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Chapter10TheNationDivided - Mrs. Henriksson iClassroom
Chapter10TheNationDivided - Mrs. Henriksson iClassroom

... protect slavery and keep the nation together. • Stephen Douglas urged southern voters to stay in the Union, no matter who was elected. • This election showed how fragmented the nation had become. • Lincoln received enough electoral votes to win the election. ...
AHON Chapter 15 Section 4 Lecture Notes
AHON Chapter 15 Section 4 Lecture Notes

... Both sides allowed draftees to hire substitutes to serve in their place. Wealthy people were able to avoid the draft. ...
Reconstruction (1865
Reconstruction (1865

...  White Supremacist. ...
Unit 3: Civil War and Reconstructions
Unit 3: Civil War and Reconstructions

... 3. Political Cartoon Activity ...
Lincoln`s Plans for Reconstruction
Lincoln`s Plans for Reconstruction

... law. Rebuilding the South became the new president’s job. ...
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Reconstruction Review

... Which one was NOT true about life on the battle field during the Civil War? A. family and friends fought each other B. combat was brutal C. disease was a major killer D. all had adequate supplies ...
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Chapter 5

... • Industrial economy based on manufacturing • Factories needed labor, but not slave labor • Immigrants worked in factories, built roads, settled the West • Wanted high tariffs to protect its own products ...
Civil War
Civil War

... •Lee’s retreat at Gettysburg on July 3rd and Grant’s defeat of the South at Vicksburg on July 4th would lead to the eventual surrender of the South by 1865. ...
Civil War and Reconstruction Study Guide
Civil War and Reconstruction Study Guide

... Maryland. This was the deadliest day of the war. The Union army won this battle. Emancipation Proclamation Presidential order signed January 1, 1863, by Abraham Lincoln, that freed enslaved people in the Confederate states. It did not free slaves in the border states. The Emancipation Proclamation m ...
- Compromises and War | SOL USI. 9b
- Compromises and War | SOL USI. 9b

- Continents and Oceans | SOL USI
- Continents and Oceans | SOL USI

... Congress, and Southerners began to proclaim states’ rights as a means of selfprotection. The North believed that the nation was a union and could not be divided. While the Civil War did not begin as a war to abolish slavery, issues surrounding slavery deeply divided the nation. between the North and ...
Johnson`s Reconstruction plan - St. John`s School AP US History
Johnson`s Reconstruction plan - St. John`s School AP US History

... • The states would have to write new constitutions eliminating slavery and renouncing secession. • Required all Southern citizens to swear a loyalty oath before receiving amnesty for the rebellion • Many of the former Southern elite (including plantation owners, Confederate officers, and government ...
The Civil War Powerpoint
The Civil War Powerpoint

... thenceforward, and forever free; and the Executive Government of the United States, including the military and naval authority thereof, will recognize and maintain the freedom of such persons, and will do no act or acts to repress such persons, or any of them, in any efforts they may make for their ...
Ch 10 Nation Divides
Ch 10 Nation Divides

... Won without a single southern state’s electoral vote because got 180 Electoral College votes ...
Unit 4: The Young Republic
Unit 4: The Young Republic

War and Reconstruction in America 1820
War and Reconstruction in America 1820

... Jefferson Davis, on the other hand, announced in his inaugural speech that the South might be required to use force to secure its aims, and that spring, the South made good on its word. On April 12, 1861, General P. T. Beauregard ordered his South Carolinian militia unit to attack Fort Sumter, a Uni ...
Jump History Chapter 15 Review Part I: Events
Jump History Chapter 15 Review Part I: Events

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USH-unit-4-section1

... Reactions to Secession Other states threatened to secede: Virginia, North Carolina, Tennessee, Arkansas Some northerners supported secession – others warned about letting secession occur Outgoing Pres. Buchanan thought secession wrong, but that the Constitution gave the federal government no pow ...
Ch. 21
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...  Cold Harbor—6/64. Union attacks fortified Confederate position. 7,000 Union Casualties in about 7 min.  In one month, Grant looses 50,000 (Wilderness to Cold Harbor; ½ as many as lost by that army in the prior 3 years)  Grant drives Lee back to Petersburg. Lee builds trenches and fortifications. ...
African Americans and the War Completed
African Americans and the War Completed

... The Battle of Antietam or Sharpsburg (fought near Sharpsburg, Maryland) on Wednesday, September 17, 1862 put an end to General Robert E. Lee's first serious attempt to bring the American Civil War to the North, gave President Abraham Lincoln the victory he needed to issue the crucial Emancipation Pr ...
Study Guide - US History Teachers
Study Guide - US History Teachers

Civil War Causes
Civil War Causes

... Antislavery Sentiment in Georgia In 1798 the Georgia Constitution outlawed the introduction of any foreign slaves into the state. Many Georgians hoped to find a practical way to end slavery Some slave owners made provisions in their wills for their slaves freedom Others brought their slaves to a fr ...
US History - Mr. Martin`s History site
US History - Mr. Martin`s History site

... 26. Who won the election of 1860? Abraham Lincoln 27. Why did southern states secede? Because Lincoln won the election and they feared he would abolish slavery. 28. Name the starting point of the Civil War? Fort Sumter 29. Name of the Union military strategy. Anaconda Plan ...
24-Reconstruction_After_the_Civil_War
24-Reconstruction_After_the_Civil_War

... districts, ruled by a federal general and troops -protect former slaves •Must ratify 14th Amendment •Must ensure the black vote -bans former leaders •Denied the right to vote ...
Chapter 17 Causes of Civil War Frontloaded Notes
Chapter 17 Causes of Civil War Frontloaded Notes

... Of 1860 ...
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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.
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