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10 Major Battles of the Civil War

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10 Major Battles of the Civil War Gettysburg State: Pennsylvania Dates: July 1-3, 1863 Winner: North *This battle is regarded by historians as ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: 10 Major Battles of the Civil War


1
10 Major Battles of the Civil War
2
Notes to add in the margin
  • The Civil War was fought on 3 fronts,
    corresponding to the 3 parts of the Union
    strategy
  • Eastern Front attempt to capture Richmond and
    defend Washington, DC
  • Western Front attempt to capture the
    Mississippi River to divide the South and western
    railroads to limit communication and troop/supply
    movement
  • Blockade of southern coast to prevent them from
    receiving help from overseas

3
Battle Names
  • Most battles had 2 names
  • North named battles after nearest river or stream
    (Bull Run, Antietam creek)
  • South named battles after nearest town (Manassas,
    Sharpsburg)

4
First Bull Run /First Manassas
  •  State Virginia
  • Date July 21, 1861 
  • Southern Leader Beauregard
  • Northern Leader McDowell
  • Winner South

5
Confederate Pierre G. T. Beauregard
Union Irvin McDowell
http//www.civilwarhome.com/beaubio.htm
http//nps-vip.net/history/portraits/mcdowell_irvi
n.htm
6
  • Many people came from Washington, DC to watch
    this battle for control the railroad at Manassas
    Junction.
  • Confederates were losing until reinforcements
    arrived.
  • Union troops panicked and retreated toward
    Washington, DC, along with the sightseers who
    clogged the roads.

7
  • Confederates were too weary and disorganized to
    follow.
  • It was at this battle that southern General
    Thomas Jackson earned the nickname Stonewall
    Jackson because he and his troops refused to
    retreat even under heavy fire. He would become
    one of Lees most valuable lieutenants.

8
Results of this battle
  • 1. Both sides adopted new uniforms.(Confederate
    gray Union blue )  
  • 2. The Confederacy adopted a new and easily
    distinguishable flag.  
  • 3. Both sides realized that the war would not
    soon be over.

9
Shiloh/Pittsburg Landing
  • State Tennessee
  • Western front
  • Dates April 6-7, 1862
  • Winner North
  • Shiloh Church

10
Union Ulysses S. Grant
Confederate Beauregard
http//www.civilwarhome.com/beaubio.htm
http//www.cr.nps.gov/logcabin/html/usg.html
11
  • In this battle, 80 of the troops were kids who
    had never heard a gun fired in anger. Many did
    not even know how to work rifles. One general
    told his troops, Its just like shooting
    squirrels, except these squirrels have
    guns.

12
  • After two days of fighting,the Confederates
    retreated. The victory was costly, however, The
    Union lost 13,000, and the Confederates lost
    10,000.
  • This battle earned the name, Bloody Shiloh.

13
2nd Bull Run/2nd Manassas
  • State Virginia
  • Date August 30, 1862
  • Winner South
  • Eastern front
  • goal railroad line

14
Confederate Robert E. Lee
Union John Pope
http//www.nps.gov/arho/history.htm
http//www.civilwarhome.com/popebio.htm
15
  • The Union army was once again pushed back to
    Washington, DC, by the Confederates.
  • Union casualties 32,000 missing
    wounded or dead.
  • Southern casualties 9,000.
  • It was a great victory for the Confederacy
    and a crushing defeat for the Union.

16
Antietam (Sharpsburg)
  • State Maryland
  • Date September 17, 1862
  • Winner claimed by Lincoln for North

17
Confederate Robert E. Lee
Union George McClellan
http//www.nps.gov/arho/history.htm
http//www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/hh/31/h
h31b.htm
18
  • Lee had good reasons for invading the North. (1)
    He hoped to bring Maryland into the
    Confederacy and (2) from there attack Washington,
    DC, Philadelphia, and (3) the rich
    farmland that would give his army supplies of
    food. He brought 50,000 dirty, ragged, and hungry
    troops into Maryland.

19
  • It was doomed from the beginning. The people of
    the state did not welcome troops as heroes but as
    invaders.
  • Another blow happened when a Union private found
    an envelope containing Lees plans.

