Chapter 16
... Two days after Fort Sumter, Lincoln requested 75,000 militia to serve for 90 days. VA, NC, TN, AK joined the Confederacy. Confederacy moved capital to Richmond. Better chance of winning because VA was rich and populous. (heavily populated) Home of Robert E. Lee – the South’s ...
... Two days after Fort Sumter, Lincoln requested 75,000 militia to serve for 90 days. VA, NC, TN, AK joined the Confederacy. Confederacy moved capital to Richmond. Better chance of winning because VA was rich and populous. (heavily populated) Home of Robert E. Lee – the South’s ...
Ch_16_Sec_4-5
... a winner too. He was now known throughout the country. Two years later, the two rivals would again meet face to faceboth seeking the office of President. • In 1860, when they met again, the republican party had become very strong in the north. This time, Lincoln beat Douglas. In just a few years Abr ...
... a winner too. He was now known throughout the country. Two years later, the two rivals would again meet face to faceboth seeking the office of President. • In 1860, when they met again, the republican party had become very strong in the north. This time, Lincoln beat Douglas. In just a few years Abr ...
Civil War
... slaves under Confederate control Some Northerners feared … freed people would increase unemployment Abolitionists criticized Lincoln for … not going far enough by freeing all slaves Southerners … condemned it ...
... slaves under Confederate control Some Northerners feared … freed people would increase unemployment Abolitionists criticized Lincoln for … not going far enough by freeing all slaves Southerners … condemned it ...
Part I: Multiple Choice: Choose the best answer for each question
... b. Freed slaves in the Confederate territories c. Allowed slaves to fight for the Union Army d. Allowed slaves to fight in the Confederate Army 4. Which statement best describes Civil War medicine and health care? a. Soldiers were happy to be treated by the doctors b. It was often described as a med ...
... b. Freed slaves in the Confederate territories c. Allowed slaves to fight for the Union Army d. Allowed slaves to fight in the Confederate Army 4. Which statement best describes Civil War medicine and health care? a. Soldiers were happy to be treated by the doctors b. It was often described as a med ...
Civil War Study Guide
... 5. What was the purpose of the Freedmen’s Bureau do? 6. What were Black Codes or Jim Crow Laws? 7. Explain how the “sharecropping” system worked? 8. Identify the following three groups that supported the Republican Party in the South: a. Freedmen: b. “Scalawags:” c. “Carpetbaggers:” 9. Identify some ...
... 5. What was the purpose of the Freedmen’s Bureau do? 6. What were Black Codes or Jim Crow Laws? 7. Explain how the “sharecropping” system worked? 8. Identify the following three groups that supported the Republican Party in the South: a. Freedmen: b. “Scalawags:” c. “Carpetbaggers:” 9. Identify some ...
Road to Civil War
... Lincoln responded by sending a message to the governor of South Carolina informing him that he was sending an unarmed expedition with supplies to Fort Sumter. Lincoln left the decision to start shooting up to the Confederates. President Jefferson Davis and his advisors ordered their forces to attack ...
... Lincoln responded by sending a message to the governor of South Carolina informing him that he was sending an unarmed expedition with supplies to Fort Sumter. Lincoln left the decision to start shooting up to the Confederates. President Jefferson Davis and his advisors ordered their forces to attack ...
Military and Nonmilitary Leaders from the North and South in the
... Politically, Robert E. Lee was a Whig. Ironically, he was attached strongly to the Union and to the Constitution. He entertained no special sympathy for ...
... Politically, Robert E. Lee was a Whig. Ironically, he was attached strongly to the Union and to the Constitution. He entertained no special sympathy for ...
Lecture - West Ada
... her sister Southern States.” • In the weeks that followed, Virginia, North Carolina, Tennessee, and Arkansas voted to join the Confederacy • Southern volunteers rushed to enlist, just as citizens did in the North ...
... her sister Southern States.” • In the weeks that followed, Virginia, North Carolina, Tennessee, and Arkansas voted to join the Confederacy • Southern volunteers rushed to enlist, just as citizens did in the North ...
