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American Civil War Part I 1861-1865

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Title: American Civil War Part I 1861-1865


1
American Civil WarPart I1861-1865
It is well that war is so terrible we would
grow to fond of it. General Lee There is many
a boy here today who looks on war as all glory,
but boys, it is all hell. General Sherman
2
Learning Objectives
  • Know the professional development of military
    officers prior to the war.
  • Understand the significance of how the
    organizational makeup of both sides affect their
    military styles of leadership.
  • Know the different strategies used by the North
    and South.
  • Know the tactical and technological advances that
    increased combat effectiveness throughout the
    war.
  • Be able to identify the major strengths and
    weaknesses of Grant and Lees strategies.

3
PRIOR TO THE WAR
  • Professional development of officers.
  • 1802 West Point is formed
  • In 55 of 60 largest battles, both sides were
    commanded by West Pointers.
  • Artillery and Infantry schools opened.
  • Professional staff begins in earnest
  • Greater independence for military leaders.
  • Politicians focus on strategy and are less
    involved in operational and tactical decisions.
  • Mexican War
  • Many leaders on both sides gain valuable
    experience.
  • First great post-Industrial Revolution war.

4
Secession
5
Roots of Conflict
  • Slavery ?
  • States Rights?

6
Beginnings of the Civil War
  • First great conflict of the Steam Age
  • The aim of the North was unconditional surrender
    - total victory
  • The aim of the South was independence through
    persistence?
  • It was a crusade that put to test the military
    development of the industrial revolution
  • Therefore, it opened a radically new chapter in
    the history of war

7
Ideological and Political Divisions
  • Pro-Slavery South
  • Free Soil North
  • Slavery good institution
  • Protected blacks
  • Christian institution
  • Profited whites
  • White male political patriarchy
  • States rights to protect slavery
  • Western expansion of slavery
  • Northern states and territories stronger w/o
    slavery
  • Slavery morally and economically corrupt
  • Free Soil land of free white laborers
  • Freedom from slavery, freedom for whites
  • Against western expansion of slavery

8
Political Failures and Conflicts
  • Constitutional Convention institutionalized
    slavery, did not tackle abolition at the time,
    pushing it on later generations
  • Missouri Compromise (1820) free and slave state
    tit-for-tat
  • Mexican-American War war of territorial
    expansion
  • Compromise of 1850 tried to appease both sides,
    but offended both
  • Bleeding Kansas civil war over slave/free state
    status
  • Dred Scott Decision blacks had no rights which
    the white man was bound to respect C.J. Taney
  • Dred Scott Decision Congress had no right to
    outlaw slavery in territories

9
Coordinated and balanced economy vs. distorted,
agriculture-based economy
  • NORTH
  • 23,000,000 population
  • Industrial economy
  • 109 manufacturing plants
  • 22,000 miles of railroad
  • 90 of industrial power
  • SOUTH
  • 9,000,000
  • includes 3.5 M slaves
  • Agricultural economy
  • Exports, not food.
  • 31,000 manufacturing plants
  • 9,000 miles of railroad
  • mostly export crops (cotton, tobacco) so food was
    scarce

10
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11
Military Leadership Generals
  • 1,080 officers active
  • 286 went South (184 from West Point)
  • 900 West Pointers in civilian sector
  • 99 joined South
  • 55 of 60 largest battles were led by West Point
    graduates
  • Three most qualified Union generals joined South
    (Lee and two Johnstons)
  • Masters of Napoleonic Warfare
  • Interior lines and turning movements for both
    offensive and defensive
  • Problem was that both sides used them and they
    were able to predict each others moves
  • Emphasis on Engineering as taught at USMA
  • Generals from both sides trained and had fought
    together

12
Fugitive Slave Act
  • The Fugitive Slave Act was part of the Compromise
    of 1850, requiring that fugitive slaves be
    returned to owners
  • The 1850 statute gave jurisdiction for fugitive
    slave cases to federal commissioners and took it
    away from northern courts
  • Southerners supported the fugitive slave act
  • The federal commissioners were paid by
    southerners to return blacks back to slave
    catchers regardless if they were free or not
  • FSA escalated regional divisions northerners
    feared slave power conspiracy of southern slave
    owners

