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Advantages & Disadvantages The North had better access to supplies and transportation. They produced 90% of the country’s weapons, cloth, shoes, and iron. ----------------------˚------------------------- The South felt its soldiers were better prepared to fight. They did a lot of hunting and were familiar with weapons.
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Union Strategies Lincoln consulted General Winfield Scott who fought in the Mexican War. He suggested a blockade of the Atlantic and Gulf coasts of the Confederacy. Blockade – is the shutting off of an area by troops or ships to keep people and supplies from moving in or out.
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Union Strategies Winfield Scott also wanted to gain control of the Mississippi River and cut the Confederacy in half.
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Union Strategies Winfield Scott also wanted to attack the Confederacy from the east and west. This strategy was called the Anaconda Plan. Anaconda Plan – Union strategy for defeating the Confederacy by attacking from the east and the west.
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Confederate Strategies It believed that the Confederacy only had to defend its territory until the North got tired and gave up. The south thought their soldiers were more willing to fight. They also thought that Britain would help them because British clothing mills depended on Southern cotton. Britain no longer needed their cotton because they were getting it from Egypt and India.
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Early Battles The First Battle of Bull Run Lincoln sent 35,000 troops to attack the capital of the Confederacy, Richmond Virginia. The Union troops ran into Confederate troops at a stream called Bull Run near the town of Manassas Junction, Virginia.
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The First Battle of Bull Run The Battle of Bull Run went back and forth and eventually a southern general told his men to hold their place. The troops listened and they stood “like a stone wall”, and the general became known as Thomas “Stonewall” Jackson.
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Early Battles Many battles were taking place, and the South seemed to be winning. Union and Confederate troops met near the town of Sharpsburg, Maryland, in the Battle of Antietam. Robert E. Lee was the general for the Confederacy, however the Union won.
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Battle of Antietam This was an important victory for the Union because after they won, Britain stopped supporting the South. The Confederacy would have to fight alone!
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Robert E. Lee Born and raised in Virginia Rising star in the United States Army. Was asked to fight for the North, but refused even though he did not believe in slavery. Resigned from the United States Army.
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Life for Soldiers Photography allowed people to see what was happening on the battlefront. Soldiers might march 25 miles a day. They carried about 50 pounds of supplies. They often wore out their shoes and fought in bare feet. Food was not good. Volunteers for the war decreased and each side passed draft laws.
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Life for Soldiers Draft – requires men of a certain age to serve in the military if they are called. However, Confederates who owned more than 20 slaves could pay substitutes to take their place. In the Union, men could pay $300 to avoid fighting in the war.
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Life for Soldiers A total of about 1 million Union and Confederate soldiers were killed or wounded. Compared to 10,600 Patriots who were killed in the Revolutionary War. Disease was the most common cause of death in the Civil War.
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The Emancipation Proclamation At first, the Civil War was not about slavery. Lincoln wanted to preserve the United States of America. Eventually, he realized that the only way to preserve the Union was to make the abolition of slavery a goal of the war.
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The Emancipation Proclamation Many people thought it would divide the North and unite the South. Why? Lincoln stated, “Slavery must die that the nation might live.” On January 1, 1863, President Lincoln issued the Emancipation Proclamation. Moments before signing the proclamation Lincoln said, “I never in my life felt more certain that I was doing right.”
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The Emancipation Proclamation – freed slaves in the Confederate states at war with the Union. Since the Union did not control those states most African Americans remained slaves. Free African Americans, such as Frederick Douglas, encouraged each other to join the Union Army.
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African Americans in the War In the beginning of the war, African Americans were not allowed to join the army, but served as cooks, servants, or workers. They were allowed to join in 1862.
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Women in the War A Northern woman, Clara Barton – was a nurse and got the nickname “Angel of the Battlefield”. She cared for wounded soldiers during the First Battle of Bull Run. In 1881, she organized the American Association of the Red Cross to help victims of wars and natural disasters.
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Women in the War Southern women had to deal with shortages of supplies. There were bread riots because food was so expensive and in short supply. Women in the North and South did all they could for their soldiers. They sewed clothing rolled bandages sold personal possessions sent any food they could spare to the armies
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The War Goes On Soldiers in the North and South were worn out over the war: lack of supplies sleeping uncovered in the rain delays in pay deaths of family and friends Some soldiers were refusing to go to war.
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