Chapter 4 – The Civil War Section 1: From Bull Run to Antietam Section 2: Life Behind the Lines...
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Transcript of Chapter 4 – The Civil War Section 1: From Bull Run to Antietam Section 2: Life Behind the Lines...
![Page 1: Chapter 4 – The Civil War Section 1: From Bull Run to Antietam Section 2: Life Behind the Lines Section 3: The Tide of War Turns Section 4: Devastation.](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022081506/56649f065503460f94c1b791/html5/thumbnails/1.jpg)
Chapter 4 – The Civil WarSection 1: From Bull Run to AntietamSection 2: Life Behind the LinesSection 3: The Tide of War TurnsSection 4: Devastation and New Freedom
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Section 1: From Bull Run to AntietamTEKS – 24H, 25A
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TEKS 24H
Use appropriate mathematical skills to interpret social studies information such as maps and graphs.
25A Use social studies terminology correctly.
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Civil War The war between the Union states of the
North and the Confederate states of the south Richmond – capital of the south
North believed that a quick victory would occur if they captured the capital city
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First Battle of Bull Run General Irvin McDowell slowly marched his unprepared
army into Virginia North Objective: town of Manassas (railroad junction)
Defended by General P.G.T. Beauregard McDowell’s slow march allowed Beauregard to reinforce his troops
North winning the battle General Thomas Jackson rallied the south
“There is Jackson standing like a stone wall.” Confederates pushed the north back to Washington D.C. Casualties:
North – 2,900 South – <2,000
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Map of Bull Run
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Bull Run
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Bull Run
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Men of Bull Run
Gen. Stonewall Jackson
Gen. Irvin McDowell
Gen. P.G.T. Beauregard
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North vs. South More railroads
To move men and supplies
More factories Produce more
More money in the bank Functioning government An army and navy More people Patriotism
More military colleges Trained officers were
southerners
Needed to maintain a defensive position
Fighting to preserve their way of life and right to self-government
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Northern Strategy – Anaconda Plan General Winfield Scott
outlined this plan to defeat the south:
1. Naval blockade of the seceded states in the Atlantic
2. Use troops and gunboats to gain control of the Mississippi
This would lead to a long war and political pressure would prevent that.
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Southern Strategy – War of Attrition1. A type of war in which one side inflicts
continuous losses on the other in order to wear down its strength
Didn’t take into account the North’s resources
2. Stop exporting cotton to British and French Produced 75% of the world’s cotton Thought this would pressure them to help the
South Europe looked to India and Egypt
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Technology Improvements Rifles
Bullets with a tip and spiraling
Fly farther and straighter
Artillery Could fire shells – devices
that exploded in the air or when they hit something
Could fire canister – a type of shell full of bullets
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War in the West General Ulysses S. Grant captured forts Henry and Donelson
Exposed the underbelly of the south Battle of Shiloh
North objective: to capture an important railroad center General Grant was attacked by General Albert Sidney Johnston Union pushed back but counterattacked and won the battle Casualties:
North - >13,000 South - <11,000
Shattered hopes a a quick war
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Map of Shiloh
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Men of Shiloh
Gen. Albert Sidney Johnston Gen. Ulysses S. Grant
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Monitor vs. Merrimack Merrimack – southern
ironclad warship Monitor – northern version
of the Merrimack Had a standoff but neither
side came out victorious Merrimack is sunk by the
Confederates Monitor is lost in a storm
Changes naval battles forever no more wooden ships
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Second Battle of Bull Run Protected the capital of
Richmond and allowed the south to start attacking
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Battle of Antietam General Robert E. Lee led his troops north
South objective: to arouse European support and turn northern opinion against war
General McClellan moved his troops after Lee and met him at Antietam
Union forces and Confederate forces battered each other Casualties:
North - >12,000 South - <14,000
Lincoln ordered McClellan to destroy the rebel army McClellan did not take advantage (too cautious)
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Map of Antietam
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Men of Antietam
Gen. Robert E. Lee Gen. George B. McClellan
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Battle of Antietam
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Lincoln and McClellan
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Section 2: Life Behind the LinesTEKS – 24C, 24G
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TEKS 24C
Explain and apply different methods that historians use to interpret the past, including the use of primary and secondary sources, points of view, frames of reference, and historical context.
24G Support a point of view on a social studies issue
or event.
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Southern Politics - Mobilization for War
1. Draft - Required military service of white males ages 18-35
2. Regulated the economy
3. Tax on personal income
4. States’ Rights posed a threat to the South’s military success
Like the Articles of Confederation
CSA President Jefferson Davis
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Southern Politics - Formal Recognition British – Wait-and-See
Allowed ports to be used for the Confederates to build privateers
French – would not openly support the Confederacy
C.S.S. Alabama
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Northern Politics – A Republican Congress1. Built railroads2. Raised tariffs3. Created the first federal
income tax4. Created a national
currency Greenbacks – a paper
money not backed by gold
5. Instituted a draft
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Northern Politics – The Border States Border States
1. Delaware Lincoln considered this state secure
2. Maryland Arrested disloyal state representatives
3. Missouri Lincoln supported an armed uprising to overthrow the government
4. Kentucky Lincoln put the state under martial law
Emergency rule by military authorities during which some Bill or Rights guarantees are suspended
Suspended Writ of Habeas Corpus A legal protection requiring that a court determine if a person is
lawfully imprisoned
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Border States
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Lincoln and Slavery Resisted pressure to abolish slavery
Insisted that under the Constitution he was bound only to preserve and protect the Union
Realized every slave working in a field allows a white Southerner to shoot at Union soldiers
Emancipation Proclamation January 1, 1863
Freed slaves, but only in Union controlled areas
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North’s Viewpoint
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South’s Viewpoint
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African Americans and the War Slaves given back to owners after
they were captured in war Contraband
Captured items that become the property of the enemy government
180,000 African Americans fought To help free others
Served in all black regiments under a white officer
The attack on Fort Wagner by an all-African American regiment inspired the movie Glory
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Women and the War Important when it came to
medical care Thousands of women
volunteered Clara Barton – known as the
“angel of the battlefield” 4,000 women became nurses 1 in 5 soldiers died in the
medical camps Sanitation
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Section 3: The Tide of War TurnsTEKS - 24H, 25B
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TEKS 24H
Use appropriate mathematical skills to interpret social studies information such as maps and graphs.