20
  • Because more than 24,000 men had been killed
    or wounded in the fighting, the battle of
    Antietam has been called the the bloodiest
    single day of the war.
  • Even though both sides just stopped fighting,
    Lincoln claimed this battle as a victory for the
    North.

21
  • He used it as an opportunity to issue the
    Emancipation Proclamation, which freed slaves
    only in the seceding states.

22
  • However, this changed the nature of the war, to
    include the goal of abolishing slavery.
  • Although European intervention remained a threat,
    it would now be less likely.

23
Chancellorsville
  • State Virginia
  • Dates May 2-4, 1863
  • Winner South

24
Confederate Robert E. Lee
Union Joseph Hooker Fighting Joe
http//www.nps.gov/arho/history.htm
http//www.ehistory.com/world/PeopleView.cfm?PID4
2
25
  • This battle was fought in the Wilderness area
    of Virginia. The area was called this because it
    was so thick and tangled with vines that a
    soldier could only see a few yards ahead. This
    resulted in the death of Stonewall Jackson when
    he was shot by his own men who thought he was
    part of a Union cavalry charge.

26
  • Jackson had to have his left arm amputated and
    later died of pneumonia
  • Lees comment Jackson has lost his left arm,
    but I have lost my good right arm.

27
  • The loss of Jackson was important because he
    seemed to be the only general under Lee who could
    carry out his battle plans.

28
Vicksburg (siege and battle)
  • State Mississippi
  • Surrender Date July 4, 1863
  • Winner North
  • Western front
  • Goal Mississippi River

29
Confederate John C. Pemberton
Union Ulysses S. Grant
http//www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/hh/21/h
h21b.htm
http//www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/hh/21/h
h21b.htm
30
  • The Mississippi River was called the spinal cord
    of America and was very important to both sides
    during the war.
  • Vicksburg was in a very strong defensive
    position. High, fortified bluffs overlooked the
    Mississippi River. These fortifications could
    sweep the river with cannon fire.

31
  • Grant had his men surround the city on three
    sides, and the Union navy prevented any ships
    from approaching the city from the river. For
    weeks the Union troops laid siege to the city.
    Finally, on July 4, Pemberton surrendered to
    Grant.

32
  • During the siege, many of the civilians in the
    city lived in caves because of the constant
    bombardment. They ate rats, tree bark , etc.,
    to survive.
  • This battle is considered a turning point because
    the Union now controlled the Mississippi River.

33
http//www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/hh/21/h
h21d4.htm
34
Gettysburg
  • State Pennsylvania
  • Dates July 1-3, 1863
  • Winner North
  • This battle is regarded by historians as the
    turning point of the Civil War.

35

Confederate Robert E. Lee
Union George Gordon Meade
http//www.nps.gov/gett/getttour/main-ms.htm
http//www.nps.gov/gett/getttour/main-ms.htm
36
  • The Confederate government had committed itself
    to an attack deep in Union territory. In addition
    to shocking the Union, it was hoped that this
    attack might influence England and
    France to again consider supporting the
    Confederacy.

37
  • It also might affect the 1864 Elections, by
    shocking enough people into voting for a peace
    party candidate to oust Lincoln.

38
  • General Lee massed his army together and moved on
    Pennsylvania. It would be a promised land for
    the rebel troops who were running short of food.
    They disregarded the facts that they would surely
    be outnumbered and far from their own supply
    lines.

39
  • Pennsylvanians were in a panic. They feared Lee
    would capture the ammunition stored at
    Harrisburg, or that he would turn toward
    Baltimore to cut off Washington, DC from
    the rest of the Union.

40
  • The battle started by accident. On July 1, a
    small group of rebel soldiers made their way
    toward Gettysburg in search of boots, which were
    desperately needed by the troops. They
    accidentally met a Union Cavalry unit on
    routine patrol.

41
  • On the third day of the battle came the most
    famous attack Picketts Charge. Pickett and his
    men made an heroic charge against an impossible
    bombardment of cannon and bullets up Cemetery
    Hill. A handful of survivors reached the summit
    of the hill and planted the Confederate flag
    before they were killed or captured.

42
  • The Union forces at Gettysburg had numbered about
    85,000, while the Confederate army had nearly
    75,000. Nearly 7,500 men died on the
    bloody battlefield at Gettysburg, while almost
    45,000 were wounded or missing.

