Civil War study sheet Answers
... Union Goal: to bring the Southern states back into the Union Confederate Goal: to be an independent country/preserve their way of life 3. What were the military strategies? North: The Anaconda Plan 1. Blockade southern ports so that they could not get supplies in or their goods out to sell 2. Contro ...
... Union Goal: to bring the Southern states back into the Union Confederate Goal: to be an independent country/preserve their way of life 3. What were the military strategies? North: The Anaconda Plan 1. Blockade southern ports so that they could not get supplies in or their goods out to sell 2. Contro ...
Chapter 8 Sec1Notes
... Texas, Arkansas, and Louisiana _____________________ Union Plan to Capture Confederate Capital __________________, VA Union Generals’ Plan: to destroy Confederate armies and lay_________ to land Confederate: Confederate Land Strategy: to_____ down invading_____________ army Confederate Sea Strategy: ...
... Texas, Arkansas, and Louisiana _____________________ Union Plan to Capture Confederate Capital __________________, VA Union Generals’ Plan: to destroy Confederate armies and lay_________ to land Confederate: Confederate Land Strategy: to_____ down invading_____________ army Confederate Sea Strategy: ...
Civil War
... C.The North (1862) offered a bounty to get people to enlist for 3 years. Offered money as a bonus D.Militia Act – July 1862 – gave Lincoln the power to call state militias into service E. 1863 – Congress passes a national draft VII Naval War A. By 1862 Union has blockaded all southern ports except C ...
... C.The North (1862) offered a bounty to get people to enlist for 3 years. Offered money as a bonus D.Militia Act – July 1862 – gave Lincoln the power to call state militias into service E. 1863 – Congress passes a national draft VII Naval War A. By 1862 Union has blockaded all southern ports except C ...
chapter-8-sec1noteskey
... Union Blockade: Union ships blocked Confederate_ports__ to stop exporting of cotton and importing of_war equipment________(most hurtful to South’s economy) (Ironclads outrun by Confederate blockade runners.) Union Anaconda Plan: To capture_Mississippi River & split Confederacy in half, leaving Texas ...
... Union Blockade: Union ships blocked Confederate_ports__ to stop exporting of cotton and importing of_war equipment________(most hurtful to South’s economy) (Ironclads outrun by Confederate blockade runners.) Union Anaconda Plan: To capture_Mississippi River & split Confederacy in half, leaving Texas ...
Civil War: Advantages and Disadvantages for North
... true story of the South’s railroad inferiority. There were big gaps between key points in the South, which required supplies to make detours over long distances or be carried between rail lines by wagon. Tracks were of different measurements. There were few trunk lines. Most lines ran West to East t ...
... true story of the South’s railroad inferiority. There were big gaps between key points in the South, which required supplies to make detours over long distances or be carried between rail lines by wagon. Tracks were of different measurements. There were few trunk lines. Most lines ran West to East t ...
GUIDE QUESTIONS: Explain how Lincoln`s military/political
... Britain shipyards were unknowingly producing Confederate commerce-raiders. The British ships left their ports unarmed, picked up arms elsewhere, and captured Union ships. One notable ship was the Alabama. Foreign Flare-Ups ...
... Britain shipyards were unknowingly producing Confederate commerce-raiders. The British ships left their ports unarmed, picked up arms elsewhere, and captured Union ships. One notable ship was the Alabama. Foreign Flare-Ups ...
1) The nickname given to Confederate soldiers was .
... 1) The nickname given to Confederate soldiers was ________________________________. 2) An ___________________________ is when the army leads an attack or begins the war. 3) The ________________________________ was the Union plan to “strangle” the South. 4) The new design of ships that were plated wi ...
... 1) The nickname given to Confederate soldiers was ________________________________. 2) An ___________________________ is when the army leads an attack or begins the war. 3) The ________________________________ was the Union plan to “strangle” the South. 4) The new design of ships that were plated wi ...
FIGHTING THE CIVIL WAR - Kentucky Department of Education
... cities. Criticism over Lincoln’s suspension of writs of ...
... cities. Criticism over Lincoln’s suspension of writs of ...
Chapter 8 Section1 and two vocab answer key
... 4. Blockade runner – private ships that were supported by the Confederates that were able to slip through the blockade in and out of ports. 5. King Cotton diplomacy – The belief that if the South did not sell cotton to France and Great Britain that those countries would be forced to help the South b ...
... 4. Blockade runner – private ships that were supported by the Confederates that were able to slip through the blockade in and out of ports. 5. King Cotton diplomacy – The belief that if the South did not sell cotton to France and Great Britain that those countries would be forced to help the South b ...
Chapter 20 Study Guide
... Both sides relied mainly on them at first, but later turned to draftees. Still, most that fought did so willingly. Overall, More than 90% of Union troops were volunteers. 11. Draftees ...
