36. Part One of Reconstruction
... the readmitted states be permitted to vote in national elections? Would they be allowed representation in the Congress? Essentially, would the former Confederate states ever be allowed to be equal members of the United States again? The reason Lincoln’s death by assassination was a calamity for the ...
... the readmitted states be permitted to vote in national elections? Would they be allowed representation in the Congress? Essentially, would the former Confederate states ever be allowed to be equal members of the United States again? The reason Lincoln’s death by assassination was a calamity for the ...
THE CIVIL WAR 1861-1865 The Civil War began over
... “Bobby Lee, Bobby Lee, he'll do this, that, and the other.” I’m tired of hearing about Bobby Lee. You'd think he was going to do a double somersault and land in our rear. Quit thinking about what he’s going to do to you and think ...
... “Bobby Lee, Bobby Lee, he'll do this, that, and the other.” I’m tired of hearing about Bobby Lee. You'd think he was going to do a double somersault and land in our rear. Quit thinking about what he’s going to do to you and think ...
Chapter 17 Reconstruction and the New South
... • The Union was saved • Now the challenge was reuniting and rebuilding the country • The Southern states needed to be readmitted • The Southern economy and society also needed to be rebuilt • Americans disagreed on how this should happen • The period of rebuilding is called Reconstruction • Also ref ...
... • The Union was saved • Now the challenge was reuniting and rebuilding the country • The Southern states needed to be readmitted • The Southern economy and society also needed to be rebuilt • Americans disagreed on how this should happen • The period of rebuilding is called Reconstruction • Also ref ...
B. - Springtown ISD
... • The Union was saved • Now the challenge was reuniting and rebuilding the country • The Southern states needed to be readmitted • The Southern economy and society also needed to be rebuilt • Americans disagreed on how this should happen • The period of rebuilding is called Reconstruction • Also ref ...
... • The Union was saved • Now the challenge was reuniting and rebuilding the country • The Southern states needed to be readmitted • The Southern economy and society also needed to be rebuilt • Americans disagreed on how this should happen • The period of rebuilding is called Reconstruction • Also ref ...
Civil War and Reconstruction Study Guide Emergence of Two
... a. Major war aims for both sides b. Major strategies for both sides (attrition, Anaconda Plan) c. Changes in the military d. Major strengths and weaknesses for each side e. Why soldiers did not desert ...
... a. Major war aims for both sides b. Major strategies for both sides (attrition, Anaconda Plan) c. Changes in the military d. Major strengths and weaknesses for each side e. Why soldiers did not desert ...
Chapter 21 The Furnace of Civil War, 1861-1865
... proposition that all men are created equal. Now we are engaged in a great civil war, testing whether that nation or any nation so conceived and so dedicated can long endure. We are met on a great battlefield of that war. We have come to dedicate a portion of that field as a final resting place for t ...
... proposition that all men are created equal. Now we are engaged in a great civil war, testing whether that nation or any nation so conceived and so dedicated can long endure. We are met on a great battlefield of that war. We have come to dedicate a portion of that field as a final resting place for t ...
Others in the War
... In charge of Fort Sumter (Andersonville) was General John H. Winder with Captain Henri Wirz being the Commander of th Low food rations were very common for the prisoners that called Andersonville their temporary home. McElroy reports of the There was also a stream, which went through Andersonville, ...
... In charge of Fort Sumter (Andersonville) was General John H. Winder with Captain Henri Wirz being the Commander of th Low food rations were very common for the prisoners that called Andersonville their temporary home. McElroy reports of the There was also a stream, which went through Andersonville, ...
Rules - Victory Point Games
... Southern arsenals by the U.S. War Department. This continued until stopped by President Buchanan. Then Secretary of War John B. Floyd, a Southerner, ordered these transfers as scheduled complements to federal forts then under construction in the South. Northern opinion at the time attributed these a ...
... Southern arsenals by the U.S. War Department. This continued until stopped by President Buchanan. Then Secretary of War John B. Floyd, a Southerner, ordered these transfers as scheduled complements to federal forts then under construction in the South. Northern opinion at the time attributed these a ...
