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Quiz 3
Quiz 3

... A. ___________________________________________________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________________________________________________ B. ___________________________________________________________________________________________ __________________ ...
Document
Document

... 1. Why did Lincoln originally fight the Civil War? 2. Describe the Border States and name them. 3. How did Lincoln keep the Border States under control? Explain. 4. ID Copperheads 5. List the southern advantages. 6. Who did the south rely on for trade? 7. Why could the north’s victory be called a wa ...
The Union Dissolves
The Union Dissolves

... Lincoln announced plans to resupply Fort Sumter in Charleston Harbor. ...
Chapter 2, lesson 3
Chapter 2, lesson 3

... farmhouse in Appomattox Court House, Virginia on April 9, 1865 to discuss the terms of surrender. The war was over, but the President expressed sympathy for the south. He asked the band to play “Dixie” as he told the crowd “I have always thought “Dixie” one of the best tunes I ever heard.” He would ...
17. Civil War-Life in South
17. Civil War-Life in South

... percentage of their produce). But taxation never provided the Confederacy with very much revenue; it produced only about 1 percent of the government’s total income. Borrowing was not much more successful. The Confederate government issued bonds in such vast amounts that the public lost faith in them ...
Civil War PP
Civil War PP

... relating to the causes, course, and consequences of the Civil War. • b. Describe President Lincoln’s efforts to preserve the Union as seen in his second inaugural address and the Gettysburg speech and in his use of emergency powers, such as his decision to suspend habeas corpus. • c. Describe the ro ...
Untitled - Grand Hotel Marriott Resort
Untitled - Grand Hotel Marriott Resort

... Hotel has hosted guests from American Presidents to leaders from around the world to generations of families from across the country. Guests originally traveled to the Grand Hotel by steamboats and docked at what is now the Marina. During times of war, the Grand Hotel was very important to the milit ...
The Civil War - Geneva Area City Schools
The Civil War - Geneva Area City Schools

... wrote Constitution similar to US Constitution, except it protected slavery  Fatal weakness in Confederate government was tension between Southern idea of state’s rights vs. the need for a strong central government ...
Unit 6
Unit 6

... •  Corruption of the Grant Administration •  Election of 1876 –  Rutherford B. Hayes (R) vs. Samuel J. Tilden (D) –  Compromise of 1877 ...
(CH 10-12) (1848
(CH 10-12) (1848

... _____________________ was the 1st battle of the Civil War and occurred in South Carolina. _____________________ was the bloodiest single day of battle in the war and Lincoln signed the Emancipation Proclamation afterwards. _______________________ was the last Confederate stronghold on the Mississipp ...
CW lecture-1 - WordPress.com
CW lecture-1 - WordPress.com

...  War comes when Southern states (now calling themselves “The Confederacy”) open fire on a small garrison of Federal troops stationed at Fort Sumter in Charleston harbor on April 12th, 1861. The bombardment will last 33 hours before the fort surrenders.  In response, Lincoln calls for 75,000 volunt ...
Civil War-Life in South - Scarsdale Public Schools
Civil War-Life in South - Scarsdale Public Schools

... percentage of their produce). But taxation never provided the Confederacy with very much revenue; it produced only about 1 percent of the government’s total income. Borrowing was not much more successful. The Confederate government issued bonds in such vast amounts that the public lost faith in them ...
Name
Name

... cannot be imprisoned without being brought before a judge) and jailed the strongest supporters of the Confederacy. 75. Another point of contention in the North was Lincoln’s decision to establish a draft. 76. Lincoln’s draft was particularly unpopular among the poor and immigrants. They resented the ...
Check your Review Answers
Check your Review Answers

... Battle of Bull Run – 1st major battle of the Civil War, fought in Virginia in 1861 Virginia – ironclad warship used by the Confederates to break the Union blockade Monitor – ironclad Union warship Battle of Antietam – 1862, battle in Maryland; day-long battle, more than 23,000 soldiers killed or wou ...
Chap14-CivilWar - AP US Government & Politics
Chap14-CivilWar - AP US Government & Politics

... When the Civil War began, most expected the fighting to end quickly, but the war lasted until 1865 due to:  The commitment of the Union & Confederacy to “total war”  Excellent Southern generals like Robert E. Lee & ...
Nuts and Bolts of the Civil War Relations with Foreign Nations
Nuts and Bolts of the Civil War Relations with Foreign Nations

... Mexico negotiated a settlement with England and Spain France used the events as a reason for colonization Napoleon III sent troops and took Mexico City Maximillian – Archduke of Austria – was placed in control of Mexico with the support of French troops They maintained control throughout the Civil W ...
The American Civil War
The American Civil War

... Chickamauga Creek in northern Georgia. Confederates, lead by General Braxton Bragg, defeats Union army. Retreat back to Chattanooga and Confederates trap them. Bragg, however, fails to follow up and attack. Another victory would have turned the war in the favor of the South (lost at Gettysburg and V ...
AP U - Uplift Community High School
AP U - Uplift Community High School

... c. Caused some seceded states to rejoin the Union d. Contradicted the campaign promises of the Republican party e. Cost him support in the “Butternut region” of Ohio, Indiana, and Illinois 3. To achieve its independence, the Confederacy had to a. Invade the Union b. Win a decisive military victory o ...
Name Period_______ APUSH Homework, Chap 21 The Furnace of
Name Period_______ APUSH Homework, Chap 21 The Furnace of

... A series of Union military victories just before the election of 1864 guaranteed Lincoln’s victory over McClellan and ended the South’s last hope. 13. __________ Lee’s turn to defensive tactics in the last year of the war forced Grant into an offensive strategy that caused enormous casualties in dir ...
Turning points of the U.S. Civil War
Turning points of the U.S. Civil War

... But, in a larger sense, we can not dedicate, we can not consecrate, we can not hallow this ground. The brave men, living and dead, who struggled here, have consecrated it, far above our poor power to add or detract. The world will little note, nor long remember what we say here, but it can never for ...
Succession and War
Succession and War

... by 1863, the war began to turn in favor of the North: –Northern supremacy in industry & manpower began to take its toll on the exhausted South –The North began enlisting blacks into the Union army; ...
File
File

... • Sherman left Atlanta and headed for the Atlantic port of Savannah, GA. • He continued his campaign of total war, ravaging a 50-mile wide swath of land in his famous “March to the Sea.” ...
slave states. - Social Circle City Schools
slave states. - Social Circle City Schools

... • In April of 1862, Union artillery bombarded the Fort Pulaski and caused the Confederate forces to surrender. • As a result, the Union troops used the fort to block ships from entering Savannah. Savannah fell under the blockade. • The blockade made it difficult for farmers and merchants to sell the ...
CH 11_AM HISTORY III
CH 11_AM HISTORY III

... North had to have Maryland to keep contact with Washington D.C. - Lincoln ordered the arrest of lawmakers who had supported the south - Federal troops helped a group of western counties break away from Virginia (West Virginia) War caused many families in the border states to spilt ...
Civil War Project - River Mill Academy
Civil War Project - River Mill Academy

...  It was the bloodiest battle day in United States history. 23,000 men lost their lives that day.  The Union army stopped the Confederate army. This “victory” by the Union gave President Lincoln the chance to announce the abolition of slavery in the South. ...
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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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