25B Use standard grammar, spelling, sentence
structure, and punctuation.
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The Battle of Chancellorsville (May of 1863) General Hooker replaced General Burnside,
who replaced General McClellan General Robert E. Lee and General Stonewall
Jackson win their greatest victory But there is one setback
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The Battle of Chancellorsville
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The Battle of Chancellorsville
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The Battle of Chancellorsville
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Men of Chancellorsville
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The Battle of Chancellorsville
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The Battle of Gettysburg (July of 1863) Confederates looked for a supply of shoes in a town called
Gettysburg, Pennsylvania Encountered a unit of Union cavalry
Grew into the greatest battle ever fought in North America General Meade replaced General Hooker as commander of
the Union army General Robert E. Lee headed the Confederates Became the turning point of the war Casualties:
North – approx. 23,000 South – approx. 28,000
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Pickett’s Charge
15,000 men charge A few hundred return
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Men of Gettysburg
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Gettysburg National Cemetery
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Confederates Retreat July 4, 1863, General Robert E. Lee began his
retreat back to Virginia
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The Battle of Vicksburg (July of 1863) General Ulysses S. Grant
1. Tried to bypass Vicksburg2. Tried to build a canal3. Approached through swampy bayou (a disaster)4. Approached south, attacked Jackson, MS and drew out the
Confederate forces General John Pemberton in charge of the Confederate forces Grant won, but couldn’t trap Pemberton and he retreats back
to Vicksburg Starts a month long siege
A tactic in which an enemy is surrounded and starved in order to make it surrender
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Vicksburg Campaign
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The Battle of Vicksburg
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Men of Vicksburg
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Vicksburg Surrenders After a month long siege, Pemberton leads his
30,000 troops out of Vicksburg and surrenders to Grant On July 4, 1863
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Gettysburg Address Edward Everett of Massachusetts (great
orator) delivered a 2 hour long speech Abraham Lincoln delivers a short two minute
speech called the Gettysburg Address Lincoln’s reason for fighting the war: to preserve
a young country.
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Section 4: Devastation and New FreedomTEKS – 24G, 24H, 25B
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TEKS 24G
Support a point of view on a social studies issue or event. 24H
Use appropriate mathematical skills to interpret social studies information such as maps and graphs.
25B Use standard grammar, spelling, sentence structure, and
punctuation.
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Grant Given the Lead General Grant takes
command of the Union army
Told to end the war before the November elections South believed they
could vote a new president into office
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Union Sees Victory Near General Grant moving through Virginia General Philip Sherman moving through the
west and Georgia Captured the capital city, Atlanta Before leaving for Savannah, GA, Sherman order
his troops to evacuate the city and burn it
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Sherman’s March to the Sea
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Election of 1864 Republican Party
changes its name to the Union Party and chooses Abraham Lincoln Lincoln believes he is
going to lose Democrats choose
General George McClellan
Abraham Lincoln wins an easy victory
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Thirteenth Amendment “Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude,
except as a punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted, shall exist within the United States, or any place subject to their jurisdiction.”
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Sherman Moves North General Sherman
swings north to South Carolina Wants to meet up with
Grant And crush South
Carolina Why?
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Battle of Appomattox General Ulysses S. Grant attempts to end the
war General Robert E. Lee tried to hold out in
Richmond and Petersburg Desertions left the Confederate with fewer than
35,000 starving men Tried to slip around Grant’s army to meet up with
General Johnston’s army who was retreating from General Sherman
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Appomattox Campaign
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Lee and Johnston Surrender Confederates surrounded at Appomattox
“There is nothing left for me to do but go and see General Grant, and I would rather die a thousand deaths.”
Terms of the surrender:1. Soldiers could gather their stuff and go home
2. No punishment so long as they obeyed the laws
3. Offered to feed the starving Confederate army General Johnston surrendered to General Sherman
shortly after
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Appomattox Courthouse
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Lincoln Assassinated Southern conspirators tried to aid the Confederacy
First Attempt: plotted to kidnap Lincoln in exchange for prisoners of war
Second Attempt: assigned members to kill Grant, Johnson, and Lincoln
John Wilkes Booth decided he would kill Lincoln At Ford’s Theater, he slipped into Lincoln’s booth and
shot him in the head Army tracked Booth to a barn, set the barn on fire, and
was shot to death (by soldier or himself)
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Civil War Statistics Union Dead:
Appox. 360,000 Confederate Dead:
Appox. 250,000 Civil War Deaths:
Approx. 610,000 All Other U.S. War Deaths:
Approx. 640,000
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End of Chapter 4 – The Civil WarPrepare for a QUIZ!