13
Kansas-Nebraska Act
  • In 1853 the House of Representative banned
    slavery in Nebraska, however the senate killed
    the bill.
  • Stephen Douglas reintroduced the principle of
    popular sovereignty so they (residents of state)
    were able to decide if it was going be a Free
    State or a Slave State.
  • Stephen Douglass idea became law free states
    thought that it was pro- slavery, and the
    southerners mistrusted the law.
  • Law backfired for Stephen Douglas and the
    northern Democrats in Congress their number fell
    from 91 to 25.
  • A major result of this act the emergence of
    Abraham Lincoln tried to reestablish the
    Missouri Compromise
  • Lincoln was against slavery because he thought it
    was dehumanizing of slaves, showed greed and
    selfishness.
  • This act was a major cause of the Civil War
    because it reopened the controversy of slavery
    and led to battle in Kansas over whether it would
    be a free state or slave state.

14
Dred Scott Decision
  • The Dred Scott case of 1857 addressed the issue
    of whether a slave was a citizen or property
  • Dred Scott, a slave, sued for his freedom based
    on the fact that he had been transported by his
    owner to a free state
  • The Supreme Courts Decision Dred Scotts case
    would not be heard b/c he was not a citizen
  • The Supreme Court ruled that slaves were property
    and could not hold citizenship, regardless of
    where they resided
  • As a result of the Supreme Court's decision,
    slave-states found the legal protection to oppose
    the abolition of slavery
  • Supreme Court upheld states rights the federal
    govt. could not infringement on a state's
    sovereignty or an individual's right to hold
    property
  • This protection allowed them to draw the
    proverbial line in the sand, which only escalated
    tensions between the north and the south

15
John Browns Raid, 1859
  • Raided federal arsenal in Harpers Ferry, VA (now
    WV)
  • Hoped to arm slaves for slave rebellion
  • Raid a failure and Brown executed
  • Applauded by northerners denounced by
    southerners
  • Indicates growing divide, animosity, and hatred
    between regions
  • Conspiracy theories on both sides
  • Fears of southern Pro-Slavery power
  • Fears of northern abolition and slave
    insurrection

16
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17
Slaves in the Original Thirteen Colonies
(1750-1860)
18
Slaves as Percentage of Southern Population
(1750-1860)
19
Slaves as Percentage of Southern Population
(1750-1860
20
Slaves in the South (1790-1860)
21
Political Divisions 3rd Party System
  • Solid South white male Democratic Party
  • Northern urban Democrats (immigrants/workers/Irish
    )
  • Constitutional Union Party (1860) Whigs,
    Democrats, and Know-Nothings who supported Union,
    but didnt want slavery to be major issue
  • New political party Republican Party formed in
    1854 by anti-slavery activists
  • Opposition to slavery in Kansas and Nebraska
  • Free Soil ideology
  • Pro-Union
  • Equal rights
  • Big Government for social and economic goals

22
1860 Election
23
The Soldiers
  • North (semi-regular)
  • Marched Heavy (60 lbs)
  • Military rigidity and form of discipline
  • Maintaining line in open fields
  • Stay in our range but out of theirs
  • South (semi-guerrilla)
  • Marched Light (30-40 lbs)
  • Independent action on the battlefield
  • Move forward, back then rush without precision or
    order sweeping everything in front of them
  • Stay close to enemy, within our range

24
Why Did Northerners Fight?
  • Abolitionist minority fund. opposed to slavery
    slavery was an evil, a stain on the nation
    represented belief in full INCLUSION of blacks
    into nation
  • Free Labor majority opposed to expansion of
    slavery
  • Slavery hurts free labor
  • Free labor economic and political independence
  • Free people would not allow themselves to be
    enslaved
  • Republican and republican
  • Pro-Union unification of nation under free
    labor ideals
  • Belief a pivot point to judge whether people are
    worthy of citizenship or rights

25
Union Strategy
  • Aggressive offensive to crush the rebellion.
  • Attrition
  • Gen Winfield Scotts Anaconda Plan
  • Links economics and combat
  • Blockade and seizure of ports
  • Take Richmond
  • Thought to be CSA center of gravity.
  • Ironworks
  • Urgency (3 month enlistments)
  • Dont allow Confederacy to rest.
  • Napoleonic tactics.

