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America s Civil War North vs. South 1861-1865 – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: America


1
Americas Civil War
North vs. South
1861-1865
2
(No Transcript)
3
President Abraham Lincoln
  • President of the United States (the North!!!)
  • Southern States SECEDED because they thought
    Lincoln would end slavery

4
President Jefferson Davis
  • President of the Confederate States (the
    South!!!)
  • Southern Capital was in Richmound, Virginia

5
Northern (Union) Advantages
  • More people than South
  • More factories
  • Make more weapons supplies
  • More/better railroads
  • More ships

6
Look at all of the Northern ADVANTAGES!!!!
7
Northern (Union) Disadvantages
  • North had to Invade/attack the South
  • They dont know hiding spots
  • They dont know the terrain
  • North had to fight the DETERMINED South

8
Southern (Confederate) Advantages
  • White Southerners STRONGLY SUPPORTED the war
  • Fighting on their own land
  • they know hiding spots know land
  • determined to keep their land
  • Experienced military leaders
  • Had slaves to work on fields, while soldiers
    fought

9
Southern (Confederate) Disadvantages
  • Less people than North
  • fewer soldiers/ slaves didnt fight
  • Hardly any factories
  • Couldnt make weapons supplies
  • Hardly any railroads

10
Battle at Fort Sumter
U.S. Fort off the coast of South Carolina
South wanted to attack and capture Fort Sumter
1st Battle of the Civil War- April 12,1861
11
Battle at Fort Sumter
  1. U.S. troops were low on supplies were stuck in
    the Fort

2. Lincoln sends supplies to his troops
3. The South attacks Fort Sumter before the
supplies can get there!!!
4. The North surrenders after 33 hours
5. The South wins the 1st battle gets control
of the fort!
12
The South bombarding Fort Sumter with cannon fire
13
1st Battle of Bull Run
  • July 21, 1861
  1. The North drives the South back

2. Then Stonewall Jackson helps the South by
bringing reinforcements!!
3. The South Drives the Northerners back
4. The Northern troops RUN AWAY!
5. The South Wins AGAIN!
14
Southern General Stonewall Jackson
  • Leader of the 1st Battle of Bull Run (South Won)

Nickname Someone stated There is Jackson
standing like a stone wall." The soldiers under
his command came to admire his stubborn courage
and started calling him "Stonewall" Jackson
15
Approximately 5,000 men died (3,000 were Union
soldiers)
16
The Lives of Soldiers
Confederate (South) Uniform
Union (North) Uniform
17
The Lives of Soldiers
Draft Laws
South Men 18- 35 (1862) Men 18 - 45 (1862) Men 17- 50 (1864) North-1863 Men 20-45
  • North- Many men got out of being drafted
  • paid 300 fee or hired substitute
  • Only 6 of the drafted men served!

18
The Lives of Soldiers
Food Was SCARCE!!!
  • Food Choices were limited.
  • Meats were salted or smoked
  • Fruits and vegetables were dried or canned.
  • Soldiers got daily rations.
  • Everything was given out uncooked so the
    soldiers prepared their meals.
  • Small groups would often gather together to cook
    and share their rations and they called the group
    a "mess"

19
The Lives of Soldiers
What did they eat?
  • Hardtack was a biscuit made of flour.
  • Soldiers were allowed six to eight Hardtack
    crackers for a 3 day ration
  • Hardtack did not get to the soldiers until
    months after it had been made. By that time, they
    were very hard, so hard that soldiers called them
    "sheet iron crackers". Sometimes they were
    infested with small bugs the soldiers called
    weevils, so they referred to the hardtack as
    "worm castles."

20
The Lives of Soldiers
What did they eat?
  • Meat
  • Coffee
  • Hardtack
  • Stew
  • If a march was near, men would cook everything
    at once and store it in their haversack, (a
    canvas bag made with a sling to hang over the
    shoulder).
  • Haversacks had a inner cloth bag that could be
    removed and washed, though it still became a
    greasy, foul-smelling container after several
    weeks of use.

21
The Lives of Soldiers
Civil War Entertainment
  • Wrote letters home/ diaries
  • Read (newspapers, bibles magazines)
  • Played music (banjo, fiddle, guitar)
  • Races (wheel barrel, soldiers on hogs,
    cockaroaches)
  • Played baseball
  • Bowling (used cannon balls!)
  • Sat around and talked

22
The Lives of Women
What were women doing during the war?
  • Took over mens jobs
  • Worked in factories (north)
  • Tended to the farms (south)
  • Became nurses
  • Made uniforms blankets for soldiers
  • Some were SPIES!

23
The Lives of Women
Nurse Clara Barton
  • Delivered supplies to battle fields
  • Tended to the wounded soldiers
  • 1881- Organized the American Red Cross
  • served as its President for 20 years!

24
The Lives of Women
Spy Rose Greenhow
  • Entertained Union Troops
  • Actually spying on North
  • Was caught
  • Exiled to the South (she was greeted with
    CHEERS!)