The Civil War 1861-1865
... • Union forces seized two Confederate diplomats from aboard a British ship, the Trent • British contended the seizure was an act of war • Union eventually released the diplomats • Confidence built between the U.S. and British governments • Britain refused to support Confederacy ...
... • Union forces seized two Confederate diplomats from aboard a British ship, the Trent • British contended the seizure was an act of war • Union eventually released the diplomats • Confidence built between the U.S. and British governments • Britain refused to support Confederacy ...
US History/Civil War
... Shiloh and Ulysses Grant While Union military efforts in the East were frustrated and even disastrous, West of the Appalachians, the war developed differently resulting in the first significant battlefield successes for the North. Kentucky, on the border between the Union and Confederacy, was divide ...
... Shiloh and Ulysses Grant While Union military efforts in the East were frustrated and even disastrous, West of the Appalachians, the war developed differently resulting in the first significant battlefield successes for the North. Kentucky, on the border between the Union and Confederacy, was divide ...
Guided Reading Activity: Creating a Nation Lesson 5
... DIRECTIONS: Read each main idea and answer the questions below. Refer to your textbook to write the answers. Main Idea A: The North and the South each had distinct advantages and disadvantages at the beginning of the Civil War. ...
... DIRECTIONS: Read each main idea and answer the questions below. Refer to your textbook to write the answers. Main Idea A: The North and the South each had distinct advantages and disadvantages at the beginning of the Civil War. ...
Civil War 1863-1865
... 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 ...
... 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 ...
United States History Mr. Kevin W. Walsh Unit 3 Assessment Study
... When did the secession of Southern states begin? What did Emancipation Proclamation mean for slaves living in Kentucky? How did Lincoln justify suspending habeus corpus during the Civil War? Why did Gen. Sherman destroy so much of Georgia? How did Gen. Grant capture Vicksburg? Why was Gen. McClellan ...
... When did the secession of Southern states begin? What did Emancipation Proclamation mean for slaves living in Kentucky? How did Lincoln justify suspending habeus corpus during the Civil War? Why did Gen. Sherman destroy so much of Georgia? How did Gen. Grant capture Vicksburg? Why was Gen. McClellan ...
Civil War
... http://www.history.com/videos/surrender-at-appomattox-courthouse#surrender-atappomattox-courthouse ...
... http://www.history.com/videos/surrender-at-appomattox-courthouse#surrender-atappomattox-courthouse ...
Library of Congress
... women who served as nurses during the Civil War sits with some of her wounded charges. Medical facilities and treatment for the wounded were woefully inadequate; most of those who were not killed outright by the primitive surgical practices of the day either died from their wounds or from secondary ...
... women who served as nurses during the Civil War sits with some of her wounded charges. Medical facilities and treatment for the wounded were woefully inadequate; most of those who were not killed outright by the primitive surgical practices of the day either died from their wounds or from secondary ...
Ch 20 Packet
... the British discovered that they could substitute flax and wool for cotton. b. the British proved able to grow sufficient cotton in their own land. c. the British found sufficient cotton from previous stockpiles and from new sources like Egypt and India. d. the threat of war with France distracted B ...
... the British discovered that they could substitute flax and wool for cotton. b. the British proved able to grow sufficient cotton in their own land. c. the British found sufficient cotton from previous stockpiles and from new sources like Egypt and India. d. the threat of war with France distracted B ...
The Civil War – Create A Living Timeline Overview Students will
... • “When Abraham Lincoln, a known opponent of slavery, was elected president, the South Carolina legislature perceived a threat. Calling a state convention, the delegates voted to remove the state of South Carolina from the union known as the United States of America. The secession of South Caroli ...
... • “When Abraham Lincoln, a known opponent of slavery, was elected president, the South Carolina legislature perceived a threat. Calling a state convention, the delegates voted to remove the state of South Carolina from the union known as the United States of America. The secession of South Caroli ...
The Civil War Affects Life at Home The Civil War Affects Life at Home
... factories to manufacture weapons in Austin and Tyler. By 1863 Texas was making 800 weapons a month in its four gun factories. Iron furnaces opened in East Texas, and the state government had prisoners in Huntsville make clothes. The U.S. blockade of the Confederate states kept goods from entering or ...
