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Title: Resources, Strategies & Early Battles of the Civil War Focus


1
Resources, Strategies Early Battles of the
Civil War
  • Focus Question How did each sides resources and
    strategies affect the early battles of the war?
  • Objectives
  • Contrast the resources and strategies of the
    North and South
  • Describe the outcomes and effects of the early
    battles of the Civil War

2
The American Civil War 1861-1865
Copy down things in bold black put things in
blue in your own words/summarize
3
North South
23 States 11 States
Union Confederate
Yankee Rebel
Blue Coats Grey Coats
USA CSA
President Abraham Lincoln President Jefferson Davis
Federal States Rights
4
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5
Advantages Disadvantages of the Union
  • ADVANTAGES
  • Population (22 million)
  • 5 times as many factories (more resources,
    greater ability to make weapons, supplies)
  • Greater resources (coal, iron)
  • Double the railroads (makes moving troops and
    supplies easier)
  • Well-organized navy (South had none)
  • Established government with strong leader
    (Lincoln)
  • DISADVANTAGE
  • Fighting an offensive war (had to go into the
    South and attack)

6
Advantages Disadvantages of the Confederacy
  • ADVANTAGES
  • Psychological advantagefighting for survival
  • Strong military leadership
  • Robert E. Lee
  • Most of their generals were trained at West
    Point, the military academy
  • Strategic advantagesjust needed to defend
  • Defending is easier than attacking
  • Fighting on familiar territory
  • Just had to avoid defeat, get North to back down
  • DISADVANTAGES
  • Less factories to produce supplies
  • No navy
  • New, inexperienced government
  • Smaller population

7
Confederate Wartime Strategy
  • Self-preservation while damaging the Union enough
    to get it to give up
  • Sought Foreign Support from Britain France
  • Needed to trade for supplies
  • hoped that European dependence on Southern cotton
    would get military support

8
Union Wartime Strategy
  • Anaconda PlanUnion plan to starve out the South
    by controlling the Mississippi River and
    splitting the Confederacy
  • 1) Blockade (block off) Southern ports
  • 2) Control the MI River, splitting the
    Confederacy
  • Proposed by General Winfield Scott

General Winfield Scott 1st Commander of Union
Forces
9
Lincoln Avoids the Slavery Issue
  • Border Statesstates that allowed slavery but
    remained in the UnionMissouri, Kentucky,
    Delaware, and Maryland
  • Lincoln wanted to keep the border states in the
    Union
  • Promised not to interfere with slaveryhis goal
    was to preserve the Union
  • I believe I have no lawful right to free the
    slaves, and I have no inclination to do so1st
    Inaugural Address

10
Civil War The First Modern War?
  • New technology revolutionized war
  • Iron ships replaced wooden ones (battle between
    the Monitor (Union) and Virginia (Confederate)
    1st battle w/ ironclad ships
  • New firearms and cone-shaped bullets w/ greater
    accuracy
  • Trench warfare, like in WWI and WWII
  • (P. 107)

11
1st Battle at Bull Run (Manassas, VA)
  • July 21, 1861 outside D.C.
  • Union Commander General Irvin McDowell
  • Confederate CommanderBeauregard and Thomas
    Stonewall Jackson
  • Jackson leaders his troops in refusal to back
    downSouth WINS
  • Shock for people who expected war to be quick
    and painlessshowed it would be violent and long!
  • Lincoln replaces McDowell w/ General George B.
    McClellan, new commander of Army of the Potomac.

