Title: Civil War
1Civil War
2Ft. Sumter
- Lincoln would not provoke war
- Feared border states would leave Union
- Upset Europe
- Upset Northerners who wanted peaceful solution
- Did not want to fight Southern brethren
3After Ft. Sumter
- Rallied the North toward war
- So many signed up, U.S. turned some volunteers
away - Some believed South could not survive and would
be back - Copperheads Northern Democrats against war
- Wanted immediate peace with South
- Opposed almost everything Lincoln did
4April 15, 1861
- Lincoln calls for 75,000 volunteers
- Serve for 90 days
- Four more states secede
- Border states stay in Union
5U.S. after April, 1861
6Border States
- Maryland, Missouri, Kentucky, Delaware
- Importance
- Natural border
- Over half of southern population
- Surrounded Washington D.C.
- Resources
- railroads
7Advantages/Disadvantages
- Population
- North 22 million
- South 9 million
- Men of fighting age
- North 4 million
- South 1.5 million
8Men Present for Duty in the Civil War
9Soldiers Occupations North/South Combined
10Immigrantsas a of a StatesPopulationin1860
11Adv./Disadv. Cont
- Food Production (former USA)
- 2/3 in North
- 1/3 in South
- Manufacturing (former USA)
- 4/5 in North (1.5 billion annually)
- 1/5 in South (155 million annually)
- Railroads (former USA)
- 3/4 in North
- 1/4 in South
12Resources North the South
13Rating the North the South
14Railroad Lines, 1860
15Adv./Disadv. Cont
- Most of fighting in the South
- King Cotton
- Souths Civilian Government
- Souths Military Leadership
16Confederate Government
- Constitution stressed state sovereignty
- Lack of cooperation at federal level
- Many men refused to fight outside of state
militias - Jefferson Davis elected President
17The Confederate White House
18The Confederate Seal
MOTTO ? With God As Our Vindicator
19A Northern View of Jeff Davis
20Lincoln Takes Power
- Congress not in session at beginning of war
- So, Lincoln...
- Put up blockade
- Increased size of military
- Suspended habeas corpus
- Arrest people who spoke out against the Union
- Supervised voting in the Border States
21Economics of War
- North prints greenbacks (worth about .32 due to
lack of gold) - South paper money worth .02 due to inflation
- Northern manufacturing boomed
- Passed the Morrill Tariff Act in 1861
- National Banking Act passed in 1861
- First income tax
- South devastated due to fighting on land,
collapse of transportation, blockade, collapse of
cotton market, lack of national unity
22Inflation in the South
23Events Leading to Bull Run
- Southern capital moved from Montgomery to
Richmond, Va. - U.S. army volunteers terms of service about to
run out in July - Lincoln orders an attack on Manassas Junction
(outside of Richmond, Va.) - General Irvin McDowell in charge of army in the
Potomac--he was to defend Washington D.C.) - Winfield Scott was General-in-Chief but was too
old and ill to take command of the field
24Battle of Bull Run (1st Manassas)July, 1861
25Bull Run
- Both sides inexperienced
- People watched like spectator sport
- North attacked and forced to retreat back towards
Washington, D.C. - Thomas Stonewall Jackson beat back the Northern
attack - Problem South did not follow (disorganized,
confused, lacked supplies, tired) - Realization Long war (Anaconda Plan)
26Anaconda Plan Proposed
- Lincolns plan for quick victory was thwarted
- Winfield Scott proposed Anaconda Plan
- Take the southern capital
- Split the South
- Blockade the southern ports
- Wildly unpopular amongst Lincoln and the public
who wanted quick victory - Will use this strategy later in the war
- Was successful out west
- Scott will resign in November, 61
- Tardy George McClellan succeeds him
27Overviewofthe NorthsCivil WarStrategy Anaco
ndaPlan
28Phase 1 of Anaconda Plan
- Take Richmond, Va.
- Would need 500,000 men to do this
- Victory at Bull Run would have given Union a
quick victory - Richmond is well fortified which means this will
take a long time.