43
  • The Union had lost about 23,000 men and the South
    nearly as many. Lee had lost nearly a third of
    his army. The big problem was that Lee had no men
    to replace those who were lost.

44
  • As Lee retreated southward, Meade followed him
    slowly but did not attack. The battle had been
    too costly for him to consider renewing it.
  • On July 14, Lee was safely across the Potomac
    River, his own dream of victory in the North dead
    forever. Never again would the South invade the
    North.

45
  • This is a turning point battle.
  • The defeat at Gettysburg and the loss of
    Vicksburg signaled the beginning of the
    end for the Confederacy.

46
Chattanooga
  • State Tennessee
  • Date November 24, 1863
  • Winner North
  • Western Front
  • Goal - railroads

47
http//www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/hh/25/h
h25m.htm
48
Confederate Braxton Bragg
Union Ulysses S. Grant
http//www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/hh/25/h
h25b.htm
http//www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/hh/21/h
h21b.htm
49
  • Chattanooga was important to the North as a
    railroad point. If they could control it, they
    could get supplies very easily to other Union
    troops in the South.
  • When the North attacked Chattanooga, it was so
    strong that Bragg could not withstand it.

50
  • In Grant, Lincoln had finally found a Union
    general to take charge of the war.
  • In addition, victory here opened the way for
    Shermans march to the sea.

51
Atlanta to Savannah (Shermans March to the Sea)
  • State Georgia
  • Dates September 2-December 22, 1864
  • Winner North
  • Eastern Front
  • Goal remove civilian assistance and will

52
Confederate John Bell Hood
Union William Tecumseh Sherman
http//www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/hh/25/h
h25i.htm
http//www.civilwarhome.com/hoodbio.htm
53
  • Atlanta was the main industrial city of
    the South. The fall of Atlanta would be a
    crippling blow to the South.
  • On September 2, Sherman took control of Atlanta.
    After burning the city virtually to the ground,
    he began to tear through the South to Savannah.

54
  • His men burned, looted, and destroyed the major
    cities of Georgia and lived off the land.
  • Sherman sent a message to Lincoln by telegraph on
    Christmas Day. It said, Merry Christmas, Mr.
    President I have you a present and it is
    Savannah.

55
  • Sherman had inflicted over one hundred million
    dollars worth of damage in his March to the
    Sea. He was called the Scourge of the South.
  • He was the first American general to use the
    military tactic of Total War.

56
Surrender at Appomattox
  • On April 9,1865, Lee had only 30,000 troops. He
    came near the small town of Appomattox Court
    House, Virginia, and found that he was surrounded
    on all sides by Northern troops.

57
Surrender at Appomattox
Confederate Robert E. Lee
Union Ulysses S. Grant
http//www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/hh/21/h
h21b.htm
http//www.nps.gov/gett/getttour/main-ms.htm
58
  • The Union troops waited for the command to
    attack. The Rebels with their battle flags waving
    proudly prepared for the final battle. Instead, a
    single Confederate Cavalryman rode forward,
    carrying a fluttering white flag.

59
  • Both armies stared at the rider in silence. They
    could not believe what they were seeing! The end
    had come at last!
  • I must go see General Grant, said Lee, and I
    would rather die a thousand deaths.

60
  • Palm Sunday, April 9, 1865 Two generals faced
    each other in the parlor of a farmhouse owned by
    Wilmer McLean. General Lee arrived dressed in a
    new uniform and carrying his ceremonial sword at
    his side. Grant arrived in his muddy field
    uniform with no weapon.

61
http//www.nps.gov/apco/mchs.htm
62
  • The two commanders faced each other. Both wanted
    a good peace. Lee knew that the South was beaten
    and would have to make the best of whatever
    happened. Grant wanted only to prove that
    Northerners and Southerners could be fellow
    citizens again.

63
  • Grants terms were very generous. Each
    rebel soldier was to be allowed to go home
    undisturbed. Officers were to be allowed to keep
    their weapons and personal possessions .
    Any man who had a horse or mule was to be allowed
    to keep it.

64
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65
  • At four oclock, the two men shook hands, and it
    was over.
  • Lee mounted his horse, Traveller, and
    returned to his men. The Union guns began to fire
    victory volleys which were halted at once by
    Grant. We will not exult over their downfall,
    he said.
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