12
Grant Fights in Tennessee
  • Union forces in TN led by General Ulysses S.
    Grant, following Anaconda Plan down the
    Mississippi
  • Capture two Confederate forts
  • Battle of Shiloh, April 1862 (Confederates win)
  • Terrible death toll 25,000 Union Confederates
  • Hurts Grants reputation as rising start in Union
    Army

13
Fighting in the Southwest
  • Both Union Confederacy wanted the resources of
    the Southwest (gold in CA, access to Pacific)
  • March at Glorieta Pass, NM (1862)
  • Union defeats Confederate attempt to control SW
  • Confederates never threaten again
  • Union Confederacy both try to get help from
    Mexicans, Mexican-Americans, and native peoples
  • Union gets Cheyenne to ally in exchange for land
    protection
  • Confederates get support of Creeks Choctaw
  • Cherokee split between U C

14
Stalemate in the East Failures of McClellan?
  • General George McClellancommander of all Union
    forces
  • Cautious, hesitant to act before prepared
  • Lincoln wanted McClellan to be aggressive, but
    would not give forces McClellan asked for
  • Summer 1862 McClellan agrees to march toward
    Richmond (Peninsular Campaign)
  • Battle of the Seven Days (June 26-July 2 1862)
  • Union loses at Richmond to Confederates commanded
    by Robert E. Lee, who took advantage of
    McLellans cautious style
  • Union stalled, McClellan retreated

15
  • Lincoln replaced McClellan with General Ambrose
    Burnside, which would prove to be a mistake
  • Union struggled to find good military
    leadershipthere was a revolving door of generals
    and the Union faced numerous defeats
  • McClellan would be hired/fired again

16
2nd Battle of Bull Run (Manassas, VA)
  • August 29-30, 1862
  • The general for the Confederate was Stonewall
    Jackson.
  • The general for the Yankees was John Pope.
  • The North lost 16,000 soldiers while the South
    lost only 9,000
  • The South won the battle
  • North seemed at disadvantage

17
Antietam/Sharpsburg, Maryland
  • September 17, 1862
  • Known as the bloodiest day of the Civil War w/
    23,000 dead or wounded
  • Union CommanderMcClellan
  • Confederate CommanderRobert E. Lee
  • South retreated. Not a clear victory, but enough
    for Lincoln to move forward with an important
    decision

18
Life During the War
  • Focus Question How did the war change American
    society?
  • Objectives
  • Analyze the Emancipation Proclamation and what it
    achieved
  • Assess the role of African Americans during the
    war
  • Evaluate how the war changed Northern and
    Southern economy society
  • Discuss the experience of war for northern and
    southern soldiers
  • Explain the impact of the war on women

19
The Push Toward Emancipation
  • Pressure from abolitionists
  • Numerous requests from Union soldiers
  • Union General Butler declared fugitive slaves to
    be contraband (war supplies) to protect them
  • Union General Fremont declared slaves who came to
    him in MO free (Lincoln reversed order)
  • Concerned w/ angering border states, but Lincoln
    felt he could not avoid issue any longer

20
Emancipation Proclamation
  • September 22, 1862 (after Antietam)
  • Freed all slaves in territories in rebellion
    after January 1, 1863
  • Did not free slaves in border states
  • Mixed attitudes toward in it North (some happy,
    some thought it wasnt enough, some angry)
  • Infuriated South

21
Emancipation Proclamation
  • Important turning point for the war
  • Reaffirmed many northerners belief that it was a
    war against slavery
  • Made Confederates more determined to fight to the
    end
  • Even more free blacks and slaves flocked to Union
    to join the fight

22
Blacks in the Military
  • July 1862 Militia Actrequired black soldiers be
    accepted into military
  • 54th Massachusetts Regimentall-black regiment
    that fought bravely in Charleston, S.C.
  • Still faced prejudiceassigned worst tasks, etc.
  • If captured, killed

23
War Transforms the Northern Economy
  • to fund war needed
  • 1st Income tax (tax on wages) introduced to pay
    for the cost of the war
  • Sold bonds, certificates from government that
    promise to payback interest
  • Printed
  • Homestead Act sold 160 acres out west to those
    willing to live on it for 5 years (very cheaply)

24
The Draft Triggers Rioting in the North
  • 1863 conscription (draft) for any white man
    between ages of 20-45
  • Men could pay 300 for replacement
  • Made draft something that only working class and
    immigrants had to deal with
  • Resentment grew, including toward African
    Americans who werent subject to draft
  • New York Draft Riot July 1863

