Title: The Civil War 1861 - 1865
1The Civil War1861 - 1865
2A. The Beginning Fort Sumter
3Lincolns Inauguration
- March 4, 1861
- 7 states have seceded
- Lincoln does not believe they had the authority
- Does not want war
- Only Ft. Sumter Ft.
- Pickens still under
- Federal control
I hold that in contemplation of universal law
and of the Constitution the Union of these States
is perpetual. Perpetuity is implied, if not
expressed, in the fundamental law of all national
governments
4The Confederate States of America
- Eventually 11 states
- Capital initially Montgomery, AL
- Will move to Richmond, VA after the secession of
VA - Jefferson Davis is the President
- Government similar to Articles of Confederation
5Ft. Sumter April 12, 1861
- Fort surrenders April 14
- Lincoln calls up the army
- Final 4 states secede
- Civil War begins
- Lincoln tries to send provisions
- Confederacy sees this as a sign of aggression
- SC militia attacks the Fort
6B. The Union vs. The Confederacy
7See Handouts
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14Why did it take the North 4 years to win?
- Leaders
- South had much better leadership from the get-go
- North would not find an effective leader until
1863 - South just had to defend its territory
- North had to conquer 11 states
15Confederate Generals
George Pickett
PGT Beauregard
Thomas Stonewall Jackson
Nathan Bedford Forrest
West Point Graduate Served in Mex-Am War Won Ft.
Sumter Won 1st Battle of Bull Run
West Point Graduate Served in Mex-Am War Tactical
Genius
West Point Graduate Served in Mex-Am War
Wealthy Planter Later started the KKK
16Robert E. Lee
- Attended West Point
- Served in Mex-Am War
- Lincoln asked him to head Union Army
- Chose to follow VA
- Man in charge of Confederate Army
17Union Generals
George McClellan
Winfield Scott
War of 1812 Black Hawk War Seminole War Mex-Am
War
He is 74 years old Incapable of going to battle
West Point Mex-Am War Overcautious Unaggressive
18C. War in the East the Anaconda Plan
19The Anaconda Plan
- Proposed by Winfield Scott
- Realized it would take time to defeat the CSA
- 2 Part Plan
- Blockade the South
- Take control of the Mississippi
- Never called for a direct invasion
20- Lincoln put Blockade into place 4/19/61
- Hard to enforce
- 3,500 miles of coastline
- 90 ships
- Cut off all imports exports
- to the CSA
- Britain refused to violate
21- Blockade eventually very effective
- Part 2 not followed until late 1862
- Lincoln decides instead to invade
22Battle of Bull Run (7/21/61)a.k.a. First
Manassas
- North thought victory would be swift easy
- Lincoln ordered invasion
- Union lost
- Impact
- North realized this would be a long fight began
to prepare
23Battle of the Ironclads (3/8-9/62)Monitor v.
Merrimack (Virginia)
- 1st battle of iron re-enforced ships
- Armored ships with a ram on the front
24- March 8 Virginia was trying to disrupt the
blockade in the Chesapeake Bay - Inflicted huge damage to U.S.
- Navy
- March 9 Monitor arrives
- Spend the day ramming
- each other
- Neither wins
- Dramatically changes naval warfare
25The Peninsula CampaignApril 5-July 1, 1862
- McClellan now in charge of the Union Army
- Ordered to capture Richmond
- Afraid to have frontal assault
- Invades up the Peninsula
- Encounters Lee
- Loses is fired
26Second Bull Run (8/28-30/62)
- John Pope now in charge of Union Army
- Engages Lee at Manassas
- Loses, retreats to D.C., is fired
- McClellan put back in charge
27Antietam (9/17/62)
- Bloodiest single day of fighting of the entire
war - Lee decides to invade the North
- Persuade Border states to join the CSA
- Gain British aid
- Capture D.C.