291862 Second Battle of Bull Run
- Robert E. Lee able to defeat George McClellan in
the Seven Days Battles (McClellan was fired) and
General John Pope at 2nd Bull Run. - Lee decides to attack Washington D.C.
- Problem Union finds Lees secret plans which he
used to wrap cigars
30War in the East 1861-1862
31Battle of Antietam
- 9/17/62
- McClellan (back in charge) forced Lee to retreat
- McClellan doesnt pursue and is fired again.
- Replaced by Ambrose Burnside and later Thomas
Hooker
32Battle of Antietam Bloodiest Single Day of the
War
September 17, 1862
23,000 casualties
33Phase Two of Anaconda Plan
- Attack along the Mississippi River
- Split the South in two
- Take major river artery
- Ulysses S. Grant in charge out west
34Out West
- Grant had a lot of success (Ft. Henry, Ft.
Donelson, Shiloh, etc.) - 23,000 casualties at Shiloh alone
- Gets reputation due to his stance of
Unconditional Surrender - North beginning to dominate in the west--time to
begin moving east
35Phase Three of Anaconda Plan
- Blockade
- Leaky, but effective
- Effective enough to keep other countries from
risking trade - North took New Orleans in 1862
- Southern economy and war making ability hurt
36Europe
- Did not want to support slavery
- Uncle Toms Cabin was very influential
- Did not support South
- South thought Britain and France would help due
to need for cotton - Britain had a major surplus
37Change in Tactic..
- North makes slavery a bigger deal
- Before war Lincoln said it was to keep Union
together - Factors changing Lincolns mind
- Ending slavery hurts South
- Slaves could help war effort
- Could bring Britain into war on U.S. side
- Radical Republicans growing in number and power
38Emancipation Proclamation of 1863
- Lincoln proclaimed that all slaves in Confederacy
were freed - Did not apply to border states
- Could not be enforced in South
- Encouraged runaways
- 300,000 black soldiers will fight
- Britain begins sending aid to U.S.
- No chance of negotiated end to the war
39Emancipation in 1863
40TheEmancipationProclamation
41African-American Recruiting Poster
42The Famous 54th Massachusetts
43Black Troops Freeing Slaves
44The North Initiates the Draft, 1863
45NYC Draft Riots, (July 13-16, 1863)
46The Progress of War 1861-1865
47Changing Southern Strategy
- Defense no longer working
- Lee realized South cold not outlast North
- South goes on offense
- July 1, 1863 marched into Pennsylvania
48Battle of Gettysburg
- Union now under leadership of George Meade
- CSA suffered heavy losses
- Could never go on offensive
- South never recovers
- Grant captures Vicksburg the next day
49Shermans March
- Grant named commander in 1864
- Starts Total War
- March of 1864 General William T. Sherman put in
charge of marching through the South
50ShermansMarchto theSeathroughGeorgia,1864
51War Effects North/South
- North
- National banking system with national currency
- Industrial, agricultural and economic expansion
- Blacks and women enter work force
- South
- Economic devastation
- High inflation
- Starvation (Virginia Bread Riot--1864)
521864 Election
Pres. Lincoln (R)
George McClellan (D)
53Lincoln Faces Opposition
- Radical Republicans want Salmon Chase
- Northern Democrats want George McClellan
- Republican Party tries to stress union and
becomes Union Party - Lincoln also chose a Democrat as his VP running
mate Andrew Johnson
54Presidential Election Results 1864
55War is Hopeless for South
- Failing economy
- Plantation system is failing
- People angry with government
- 500,000 blacks fled to North
- 4 million will be freed at wars end
- Increased taxes
- Military desertion rate over 50 by end of 1864
56Surrender at AppomattoxApril 9, 1865
57Casualties on Both Sides
58Civil War Casualtiesin Comparison to Other Wars
59Fords Theater (April 14, 1865)
60The Assassin
John Wilkes Booth
61The Assassination
62WANTED!!
63Now He Belongs to the Ages!