Mob of poor white working men went on 4-day
rampagedamaged factories, attacked and lynched
African Americans, etc
25
War Threatens Civil Liberties
  • Copperheads Peace Democrats, demanded end to
    war
  • Lincoln suspicious of them
  • Lincoln suspended habeas corpus, which protects
    person from being held in jail without being
    charged for a specific crime
  • Let military arrest people suspected of disloyalty

26
The Homefront in the South
  • Union blockade of southern ports costs South
    resources, makes feeding and supplying army and
    civilians difficult
  • Blockade runner ships to bring supplies grow
    less effective as Union gains strength
  • Struggle to Pay for War
  • Souths wealth was in land, which mattered less
  • Printed ?inflation, which combined w/ shortages
    of food and supplies, led to riots
  • Conscription (draft) and suspension of habeas
    corpus
  • Some suggested impeaching President Jefferson
    Davis

27
Comparing North South
28
The Life of the Soldier
  • ½ the eligible men in the Union and 4 out of 5 in
    the South served in the military
  • Difficulties of homesickness, divided loyalties
    (families torn between Union and Confederacy)
  • Death disease common
  • Infections from lack of sanitation, poor food,
    etc
  • For every soldier killed in battle, two died of
    disease
  • Prison camps were especially horrible
  • Starvation, disease, etc
  • Ex. During the 15 months that Confederate prison
    at Andersonville, GA operated, 12,000 Union
    prisoners died of disease and malnutrition

29
Women and the War
  • Women replaced men in many professions as men
    were away at war (family businesses, farms,
    plantations)
  • Some joined the army in secret (dressed as men)
    some joined the army camp to help with cooking,
    laundry, etc
  • Served as spies and guides
  • NURSING
  • Clara Barton, nurse on the battlefield, caring
    for wounded soldiers
  • Founded the American branch of the Red Cross, the
    international health/nursing organization

30
Gods Generals Turning Points of the War
  • Focus Question How did the Battles of Vicksburg
    and Gettysburg change the course of the Civil
    War?
  • Objectives
  • Evaluate the changes in Union Confederate
    military leadership
  • Explain what the Union gained by capturing
    Vicksburg
  • Describe the importance of the Battle of
    Gettysburg
  • Analyze how the Union used its military advantage
    after 1863

31
Key Union Generals Ulysses S. Grant
  • Began Civil War career fighting in Tennessee and
    Kentucky
  • Decisive, bold military leader
  • Becomes Union Commander in 1864
  • Won victories in South where other generals
    failed (example McClellan)

32
Key Union Generals William Tecumseh Sherman
  • General who conducted the March to the Sea in
    Georgia
  • Goal to make Georgia howl
  • War is all hell

33
Key Confederate Generals Thomas Stonewall
Jackson
  • Confederate General who fought at both battles of
    Bull Run
  • W/ Lee, led 3 month long campaign to hold onto
    the Shenandoah Valley in Virginia
  • Died in battle at Chancellorsville (1863)
  • Known for his courage, strength in battle, and
    ability to win with fewer men

34
Key Confederate Generals Robert E. Lee
  • Confederate general of the Army of Northern
    Virginia
  • Lee opposed secession, but did not believe the
    Union should be held together by force
  • Admired as a strong, decisive leader Lincoln had
    asked him to command Union
  • Urged Southerners to accept defeat and unite as
    Americans again, when some Southerners wanted to
    fight on after Appomattox.

35
Vicksburg, MI July 4,1864
  • Vicksburg Confederate stronghold on the
    Mississippi River, seen as key to Union victory
  • After numerous failed attempts, Grant placed
    Vicksburg under siege, surrounding the city,
    cutting off its supplies, and constantly
    attacking it
  • After over a month, on July 4, 1863, Confederates
    surrendered
  • Turning point in the warsplit Confederacy in
    two! Led other Confederate stronghold, Port
    Hudson, LA, to surrender too. (p. 132)