28- The Union won
- 1st real victory
- McClellan failed to pursue the Confederates
across the Potomac - Fired again
- Britain would not intervene to help the CSA
29D.The War in the West
30Ulysses S. Grant
- West Point graduate
- Served in Mex-Am War
- Forced to resign from the army in 1854
- Rejoined with the start of the Civil War
- Sent to the West where he will become a hero
31Grants Victories in the West
- Forts Donelson Henry captured in Feb 1862
- Allowed access to the Tennessee Cumberland
Rivers - Allowed Union to capture Nashville most of TN
- Kentucky now secure
32- Shiloh (April 6 7, 1862)
- Fought against Gen. Beauregard
- Won
- Bloodiest battle of the war
- New Orleans captured April 29 by the Navy
- Grant ordered to take control of the Mississippi
33E. The Emancipation Proclamation
34The Proclamation
- Lincoln announced on September 23, 1862
- All slaves in rebellious areas would become free
on January 1, 1863 - Warning to the South
- Main purpose make sure
- Britain would not aid the CSA
- Constitutionality
- questionable
35Reaction
- North has a mixed reaction
- Abolitionists felt it wasnt enough
- Some worry about the Border States
- Racism increases because of worry of increasing
numbers of African-Americans - South FURIOUS
- Europeans most
- important
- Will now not intervene
36F. The Soldiers
37Johnny Reb Billy Yank
- Over 3 million men served in the Civil War
- Chances in the War
- 1 out of every 6.7 wounded
- 1 out of every 38 would die of his wounds
- 1 out every 42.7 killed in battle
- 1 out of every 10 captured
- 1 out of every 7 captured died in prison
38Confederate Draft
- Initially relied on volunteers
- Draft brought in April 1862
- Any man age 17-50
- Ways around the draft
- 1 exemption for every 20 slave owned
- Hire a substitute
- Became Rich mans war, but a poor mans fight
39Union Draft
- Initially relied on volunteers
- 90 would be volunteers
- 1st conscription law passed March
- 1863
- Ways around the Draft
- Hire a substitute
- Buy an exemption (300)
- Rich mans war, but a poor mans
- fight
40Draft Riots
- Spring Summer 1863 draft riots across the North
- Most protesting b/c this is now a fight about
slavery - Most riots in Democratic areas
41Enlistment of African-Americans
- African-Americans initially not allowed to enlist
as soldiers - Served in Navy as laborers, cooks, firemen
- After Emancipation Proc, African-Americans were
enlisted - 180,000 total served
42G.Effects of the War
43Legislation Passed
- 1861 Morrill Tariff Act (raises the tariff)
- 1862 Homestead Act (free land out west)
- 1862 Legal Tender Act (print greenbacks)
- 1862 Morrill Land Grant Act (building colleges)
- 1863 Pacific Railway Act (transcontinental RR)
- 1863 National Bank Act (create banks national
currency)
44The Economy
- North prospered
- South fell apart
- Women saw expanded roles in both North South
- Inflation was a problem for both
- 90 in the North
- 9000 in the South
45Limitation on Liberties
- In times of war limitations are placed on
peoples rights - Violations of Constitution
- Blockade of the South
- Suspended Habeas Corpus
- Supervised voting in Border States
46H. Turning Points of the War
47Vicksburg
- Grant needs Vicksburg to have control of
Mississippi river - Frontal attacks did not work
- Laid siege May 19-July 4, 1863
- Wins control of Vicksburg
- Wins control of the Mississippi
- South cut into 2
- Vital food supply line cut off
48Gettysburg
- Lee decides to again invade the North
- Foreign Aid
- Force a negotiated peace
- July 1-3, 1863 fights in Pennsylvania
- Meade in control of Union army
- Union wins
- Significance
- Lee now only defensive
- Coupled with Vicksburg,
- South now losing
49Gettysburg Address
- Speech given by Lincoln Nov. 19, 1863
- Outlines the goal of the Federal government
- EQUALITY
- The U.S. is a nation not a union of autonomous
states
50Grant vs. Lee
- After Vicksburg, Grant in charge of Union army
- Moves to the East
- Fights a war of attrition
- Destroy strategic, economic, and psychological
capacity for war
- Able to defeat Lee numerous times
- Gets stuck in Petersburg 1864
51William Tecumseh Sherman
- Chosen by Grant to capture the deep South
- Marches from TN to GA capture Atlanta (1864)
- Uses a Scorched Earth Policy
- Burns Atlanta
- Turns East
- toward Savannah
- Shermans March to the Sea Nov 15 Dec 22,1864
- Ordered his troops to burn crops, kill livestock,
consume supplies, and destroy civilian
infrastructure along their path
52I. The Election of 1864
53The Candidates
- Lincoln v. McClellan
- McClellan runs on a platform of cease-fire
peace talks - Lincoln doesnt think hell win
- High casualty rate
- Low Morale
- Sherman wins Atlanta
- Lincoln wins
54Lincolns 2nd Inauguration
- Outlines his Reconstruction Plan
- With malice toward none, with charity for
alllet usbind up the nations wounds.
55J. The End of It All
56Richmond Falls
- Grant laid siege at Petersburg June 1864
- Lee abandons both Petersburg Richmond April 2,
1865
57Lee Surrenders
- Grant pursues Lee to Appomattox Courthouse
- Lee surrenders to Grant April 9, 1865
- War is over
58See Handouts
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61Lincolns Assassination
- April 14, 1865 Lincoln at Fords Theatre
- Shot in the head
- Died the next morning
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