26
Important Points about Civil War
  • Change from limited to total war
  • First modern technological war
  • More casualties (1 million) and deaths (620,000)
    than any other U.S. war
  • War for the future of the country
  • War of competing ideals
  • Would the U.S. live up to the ideals of
    democracy, freedom, and equality?
  • Would the union of states survive?

27
Confederate Strategy
  • Defend and delay until Union gives up.
  • Need support/intervention from Europe.
  • Emancipation Proclamation made foreign support
    politically unviable.
  • Used as a strategic weapon by Union?
  • Threaten Washington, and keep the war distanced
    from Richmond.
  • Sought decisive battle that would convince the
    Union it wasnt worth it (Gettysburg?).
  • Lee favored tactical defense.
  • Dug in regiment can tie down a division, allowing
    the remainder of forces to maneuver and attack.

28
Fort Sumter, SC
  • Confederates fired on U.S. fort on April 12, 1861

Official beginning of the Civil War
29
Civil War Casualties by Battle
30
Odds of Dying from Combat Wounds
31
First Modern War
  • Increased death and brutality
  • Both sides fighting for causes they believed in
  • Length of war increasingly hardened soldiers
  • Mentality of victory at all costs
  • New military technologies increased deaths and
    casualties
  • Long-barreled muskets shot farther and more
    accurately than ever before
  • Cannons
  • Arms outpaced traditional military strategies
    marching in formation, close-range fighting in
    long lines
  • Defensive strategies best, but generals refused
    to give up on charges
  • Lag in medical technology lack of sanitation
  • Became a total war attacks on civilian
    populations

32
WEAPONS
  • Rifle (muzzle loader) greatly changes tactics,
    although most leaders are slow to grasp its
    impact.
  • 2k dead in twenty minutes, another 5k wounded.
  • Calvary is not used to charge/exploit, but to
    scout/skirmish.
  • reconnaissance

33
Early War 1861-1862
  • Idea of limited short war on both sides
  • Most northerners fighting to preserve union (the
    nation), not to end slavery believed the war
    would be short quick victory for North
  • Most southerners fighting to preserve slave
    system and homeland believed quick victory
    would force north to give in to demands for
    separate country
  • General George McClellan, Union military leader,
    believed that quick victories would convince most
    southerners to rejoin the Union but he never
    won those victories and war dragged on
  • Became a long, total war

34
1861 1862
  • JAN - Secession begins in earnest. (SC first
    state to secede in Dec 1860).
  • FEB - Davis elected and inaugurated
  • MAR- Lincoln inaugurated Constitution of CSA
    passed.
  • APR - Ft Sumter seized (12-14 April)
  • MAY- CSA declaration of war passed.
  • JUL - First Bull Run/Manassas (21st)
  • JAN- McClellan fired
  • MAR- Monitor and Merrimac
  • APR- Shiloh Lee assumes command
  • APR-AUG- Peninsular Campaign
  • SEPT- Antietam Emancipation Proclamation passed
    (takes effect Jan 63).
  • DEC- Fredericksburg

35
Major Front Eastern Front
  • Most battles fought in Virginia
  • The North wanted to capture the Confederate
    capital in Richmond, VA
  • Virginia and Richmond defended by Robert E. Lee
    and Army of Northern Virginia
  • Lee and Stonewall Jackson effective defenders
  • Union General George McClellan overly cautious
    didnt pursue Confederates after victory at
    Antietam in 1862 (bloodiest one-day battle in
    U.S. history)
  • McClellan removed from command
  • Union defeated at Fredericksburg in next attempt
    to capture Richmond

