Title: A Nation Sundered: The Civil War, 18611865
1A Nation Sundered The Civil War, 1861-1865
2Fighting the Civil War
The Secession Crisis South Carolina first to
secede, Dec. 1860 six additional lower South
states seceded by Feb. 1861, when Confederate
States of America was established. Crittendens
Compromise plan to extend Missouri Compromise
line to California rejected by Lincoln, defeated
in Congress
3- Fort Sumter, April 12, 1861
- President Lincolns effort to re-supply fort in
Charleston Harbor - Confederate shore batteries opened fire fort
surrendered two days later - Lincoln called for 75,000 militia troops to put
down rebellion - Virginia and three other Upper South states
seceded and joined the Confederacy
4- Southern (Confederate) Advantages
- Defensive strategy survival means victory
- Morale belief that the South was fighting for
self-determination - Superior military leadership (e.g. Robert E. Lee,
Thomas J. Stonewall Jackson) - Some sympathy in Europe
- Southern Disadvantages
- Inadequate manufacturing base
- Lack of railroads
- Political philosophy (states rights) that
hampered war effort
5- Northern (Union) Advantages
- Population
- Economic superiority
- A navy
- Abraham Lincoln
- Kept Republican party together
- Kept border states in Union
- Emancipated slaves
- Good cabinet officers other subordinates
- Inspiration for the Union to persevere
- Northern Disadvantages
- Military leadership
- Offensive strategy had to conquer to win
- European hostility
6Major Campaigns and Battles
7Shiloh, April 6-7, 1862
Bull Run (Manassas), July 21, 1861 Antietam,
Sept. 17, 1862
8 - Bull Run (Manassas), July 21, 1861
- First major battle, fought 25 miles from
Washington, D.C. - Confederate victory after counterattack broke
Union ranks - Revealed both sides lack of preparedness and
likelihood of long war
9Shiloh, April 6-7, 1862 Union forces under
command of Ulysses S. Grant had
driven Confederates from Kentucky and middle
Tennessee Surprised by Confederates at Shiloh
and driven back to Tennessee River With
reinforcements, Grant counterattacked on
following day and drove Confederates from the
field
10- George B. McClellan
- Named commander of the Army of the Potomac after
Bull Run - Able, but arrogant
- Excellent at organization and training, but
reluctant to fight - Commanded during Peninsula Campaign,
Spring-Summer 1862, and at Antietam.
11- Antietam, Sept. 17, 1862
- First invasion into northern territory by Robert
E. Lees Army of Northern Virginia - Bloodiest single day of the war, with combined
23,000 casualties - Union victory, but Lee able to escape back into
Virginia - Lincoln issued Emancipation Proclamation five
days later
12- The Emancipation Proclamation (Jan. 1, 1863)
- Lincolns main objective at outset of war was to
save the Union and not necessarily end slavery - Drafted proclamation during summer of 1862
cabinet members advised waiting until the Union
achieved a victory. Antietam provided the
opportunity.
13- The Emancipation Proclamation, effective Jan. 1,
1863, abolished slavery in areas still in
rebellion but not in areas occupied by Union
armies or in border states still loyal to the
Union - Altered the character of the war, which now
became one to both save the union and abolish
slavery
14Gettysburg, July 1-3, 1863
Appomattox Court House, April 9, 1865
15Vicksburg, July 4, 1863 Atlanta and the March
to the Sea, September- December 1864
16- Gettysburg, July 1-3, 1863
- McClellan fired after Antietam
- Humiliating defeats for the Union at
Fredericksburg (Dec. 1862) Chancellorsville
(May 1863) Lincoln appointed George Meade to
command Army of the Potomac - Lees second invasion of the north armies
collided at Gettysburg, Pennsylvania - Picketts Charge
- Lee ordered disastrous frontal assault on Union
center - Considered the high water mark of the
Confederacy
17- Vicksburg, July 4, 1863
- Grant had moved away from supply lines behind the
city and followed up with siege - Surrender of Vicksburg and Port Hudson gave Union
total control of the Mississippi River, cutting
the Confederacy in two
18- Ulysses S. Grant
- Undistinguished military career out of the army
when war began - Demonstration of willingness to fight and win
impressed Lincoln - Brought east, promoted to Lieutenant General, and
put in command of all Union armies in March 1864
19- Robert E. Lee
- Had taken command of Army of Northern Virginia in
1862 - Member of Virginias planter elite
- Distinguished military career refused command of
the Union army when Virginia seceded
20- Atlanta and the March to the Sea,
September-December 1864 - William Tecumseh Sherman
- Replaced Grant as commander of Union armies in
the West - Captured Atlanta, September 2, 1864
- Devastating march to the Atlantic coast through
Georgia and then into South Carolina
21Grant fought continuous battles Against Lees
Confederates in Virginia, May 1864-April
1865. Lees troops finally surrendered
at Appomattox Court House on April 9, 1865
22War, Government, and Society
- The Union
- Economic Measures
- New national banking system
- Federal taxes on goods, services, incomes
- Paper currency backed by faith and credit of the
government (greenbacks) problems with
inflation - Government borrowing from citizens and banks
23- Raising the Union Armies
- Volunteers three-year terms
- National conscription (March 1863)
- All young, adult males eligible
- Conscripts could avoid service by hiring a
substitute or paying a 300 fee - Widespread opposition to the draft, especially
among laborers, immigrants, and anti-war Democrats
24- Lincoln in Command
- Use of Presidential War Powers
- Sent troops into battle without war declaration
insisted on referring to the conflict as a
domestic insurrection
25- Treatment of War Protesters
- Suppressed anti-war Democrats (Copperheads)
- Martial law in certain locations
- Military arrests and detention of civilian
dissenters - Suspension of the right of habeus corpus (right
to a speedy trial)
26- Election of 1864
- Republicans built coalition of groups that
supported the war the Union party - Andrew Johnson, pro-war Democrat from Tennessee,
nominated for vice president - Democrats nominated General McClellan, denounced
the war, and called for a truce - Shermans capture of Atlanta and soldiers votes
helped Lincoln win reelection
27- The Confederacy
- Confederate States of America formed in
Montgomery, Alabama in February 1861 capital
moved to Richmond after Virginias secession - Constitution similar to that of the United States
except it - Acknowledged sovereignty of individual states
- Specifically sanctioned slavery and made
abolition practically impossible - Jefferson Davis of Mississippi chosen president
28- Financing the War in the South
- Requisitioning funds from states
- Income taxes and borrowing from citizens and
European banks - Printing of paper currency by Confederate
government, states, cities, private banks 9,000
percent inflation over course of the war
29- Raising the Confederate Armies
- Volunteers
- Conscription Act of 1862
- All white males between 18 and 35
- Three-years of military service
- Draftees could furnish substitutes
- Exemption for one white man on each plantation
with twenty or more slaves
30- States Rights vs. Centralization
- States rights enthusiasts obstructed national
governments efforts to conduct the war - Restricted President Daviss ability to impose
martial law and suspend habeus corpus - State governors often obstructed conscription and
hoarded supplies for use of state militias - Confederate government nonetheless made
substantial progress in centralizing power - Impressed slaves to work as laborers on military
projects - Seized control of railroads and shipping
- Imposed regulations on industry and limited
corporate profits
31- Women and the War (She Ranks Me video excerpt
from Ken Burnss The Civil War) - U.S. Sanitary Commission
- Clara Barton/Sally Tompkins/Mary Ann Bickerdyke
32- African Americans and the War (Bottom Rail on
Top video excerpt from The Civil War) - New York City draft riots, 1863
- 54th Massachusetts