... Both sides relied mainly on them at first, but later turned to draftees. Still, most that fought did so willingly. Overall, More than 90% of Union troops were volunteers. 11. Draftees ...
North and South
... diplomats going to Europe. Lincoln released them reluctantly, but wisely. Britain built Confederate commerce-raiders i.e. the Alabama left Britain unarmed and picked up weapons in the Azores. Alabama flew the Confederate flag and had Confederate officers, but was manned by Britons. This “British pir ...
... diplomats going to Europe. Lincoln released them reluctantly, but wisely. Britain built Confederate commerce-raiders i.e. the Alabama left Britain unarmed and picked up weapons in the Azores. Alabama flew the Confederate flag and had Confederate officers, but was manned by Britons. This “British pir ...
War Erupts
... • Confederates defending homes, have more ___________ than invaders The Confederate Strategy • Confederacy takes ________ position, does not want to conquer North • Uses _______________ to win foreign support, withholds cotton exports • Hopes to force Britain, ___________ to aid the Confederates • E ...
... • Confederates defending homes, have more ___________ than invaders The Confederate Strategy • Confederacy takes ________ position, does not want to conquer North • Uses _______________ to win foreign support, withholds cotton exports • Hopes to force Britain, ___________ to aid the Confederates • E ...
KT`s (ch.14) - MichelleDAPnotebook
... once North issued naval blockade of the south = experienced massive shortages b/c it was mainly agricultural. so concentrated to export crops didn't grow enough for their own. The Union Blockade: blockade of the south was never fully effective. but had major impact on the Confederacy. U.S. ...
... once North issued naval blockade of the south = experienced massive shortages b/c it was mainly agricultural. so concentrated to export crops didn't grow enough for their own. The Union Blockade: blockade of the south was never fully effective. but had major impact on the Confederacy. U.S. ...
Anaconda Plan - glanguagearts
... thought to be an impossible task against 3000 miles of highly irregular coastline, was an unparalleled success within the first 6 months, and nearly impregnable within the first 2 years. The blockade accounted for the vast increase in the price of cotton abroad and the extreme scarcity of manufactur ...
... thought to be an impossible task against 3000 miles of highly irregular coastline, was an unparalleled success within the first 6 months, and nearly impregnable within the first 2 years. The blockade accounted for the vast increase in the price of cotton abroad and the extreme scarcity of manufactur ...
Civil War 1861- 1865
... 5. Houston was removed from office when he refused to take an oath of allegiance to the Confederacy. 6. Confederate Constitution – States were given more power and the Federal Government was given less. 7. Jefferson Davis – President of the Confederacy 8. Robert E. Lee –Commander of the Confederate ...
... 5. Houston was removed from office when he refused to take an oath of allegiance to the Confederacy. 6. Confederate Constitution – States were given more power and the Federal Government was given less. 7. Jefferson Davis – President of the Confederacy 8. Robert E. Lee –Commander of the Confederate ...
ASKED ROBERT E. LEE TO COMMAND THE UNION TROOPS
... HAD LARGE NUMBER OF TRAINED ARMY OFFICERS • U.S. NAVY: STRONG, ¾ LOCATED IN THE NORTH, POOL OF TRAINED SAILORS, NAVY UNDER UNION CONTROL ...
... HAD LARGE NUMBER OF TRAINED ARMY OFFICERS • U.S. NAVY: STRONG, ¾ LOCATED IN THE NORTH, POOL OF TRAINED SAILORS, NAVY UNDER UNION CONTROL ...
75th_Day_Dec_16_2014_APUSH - Baltimore Polytechnic Institute
... despite heroic efforts, was economically and socially crushed. Lincoln’s skillful political leadership helped keep the crucial Border States in the Union and maintain northern morale, while his effective diplomacy kept Britain and France from aiding the Confederacy. ...
... despite heroic efforts, was economically and socially crushed. Lincoln’s skillful political leadership helped keep the crucial Border States in the Union and maintain northern morale, while his effective diplomacy kept Britain and France from aiding the Confederacy. ...
Union blockade
The Union blockade in the American Civil War was a naval strategy by the United States to prevent the Confederacy from trading.The blockade was proclaimed by President Abraham Lincoln in April 1861, and required the monitoring of 3,500 miles of Atlantic and Gulf coastline, including 12 major ports, notably New Orleans and Mobile. Many attempts to run the blockade were successful, but those ships fast enough to evade the Union Navy could only carry a small fraction of the supplies needed. These blockade runners were operated largely by British citizens, making use of neutral ports such as Havana, Nassau and Bermuda. The Union commissioned 500 ships, which destroyed or captured about 1,500 blockade runners over the course of the war.