Course of Civil War - Taylor County Schools
... Anaconda Plan –a strategic plan proposed by Winfield Scott to slowly strangle the South, ending the Civil War before it had ...
... Anaconda Plan –a strategic plan proposed by Winfield Scott to slowly strangle the South, ending the Civil War before it had ...
Civil War
... http://www.history.com/topics/americancivil-war/american-civil-warhistory/videos/us-inches-closer-to-war ...
... http://www.history.com/topics/americancivil-war/american-civil-warhistory/videos/us-inches-closer-to-war ...
15 Civil War Dispatches 19-23 and
... known as the Ku Klux Klan, which will terrorize people of color all throughout the South and spread to the entire US. Reconstruction will not end until 1876, when the last of Union soldiers leave the South, and though the Union is restored and slavery has ended, the United States still has a long wa ...
... known as the Ku Klux Klan, which will terrorize people of color all throughout the South and spread to the entire US. Reconstruction will not end until 1876, when the last of Union soldiers leave the South, and though the Union is restored and slavery has ended, the United States still has a long wa ...
Chapter 17 Section 1 “The Conflict Takes Shape”
... some disadvantages in the war. The south had few factories to produce weapons and other vital supplies. It also had few railroads to move troops and supplies. Also, the south had a much smaller population than the north. ...
... some disadvantages in the war. The south had few factories to produce weapons and other vital supplies. It also had few railroads to move troops and supplies. Also, the south had a much smaller population than the north. ...
Lincoln, Secession and War
... candidate at their convention held in Illinois. The Republican Party’s platform: End slavery in the territories. Each state can control its own decisions. No interference in states where slavery already existed . ...
... candidate at their convention held in Illinois. The Republican Party’s platform: End slavery in the territories. Each state can control its own decisions. No interference in states where slavery already existed . ...
The Civil War - Social and Political Themes
... Belongs but to the white. But as for me, upon my soul! So liberal are we here. I’ll let Sambo be murthered instead of myself On every day of the year. ...
... Belongs but to the white. But as for me, upon my soul! So liberal are we here. I’ll let Sambo be murthered instead of myself On every day of the year. ...
Chapter 20 Study Guide
... Delaware, Maryland, West Virginia, Missouri, Kentucky; states with slavery that stayed in the Union; tremendously influenced Lincoln’s policy and goals in the war (see #2 above); Lincoln inflicted martial law on MD and sent soldier to WV and MO 4. Goals of the Confederacy ...
... Delaware, Maryland, West Virginia, Missouri, Kentucky; states with slavery that stayed in the Union; tremendously influenced Lincoln’s policy and goals in the war (see #2 above); Lincoln inflicted martial law on MD and sent soldier to WV and MO 4. Goals of the Confederacy ...
Hampton Roads Conference
The Hampton Roads Conference was a peace conference held between the United States and the Confederate States on February 3, 1865, aboard the steamboat River Queen in Hampton Roads, Virginia, to discuss terms to end the American Civil War. President Abraham Lincoln and Secretary of State William H. Seward, representing the Union, met with three commissioners from the Confederacy: Vice President Alexander H. Stephens, Senator Robert M. T. Hunter, and Assistant Secretary of War John A. Campbell.The representatives discussed a possible alliance against France, the possible terms of surrender, the question of whether slavery might persist after the war, and the question of whether the South would be compensated for property lost through emancipation. Lincoln and Seward reportedly offered some possibilities for compromise on the issue of slavery. The only concrete agreement reached was over prisoner-of-war exchanges.The Confederate commissioners immediately returned to Richmond at the conclusion of the conference. Confederate President Jefferson Davis announced that the North would not compromise. Lincoln drafted an amnesty agreement based on terms discussed at the Conference, but met with opposition from his Cabinet. John Campbell continued to advocate for a peace agreement and met again with Lincoln after the fall of Richmond on April 2. The war continued until April 9, 1865.