25
The Lives of African Americans
South
  • Beginning of war 3.5 million slaves!!!
  • Southerners didnt want slaves fighting
  • Slaves worked on farms in coal iron mines as
    nurses cooks
  • 1865 (last year of war)- South finally started
    using them in battle

26
Slaves working in the fields during the Civil War
27
The Lives of African Americans
North
  • Beginning of war couldnt join Northern army
  • 1862- could serve in Northern army
  • Made up 10 of Union Army 18 of Navy
  • 200,000 served 37,000 died for the U.S.

28
The Lives of African Americans
Most cooking occurred on an outdoor fire. In the
early days of the war freed slaves were not
allowed to carry a rifle and fight. They were
often given the role of cook
29
The Lives of African Americans
North
  • Soldiers were SEPARATE from whites in the army
  • Got LOWER PAY than whites (until 1864)
  • Could not become commanding officers

Company E, 4th US. Colored Infantry
30
Emancipation Proclamation
  • Lincoln issued this
  • January 1, 1863
  • Freed all slaves in Confederate States
  • DID NOT free slaves in Non-Rebel states
  • Felt slaves were helping South prolong war

31
Emancipation Proclamation
  • Did not actually free anyone southern owners
    didnt just let slaves leave.
  • Many slaves heard about Proclamation
  • Some tried to escape (100,000 slaves escaped
    BEFORE Proclamation)

-Signing of Emancipation Proclamation
32
13th Amendment
  • 1865 added to constitution
  • Freed ALL Slaves
  • No More Slavery in U.S.

33
Battle of Shiloh
  • April 6th-7th 1862
  1. April 6th- South launches a surprise attack!

2. The South drives General Grant the North
Back!
3. April 7th 25,000 more Northern troops come
to help
4. The North Attacks and Wins!
34
Northern General Ulysses S. Grant
  • Leader of the Battle of Shiloh (North Won)
  • Forced General Robert E. Lee and the South to
    SURRENDER at Appomattox Courthouse

35
Over 20,000 troops were killed wounded in the
Battle of Shiloh
36
Battle of Antietam
  • September 17, 1862
  1. Bloodiest Single Day Battle- 23,000 Killed
    Wounded

2. Lee South attacked the North
3. The North Was LUCKYthey had a copy of Lees
Battle plans!!!!
4. The South retreats, so North Claimed Victory!
37
Southern General Robert E. Lee
  • Most important Southern military leader
  • Surrendered and ended the war
  • He never went to jail for his role in the Civil
    War

38
Confederate troops lay dead after the Battle of
Antietam
39
This picture shows President Lincoln at Antietam
after the battle
40
Battle of Gettysburg
  • July 1st- 3rd, 1863
  1. July 1st- North had to retreat

2. July 2nd- North faced heavy attack but held
firm
3. July 3rd South had to retreat lost too many
men
4. North Won!
Battle with the most killed and wounded (46,000
in 3 days)
41
Gettysburg Address
  • November 19th, 1863
  1. Lincoln gave his famous speech telling people to
    remember the people who died in battle

2. Stated, these dead shall not have died in
vainthis nation shall have a new birth of
freedom
42
Gettysburg Address
43
Northern General William Sherman
  • Sherman and his 65,000 troops were in Georgia for
    36 days and destroyed everything that could help
    the South during the war
  • Southern Civilians had been evacuated before he
    set Atlanta on fire

44
Shermans March Through Georgia
  • November 18th December 22nd, 1864
  • Sherman ordered his troops to burn crops, kill
    livestock, consume supplies, and destroy civilian
    infrastructure along their path. This is called
    total war.
  • The Army wrecked 300 miles (480 km) of railroad
    and numerous bridges and miles of telegraph
    lines.
  • It seized 5,000 horses, 4,000 mules, and 13,000
    head of cattle.
  • It confiscated 9.5 million pounds of corn and
    10.5 million pounds of fodder, and destroyed
    uncounted cotton gins and mills.

45
Sherman Crippled the South (destroyed railroads,
buildings, farms)
46
Union soldiers wrecking railroad lines
47
SHERMAN'S TROOPS BURNING A RAILROAD STATION.
48
Shermans March Through Georgia
He captured 1,328 prisoners and 167 guns, and
destroyed 20,000 bales of cotton.
  • About 10,000 slaves fled their plantations to
    follow Sherman's army
  • The North took over the city of Savannah, Georgia
  • Shermans march was a HUGE success for the North!

49
Lee Surrenders at Appomattox Courthouse
  • April 9th, 1865
  • General Lee surrendered to Northern General
    Ulysses Grant.
  • The Southern soldiers put down their weapons, and
    then were free to go home.
  • The Civil War was OVER!!!
  • The North Won!!!
  • The North South stay ONE Nation!

50
Confederate General Robert E. Lee surrendering to
Union General Ulysses S. Grant at Appomattox
Court House, Virginia, April 9, 1865
51
Civil War Facts
  • More than 3 million men fought in the war.
    More than 620,000 people died
  • There were 6,000,000 cases of disease in the
    Federal armies, which meant that, on an average,
    every man was sick at least twice.

52
Civil War Field Hospital
53
Civil War Effects
  • Much of the South was destroyed
  • Southern houses, farms, railroads bridges were
    ruined
  • 4 million Southern Slaves were freed after the
    war
  • These slaves DIDNT have homes, jobs, food,
    clothes, or money
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