36
Gettysburg, PA July 1, 1863
  • Union had serious losses throughout 1862,
    including Battle of Chancellorsville (although
    Confederates lost Jackson there)
  • June 1863 Confederate General Lee set off to
    invade Pennsylvania
  • July 1-3, 1863
  • Union ultimately won, but over 50,000 men lost
    their lives
  • Bloodiest battle (more than a day)
  • Crushing defeat for the Southnever again would
    they fight on Union soil
  • p. 128

37
Gettysburg Address
  • November 1863
  • Gettysburgcemetery for fallen soldiers
  • Lincoln gave the Gettysburg Addressspeech to
    commemorate lives lost, statement of American
    values and goals
  • Civil War as a struggle to fulfill the
    Declaration of Independence and preserve a nation
    where all men are created equal

38
Grant Marches Toward Richmond
  • Early 1864 Grant becomes commander of entire
    Union military
  • Targeted Confederate capital of Richmond, VA
  • Engaged Lees Confederate troops in horrible
    battles Wilderness, Spotsylvania, Cold Harbor
  • Strategy was to inflict more losses on
    Confederates than they could withstand
  • Horrifying violence outraged both North and
    South, but it worked

39
Shermans March to the Sea
  • May 1864 Sherman began 250-mile march from TN
    border to capture Savannah, GA.
  • Slash and burn tacticslooting for supplies,
    burning anything of potential value
  • Captured Atlanta on September 2nd and burned it
    to the ground
  • December 1864, captured Savannah

40
Total War
War is all hell!
  • Strike military and civilian targets
  • Destroy materials and crops that enemy forces
    might be able to use
  • Destroy railroads and factories to damage local
    economy
  • Break the peoples will to continue fighting

41
Election of 1864
Abraham Lincoln vs. George McClellan
  • Union victories, like Atlanta, helped boost
    Lincolns popularity
  • Lincoln won majority of electoral votes, although
    McClellan had 45 popular vote
  • Reelection destroyed any Confederate hopes that
    North would negotiate peace

42
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43
The Wars Final Days
  • Summer 1864, Grant pushed toward Richmond to
    defeat the Confederates at their capital
  • Over six month long siege against Lees forces in
    Petersburg, VA
  • Heavy casualties on both sides and Lee had no
    backup troops
  • April 2nd, after a failed attempt to break the
    siege, the Confederates, led by Lee retreated
    from Petersburg and fled to Richmond

44
Thirteenth Amendment
  • February 1865 Thirteenth Amendment introduced to
    Congress
  • 13th Amendment outlaw slavery in the United
    States
  • Ended peace talks w/ Confederacy, which refused
    to accept a future without slavery

45
AppomattoxApril 1865
  • After running from Grants Union forces for a
    week, Lee formally surrendered to Grant in the
    town of Appomattox Court House, VA on April 9,
    1865
  • Surrender did not officially end the war
  • Fighting lasted in some parts of the country
    until June

46
Why the North Won
  • When war began, South had confidence, better
    military leadership, and determination so why
    did the North win?
  • North had technology, bigger population, and
    resources
  • Emergence of strong, fearless generals like Grant
    and Sherman greatly helped
  • Steady leadership of Lincoln
  • Emancipation Proclamation
  • Decline of the South
  • SEE PAGE 138Costs of War

47
Lincoln is Assassinated
  • April 14, 1865
  • Ford Theater
  • Assassin John Wilkes Booth
  • Part of a plot to kill Lincoln, the Vice
    President, and the Secretary of State
  • Booth was only successful conspirator killed
    immediately once found
  • Four of his accomplices were later hanged

48
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49
The Wars Lasting Impact
  • Industrial growth in the North continues, making
    it an economic powerhouse
  • Land Grant College Act built colleges in N West
  • Protective tariffs helped N economy
  • South is left in ruins, struggling to rebuild
    economy after war and relying heavily on the
    North
  • Soldiers in both N S disoriented by war
  • African Americans headed west and north to take
    advantage of freedom, although many stayed in the
    South and discovered that freedom wasnt fully
    delivered
  • Union victory helped cement the power of the
    federal government over the states and many saw
    themselves as citizens of the USA, not their
    state
  • States rights still an issue though
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