36
Tactics and Cavalry
  • Tactics
  • Few breech loaded or magazine rifles
  • Almost exclusive use of muzzle loaded rifles
  • Offensive and defensive entrenchments (Roman
    like)
  • Tactical defense was most powerful
  • Did not agree with European view that heavy
    cavalry had a role on the battlefield
  • Cavalry should not charge rifle-armed infantry
  • Both sides had extensive cavalry units, South had
    more
  • Dismounted to fight infantry
  • Carried Rifles, pistols and sabers
  • Rifle gave them a dismounted defensive power

37
Civil War Battles Map
38
Union Naval Blockade of the South
  • Goal cut off south from Atlantic and interstate
    trade
  • Goal cut off cotton trade to Europe, limit
    southern war funds, keep Europe out of war

39
Major Front Western Front
  • Between the Appalachian Mountains and Mississippi
    River
  • North wanted to capture the MS River and use it
    for invasion of the South
  • Succession of Union victories, led by U.S. Grant
  • Victories at Shiloh (April 1862), New Orleans
    (April-May 1862)
  • Needed to capture Vicksburg, MS to gain control
    of MS River
  • Capture of Vicksburg, combined with Emancipation
    Proclamation on Jan. 1, 1863, turned the tide of
    the war South on the defensive militarily and
    ideologically

40
Siege of Vicksburg, MS
41
Change in War Goals
  • Slaves pushed Union to change war goals
  • Contraband slaves fled to Union lines, demanded
    role in war effort, demanded freedom
  • Thousands of slaves on the move in the south
  • They undermined the Souths ability to sustain
    economy at home on backs of slave labor
  • Undermined Souths ability to control population
    and borders
  • A revolution from within the Confederacy
  • At same time, Radical Republicans pressured
    Lincoln to change goals
  • Confederate military victories convinced him of
    necessity of different war strategies

42
After Vicksburg, Total War
  • Generals Grant and Sherman shifted war goals and
    strategies towards complete subjugation and
    destruction of Confederate ability to fight
  • Attacked economic, social, and physical
    infrastructure
  • Shermans March to the Sea through the South
    destroyed railroads, farms, towns tried to
    break the will of the people to fight

43
Shermans March to the Sea
44
Gettysburg, July, 1863
  • While Grant and Sherman fought in west and lower
    south, Lee went on offensive
  • Lee invaded the north, hoped to relieve pressure
    on Vicksburg
  • Met Union forces under George Meade at
    Gettysburg, PA
  • Lee was defeated and had to retreat to VA
  • Called the high water mark of the Confederacy

45
Lincolns Gettysburg Address
  • Address delivered Nov. 19, 1863 at dedication of
    Gettysburg National Cemetery
  • Two main issues Constitutional Liberties
    Equality
  • War for Union, national unity
  • War for human equality
  • Link to text of Lincolns Gettysburg Address
  • Link to video/audio of reading of Gettysburg
    Address
  • Link to Library of Congress site on Gettysburg
    Address

46
End of the War New Am. Revolution
  • Defeats at Vicksburg and Gettysburg sealed the
    fate of the Confederacy
  • War lasted 2 more years, however
  • But the Union victory signified a New American
    Revolution
  • Hopes of fulfillment of American ideals for all
    Americans
  • Questions about fate of freed slaves
  • New battles over freedpersons rights,
    citizenship, and economic possibilities
  • Reaction of white southerners to black freedom
    battle for soul of the south and the country
  • Question of government role in sustaining
    equality and freedom for all Americans Is
    freedom real if the conditions for freedom dont
    exist?

