories More railroad miles Population (2/3rd) Established government Established trade with other countries


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