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Road to Civil War, Civil War and Reconstruction Chapter 2
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I. Mexican War
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II. Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo 1.Feb. 1848—Ends Mexican War 2.CA, NM (including UT, NV, AZ) 3.Rio Grande River the southern boundary 4.Mexico gets $15 million
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III. 1850s—Decade of Crisis
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1850s—Decade of Crisis (cont’d) 1.1849—80,000+ flood CA 2.CA a free or slave state? 3.CA a slave state? 4.Extend the Missouri Line?
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IV. Compromise of 1850
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Compromise of 1850 (cont’d) 1.CA free state 2.Slavery unrestricted in UT & NM territories 3.TX gets $10 million for land 4.Slave trade abolished in D.C. & MD 5.Fugitive Slave Act
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V. Kansas-Nebraska Act 1. Republican Party—Opposed to the expansion of slavery & KS/NE Act.
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Roger Taney Dred Scott
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VI. John Brown 1.Harper’s Ferry, VA 2.Big slave rebellion? 3.Failure 4.Caught, tried, executed 5.Confederate Army begins….
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VII. The South Secedes 1.Dec. 20, 1860—SC secedes 2.Protect state’s rights, slavery, & way of life 3.MS, FL, AL, GA, LA, TX followed. (Later VA, AK, NC) 4.Feb. 1861—Confederate States of America 5.Pres. Jefferson Davis
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The South Secedes (cont’d) 6.Fort Sumter, Charleston, SC 7.S. opens canon fire; Union gives up the Federal Garrison 8.Conf. celebrated their 1 st victory; Civil War begins. (Bloodies war in U.S. history)
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VIII. Civil War
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Anaconda Plan 1.Union Plan--Gen. Winfield Scott—4 Phase Plan 1.1st Phase—Union Navy blockade ALL Southern Ports 2.2nd Phase—Control the Mississippi River 3.3 rd Phase—March through GA; up to Carolinas 4.4 th Phase—Capture capital at Richmond, VA
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Antietam 1.Antietam—Bloodiest day 2.22,000 dead 3.Sept. 1862—TURNING POINT—Kept Confederates from getting foreign aid!
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Emancipation Proclamation 1.Jan. 1, 1863. 2.Gave N. moral justification 3.England agreed; won’t help the S. 4.Ex-slaves/free blacks joined Union 5.54th Mass. Infantry
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IX. 1863: Turning Point 1.1863: War Tips to the North 2.2. 1862-1863 Union loses at Battle of Fredericksburg and Chancellorsville 3.June 1863—Gettysburg, PA 4.Bloodiest overall battle of the war 5.Lee; never again try to attack the N. 6.Confederate fate sealed at Gettysburg 7.Won’t get European support; never win again
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8.July 4, 1863—Vicksburg, MS 9.Union (Grant) got control of Miss. River 10.Gettysburg Address 11.Jan. 1864—Grant Commander of the Union Army
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Sherman’s March to the Sea
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X. Consequences 1.Generation lost; 620,000 2.Women: nurses, vet. hospitals, at home, etc. 3.1865: 4 million new Americans (13th Amend.) 4.Politics: preserving the Union; federal gov. supreme 5.American democracy survived 6. Reconstruction industrialization
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XI. Reconstruction 1.13 th Amendment—Abolishes slavery
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2. 14 th Amendment, 1868 1.Protect Rights of all U.S. citizens 2.Due process & equal protection 3.No state/fed. office; Conf. officers 3. 15 th Amendment 1868, 1. States can’t prevent citizens from voting based on: race, color, or previous servitude
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