47
Tactics and Cavalry
  • Cavalry and Strategy
  • Light Cavalry
  • Reconnaissance
  • Raids on railroads and communications
  • Confederacy halted two major Union advances by
    raiding their rail communications
  • Shock Action as a last resort
  • Calvary on Calvary

48
Fight for Full Freedom During the War
  • Slave efforts
  • Fought for or worked for Union victory
  • Sought out family members
  • Geographic mobility - moved to new areas
  • Sought land and economic freedom
  • Union confiscation of lands
  • General Shermans Field Order 15, Jan. 1865
    Sea Islands and other lands set aside for
    freedpersons
  • Goal of 40 acres and a mule
  • Northern Republican support for freedmen
    formation of religious and governmental aid
    groups during war

49
Black Refugees Seeking Freedom
50
Post-Slavery Connections
  • Goals of Emancipation continue into the present
  • Common goals fight racial and economic
    exploitation fight for democracy and equality
  • Public expression and celebrations
  • Juneteenth and Emancipation Day celebrations
    throughout the Atlantic
  • Radicalism and Reform in the Black Atlantic or
    African-Atlantic
  • Anti-colonial activists
  • Civil rights activists
  • Human rights activists
  • Labor activists

51
1863 1864
  • MAY- Chancellorsville/Siege of Vicksburg begins
  • JUN-JUL- Vicksburg falls Gettysburg
  • SEPT- Chickamauga
  • NOV- Chattanooga
  • FEB- Grant assumes command
  • MAY - Wilderness Campaign
  • JUN - Cold Harbor
  • NOV - Shermans March to the Sea Lincoln
    re-elected.

52
1865
  • APR Lee surrenders at Appomattox (9 April)
    Lincoln assassinated

53
(No Transcript)
54
Grant
  • West Point Class of 1843
  • Mexican War
  • Spends first three years in West
  • Shiloh, Vicksburg, Chattanooga
  • 1864 Command of all Union forces.
  • Clausewitzian (even though On War had not been
    published)
  • Aggressively seek out and defeat the enemy by
    finding and destroying his centers of gravity.
  • Understood and applied Total War concept
  • Economics and combat.

55
Lee
  • West Point, Class of 1829
  • 2d in class w/ no demerits
  • Chief of Engineers during Mexican War.
  • Very best soldier I ever saw in the field.
    Scott
  • Superintendent of West Point in early 50s.
  • Led Marines at Harpers Ferry.
  • Offered command of Union forces, but first
    loyalty was to his state (Virginia).
  • I could take no part in an invasion of the
    Southern states.
  • Started war as advisor to President Davis.

56
Lee
  • Placed in command in June 1862.
  • Secrets to success
  • Inspired incredible loyalty in his troops.
  • Student of military affairs with extensive
    practical experience.
  • Knew his opponents.
  • Weaknesses
  • Apathy about the Big Picture (politics, Western
    Campaign).
  • Lack of clear guidance to subordinates and
    reluctance to give course corrections once
    battle started.

57
Impact on Future Conflicts
  • Expanding battlefield due to new technology.
  • Defense is favored.
  • fortification.
  • Beginnings of trend toward dispersal and
    increased individual combat.
  • Shift to Total War
  • Whole government had to be removed for success.
  • Civil and military targets.
  • Shermans March to the Sea.
  • Emancipation Proclamation.

58
Summary
  • 1. The professional development of military
    officers prior to the war.(West Point, Artillery
    and Infantry schools, greater independence for
    military leaders)
  • 2. The significance of how the organizational
    makeup of both sides affect their military styles
    of leadership.(Large manufacturing economy vs.
    Smaller agricultural economy)
  • 3. The different strategies used by the North
    and South. (North aggressive attrition style to
    crush Confederate center of gravity vs. South
    Defend and delay strategy until a hopefully
    decisive victory could be used as leverage on
    North)
  • 4. The tactical and technological advances that
    increased combat effectiveness throughout the
    war.(Rifle, telegraph, and railway)
  • 5. The major strengths and weaknesses of Grant
    and Lees strategies. (Grantaggressive total war
    tactics. Lee experienced, but apathetic about
    big pic. And unable to modify orders once fight
    was under way)
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