Title: Civil War
1Civil War
1861-1865
2Fort Sumter
- Confederates fire on Fort Sumter in South
Carolina - This will be the beginning of the Civil War
- Confederates take over courthouses and post
offices
3Lincoln Organizes Troops
- Lincoln call for 75,000 troops to volunteer to
serve - On April 17th Virginia the most heavily populated
state secedes from the union
4North vs. South
- North had the following
- More fighting power
- More factories
- Railroad System
- Greater food production
- South Had the Following
- Agriculture like Cotton
- First Rate Generals
- Highly motivated soldiers defending their homeland
5Anaconda Plan
- Union Army would blockade southern ports
- Union boats would head down the Mississippi and
split the confederate army in two - Union armies would capture the capital which was
Richmond Virginia
6Battle of Bull Run
- Was a battle that took place 100 miles from the
southern capital of Richmond Virginia - This was the first battle
- Both sides had inexperienced soldiers
- Stonewall Jackson led the Confederate soldiers
- It would be the first victory for the confederates
7Union Armies called from the West
- 50,000 soldiers are called up from the west
- George McClellan leads the new army
- February 1862 Ulysses S. Grant and the Union army
invades Tennessee
8- The confederates surrendered at Fort Donelson
- This was an unconditional surrender with no terms
- Shiloh- Union troops were surprised by
confederate troops outside a small church - Nearly 25,000 men were killed
- The confederates retreated
9Revolution of Warfare
- The Union used a new type of technology called
the ironclad ship, it could splinter wood ships - North had the Monitor
- South had the Merrimack
- Rifles
- Minie Balls
- Hand grenades land mines
10Antietam
- Was the bloodiest single day battle in American
History. - More than 26,000 troops died
11Great Britain Remains Neutral
- Britain no longer relied on the souths cotton
- They relied on the norths corn as an essential
import
12Proclaiming Emancipation
- On January 1st 1863 President Lincoln issued the
Emancipation Proclamation - The proclamation did not free any slaves
immediately - It gave symbolic importance for the fighting the
war
13Habeas Corpus
- Is a court order that requires authorities to
bring a person held in jail before a court to
determine why they are being held.
14Copperheads
- Were Northern Democrats who advocated peace with
the south. - They were arrested by the north, sent to trial,
and convicted
15Conscription
- Was a draft that would force certain members of
population to serve in the army. - Commutation- was the substitution of one kind of
payment for another. 300.00
16Matthew Brady was the American Civil War
photographer who became known as the father of
photojournalism. By being in the field of
operations, Matthew Brady and his team of
photographers were able to show Americans
something that they had not witnessed before
real images of war and its sad consequences.
17Robert E. Lee - Confederate General from
Virginia. Resigned his commission before the war.
Opposed secession and slavery, but was loyal to
his state.
Thomas J. Jackson nicknamed Stonewall by the
confederates for his refusal to yield to the
Union armies.
18Ulysses S. Grant Union General that went on to
be President of the U.S. Led troops in the
Tennessee and Mississippi Valley area.
George B. McClellan Union General that Lincoln
referred to as having a case of the slows
1954th Massachusetts Regiment a all black
regiment led by Robert Gould Shaw, a white Union
officer. They were respected for their discipline
and courage.
20Turning Points of the war Vicksburg took place
in Vicksburg, Mississippi. Led by Grant, the
Union army placed Vicksburg under
siege. Gettysburg (July 1-3, 1863) Lees army
was pushing North and this concerned the Union.
The battle lasted for 3 days and ended up being
the bloodiest battle ever fought on American
soil. In November, President Lincoln honored the
dead by dedicating the battlefield as a cemetery
(Gettysburg Address).
21William Tecumseh Sherman marched 250 miles from
the Tennessee/Georgia boarder to the port of
Savannah. His troops destroyed everything in
their way. Total War involves striking civilian
as well as military targets. 1864 Election
Lincoln won the election over his former General,
George McClellan.
22The Legacy of The Civil War
23Political Changes after the war the federal
government assumed national authority and no
state would ever again secede again from the
union.
24Economic Changes the Northern states economy
boomed while the South was devastated
economically. The government also passed the
National Bank Act of 1863, this set up a system
of federally charted banks, set requirements for
loans, and provided for banks to be inspected.
25Cost of the War 360,000 Union soldiers and
260,000 Confederate soldiers died, nearly as many
as all other American wars put together.
26Birth of Freedom the Emancipation Proclamation
freed only the slaves in the states that were
behind confederate lines. 13th Amendment
outlawed slavery in the United States.
27- Civilians Follow New Paths
- Lee became president of Washington College in
Virginia. - Grant became a U.S. President.
- Clara Barton helped establish the American Red
Cross in 1881.
28Lincolns Assassination Lincoln is assassinated
by John Wilkes Booth five days after Appomattox.
Lincoln and his wife are watching a play when
Booth sneaks into the Presidents box and shoots
him in the head.