... factories to manufacture weapons in Austin and Tyler. By 1863 Texas was making 800 weapons a month in its four gun factories. Iron furnaces opened in East Texas, and the state government had prisoners in Huntsville make clothes. The U.S. blockade of the Confederate states kept goods from entering or ...
CHAPTER SIXTEEN: THE CIVIL WAR, 1861–1865 COMMUNITIES
... The Union home front was wrought with problems. The Democratic Party divided into War Democrats who supported the war effort and Peace Democrats or “Copperheads” who did not. Democrats criticized the centralization of power and the efforts towards emancipation. Copperhead leader Clement Vallandigham ...
... The Union home front was wrought with problems. The Democratic Party divided into War Democrats who supported the war effort and Peace Democrats or “Copperheads” who did not. Democrats criticized the centralization of power and the efforts towards emancipation. Copperhead leader Clement Vallandigham ...
ch16 study guide quiz
... 10. List the percentage of factories in the southern states at the beginning of the Civil War. 11. List the percentage of farms in the southern states at the beginning of the Civil War. #12-15 List the four objectives of the Anaconda Plan. ...
... 10. List the percentage of factories in the southern states at the beginning of the Civil War. 11. List the percentage of farms in the southern states at the beginning of the Civil War. #12-15 List the four objectives of the Anaconda Plan. ...
The Bushwhacker - Civil War St Louis, The Civil War Round Table of
... the root of his problems. On December 11, 1862, Grant ordered the expulsion of all Jews “as a class” within 24 hours, causing thirty of Paducah’s most respectable families to be routed from their homes and forced aboard riverboats. After arriving in Cincinnati, three of the men sent a telegram to Pr ...
... the root of his problems. On December 11, 1862, Grant ordered the expulsion of all Jews “as a class” within 24 hours, causing thirty of Paducah’s most respectable families to be routed from their homes and forced aboard riverboats. After arriving in Cincinnati, three of the men sent a telegram to Pr ...
Crash Course 20 Civil War 680k-800k casualties 1861
... armies in field operations ○ The Union Blockade k ept ships out of Confederate ports and eventually seizing them ○ Confederates made an effort to break the blockade using ironclad warships ○ Small torpedo boats and submarines were also used ● Europe and the Disunited States (387) ○ At the beginning ...
... armies in field operations ○ The Union Blockade k ept ships out of Confederate ports and eventually seizing them ○ Confederates made an effort to break the blockade using ironclad warships ○ Small torpedo boats and submarines were also used ● Europe and the Disunited States (387) ○ At the beginning ...
Chapter 10
... Yet Southerners were optimistic. They had the advantage of fighting a defensive war on their own soil, as well as outstanding military leadership. All they had to do to win was push back invading Union forces. Before long, they believed, the Union would tire of battle and leave the Confederacy in p ...
... Yet Southerners were optimistic. They had the advantage of fighting a defensive war on their own soil, as well as outstanding military leadership. All they had to do to win was push back invading Union forces. Before long, they believed, the Union would tire of battle and leave the Confederacy in p ...
GUIDED READING Chapter 8
... A. Civil War battles involved long lines of hundreds of men fighting each other, separated by 1,000 yards or less. B. much of the battle involved hand-to-hand combat. C. most battles involved long-range guns. D. most battles involved cannons. ...
... A. Civil War battles involved long lines of hundreds of men fighting each other, separated by 1,000 yards or less. B. much of the battle involved hand-to-hand combat. C. most battles involved long-range guns. D. most battles involved cannons. ...
Anaconda Plan
The Anaconda Plan is the name widely applied to an outline strategy for subduing the seceding states in the American Civil War. Proposed by General-in-Chief Winfield Scott, the plan emphasized the blockade of the Southern ports, and called for an advance down the Mississippi River to cut the South in two. Because the blockade would be rather passive, it was widely derided by the vociferous faction who wanted a more vigorous prosecution of the war, and who likened it to the coils of an anaconda suffocating its victim. The snake image caught on, giving the proposal its popular name.