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The Civil War
The Civil War

... 2. The unique problems faced by President Lincoln and his use of executive power to solve them 3. The many interpretations of the Civil War advanced by historians 4. How the Confederacy and the Union compared in manpower, natural resources, finances, industrial potential, public support, and militar ...
File
File

... When asked why Grant had to be the commanding general, Lincoln only replied “because he fights” Grant tells Lincoln of a new battle plan which will use “total warfare” on the South to end the rebellion He agrees to take the job under the condition that he runs the war not Lincoln, his next 2 in comm ...
The Civil War 1850–1865
The Civil War 1850–1865

... Because Taylor and Fillmore had never made their views on slavery in the West clear, the issue remained unresolved. When California applied for admission as a free state, the debate picked up right where it had left off. In Congress, heavyweights Daniel Webster and Henry Clay met for the last time t ...
Eighth Grade Unit #5 – “The Civil War”
Eighth Grade Unit #5 – “The Civil War”

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Name - Wsfcs
Name - Wsfcs

... settling on Ulysses S. Grant. The South would become more desperate as resources dwindled, including Lee’s failed attempts to win a battle in Union territory. During the Civil War, Lincoln set a precedent for expanded executive powers in time of war, such as by suspending writ of habeas corpus. Supp ...
Civil War Test Study Guideanswers1
Civil War Test Study Guideanswers1

... the Confederacy that were being supplied by Georgia cities. 12. Which battle was the first of the war? Fort Sumter 13. Why did the South have to keep its ports open and operational during the Civil War? To maintain their trade with England and France who provided many of the supplies and resources t ...
Civil War – Overview - Stafford County Museum
Civil War – Overview - Stafford County Museum

... perimeter for the winter. During that strategic pause, the Army of the Potomac’s morale and condition sunk to their lowest points in the war. However, military leadership and the soldiers’ patriotism and perseverance brought about a non-battle turning point in the war and a resurgence of the army’s ...
BATTLE OF IRONCLADS
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Civil War and Reconstruction
Civil War and Reconstruction

... The Anaconda Plan was proposed in 1861 by Union General Winfield Scott to win the American Civil War with minimal loss of life, enveloping the Confederacy by blockade at sea and control of the Mississippi River. 1. Blockade the coast of the South to prevent the export of cotton, tobacco, and other c ...
Tech and the Civil War Directions
Tech and the Civil War Directions

... He spent the 1850s doing what all balloonists did in the 1850s…tring to come up with ways to fly across the Atlantic. But when war came in 1861, he offered himself and his balloons to his government. His job was to fly hundreds of feet in the air and look down. He soared over battlefields until he c ...
States` Rights_Nullification
States` Rights_Nullification

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VUS 7 a & b Civil War
VUS 7 a & b Civil War

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Eighth Grade Unit #5 – “The Civil War”
Eighth Grade Unit #5 – “The Civil War”

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The Civil War
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Casualties - Schoolwires.net
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Kansas-Nebraska Act
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... defensive strategy of “winning by not losing.” Throughout the War this involved a number of distinct military strategies, which for purposes of analysis may be considered as: STRATEGY 1 – Davis 1 or “Cordon Defence” Strategy: This strategy was used for much of the first year of the War and involved ...
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... Events that Led to Secession and War: A number of events occurred that also contributed to the rising tensions and differences between the North and South. Eventually, a civil war would begin between the two regions of the country. • Nat Turner led a revolt against plantation owners in Virginia. • A ...
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userfiles/424/my files/the civil war powerpoint?id=5151

... Many women took an interest in the war effort. Women on both sides worked as nurses. Dorothea Dix helped reform prisons and mental hospitals. Clara Barton earned fame as a Civil War nurse and founder of the American Red Cross. ...
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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.
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