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Civil War and Its Aftermath
Civil War and Its Aftermath

... until months after it had been made. By that time, they were very hard, so hard that soldiers called them "tooth dullers" and "sheet iron crackers". Sometimes they were infested with small bugs the soldiers called weevils, so they referred to the hardtack as "worm castles" because of the many holes ...
Fort Sumter - Mr. Nussbaum
Fort Sumter - Mr. Nussbaum

... fort. On December 26, 1860, however, Union Major General Richard Anderson moved his troops from Fort Moultrie to Fort Sumter, because he thought Fort Sumter was more easily defended. South Carolina subsequently seized all other Federal forts in South Carolina except for Fort Sumter. About two weeks ...
Fort Sumter - Mr. Nussbaum
Fort Sumter - Mr. Nussbaum

... fort. On December 26, 1860, however, Union Major General Richard Anderson moved his troops from Fort Moultrie to Fort Sumter, because he thought Fort Sumter was more easily defended. South Carolina subsequently seized all other Federal forts in South Carolina except for Fort Sumter. About two weeks ...
Print this PDF
Print this PDF

... Fort Sumter Reading Comprehension The Battle of Fort Sumter marked the first exchange of fire in the Civil War. After seven Southern states ratified their declarations of succession, the state of South Carolina demanded that federal (United States) troops stationed at Fort Moultrie (in Charleston Ha ...
Civil War Presentation
Civil War Presentation

... Prisoner of War Camps • Andersonville Prison near Americus GA was originally built to house 10,000 prisoners • The camp’s population swelled to more than 33,000 Union Prisoners • Conditions were horrible – almost 13,000 Union soldiers died • Captain Wirz, commander of the prison, was hung for war c ...
Pawhuska United States History
Pawhuska United States History

... memory of people killed during this great battle to protect democracy. 23. The siege of Fort Sumter by the Confederate States of America occurred on ______________ (date). ...
Read More - Battle of Westport
Read More - Battle of Westport

... that he could yet rally Missourians to the southern cause and eject the Federal authorities from the state. He launched the Missouri Expedition in August 1864 from southwest Arkansas with 12,000 troops. Price's operation was that of a mounted infantry expedition intended as a force of occupation. Th ...
Battles - Fort Sumter
Battles - Fort Sumter

... seem important by itself, but the timing can make it significant. The shots which began the American Civil War occurred in the Charleston, South Carolina harbor on April 12, 1861. When South Carolina first seceded from the Union, there was a question about the Union forts and weapons arsenal within ...
5th Grade Unit 4 Civil War
5th Grade Unit 4 Civil War

... between Northern and Southern states? • What does it mean to secede? • Why do you think President Lincoln did not want the Southern states to secede? ...
5th Grade Unit 4 Civil War
5th Grade Unit 4 Civil War

... between Northern and Southern states? • What does it mean to secede? • Why do you think President Lincoln did not want the Southern states to secede? ...
Civil War
Civil War

... between Northern and Southern states? • What does it mean to secede? • Why do you think President Lincoln did not want the Southern states to secede? ...
Chapter 20 power point - Tipp City Exempted Village Schools
Chapter 20 power point - Tipp City Exempted Village Schools

... and Lincoln now called on 75,000 volunteers; so many came that they had to be turned away. • On April 19 and 27, Lincoln also called a naval blockade on the South that was leaky at first but soon clamped down tight. • The Deep South (which had already seceded), felt that Lincoln was now waging an ag ...
Preparing for War
Preparing for War

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AIM: THE CIVIL WAR BEGINS Which of the following statements

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Crittenden Compromise/Fort Sumter Although by early 1861 seven

... expansion of slavery (again below the Missouri Compromise line). For President-elect Lincoln and most Republican leaders, some of the proposals were open to negotiation, but not the continued expansion of slavery. If they made such a concession, their victory in the 1860 election (a mandate against ...
Preston Brooks
Preston Brooks

... • was a farmer and slaveholder, a Confederate soldier, and an 1850s political activist. • As the sectional hostilities which led to the Civil War grew in the 1850s, Ruffin left Virginia for South Carolina, as he was angry that Virginia had not been the first state to secede from the Union. Ruffin fi ...
NAME: CHAPTER 14 – THE CIVIL WAR (DISCUSSION POINTS
NAME: CHAPTER 14 – THE CIVIL WAR (DISCUSSION POINTS

... of going on the offensive against Confederate military forces. Federal shipping to Fort Sumter was merely for supply reasons and nothing else. *Like Lincoln, the Confederacy knew that if it did not take a strong stance against Lincoln's shipments it would be perceived as being weak. Gen. PGT Beaureg ...
Girding For War - Haiku Learning
Girding For War - Haiku Learning

... In the pre-war years, cotton production had been immense, and thus, England and France had huge surpluses of cotton. – As the North won Southern territory, it sent cotton and food over to Europe. – India and Egypt upped their cotton production to offset the hike in the price of cotton. So, King Whea ...
Chapter 16
Chapter 16

... River • Admiral David Farragut disguised his ships with mud and trees to race past two forts guarding New Orleans • Captured the city on April 29, 1862 ...
Trails map - Civil War Traveler
Trails map - Civil War Traveler

... captured on February 1, 1864, during the Battle of Smithfield. ...
The real Souljo Boi - MAT
The real Souljo Boi - MAT

... knees--prostrate--I prayed as I never prayed before." The shelling of Fort Sumter from the batteries ringing the harbor awakened Charleston's residents, who rushed out into the predawn darkness to watch the shells arc over the water and burst inside the fort. Mary Chesnut went to the roof of her hot ...
Fort Sumter
Fort Sumter

... The Battle of Fort Sumter marked the first exchange of fire in the Civil War. After seven southern states ratified their declarations of secession, the state of South Carolina demanded that Federal (United States) troops stationed at Fort Moultrie (in Charleston Harbor) abandon the fort. On December ...
Civil War Study Guide
Civil War Study Guide

... • North had many more ships and cut off Southern ports, stopping supplies from Europe • Blockade runners • Ironclads • First successful sub attack - Hunley • March 9, 1862 – Monitor vs. Virginia (Merrimac) • Last Confederate port open – Wilmington, NC – protected by Fort Fisher – captured by North o ...
Ch. 15, Section 4: Secession and War
Ch. 15, Section 4: Secession and War

... Washington worked to find a compromise that would preserve the Union. ...
The Union - werkmeisteramericanhistoryii
The Union - werkmeisteramericanhistoryii

... Fort Sumter On April 15, 1861, Lincoln publicly called for the states to provide 75,000 soldiers each to put down the rebellion.  The recruits were told that they would only be required for three months of service. ...
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Galvanized Yankees

Galvanized Yankees was a term from the American Civil War denoting former Confederate prisoners of war who swore allegiance to the United States and joined the Union Army. Approximately 5,600 former Confederate soldiers enlisted in the ""United States Volunteers"", organized into six regiments of infantry between January 1864 and November 1866. Of those, more than 250 had begun their service as Union soldiers, were captured in battle, then enlisted in prison to join a regiment of the Confederate States Army. They surrendered to Union forces in December 1864 and were held by the United States as deserters, but were saved from prosecution by being enlisted in the 5th and 6th U.S. Volunteers. An additional 800 former Confederates served in volunteer regiments raised by the states, forming ten companies. Four of those companies saw combat in the Western Theater against the Confederate Army, two served on the western frontier, and one became an independent company of U.S. Volunteers, serving in Minnesota.The term ""galvanized"" has also been applied to former Union soldiers enlisting in the Confederate Army, including the use of ""galvanized Yankees"" to designate them. At least 1,600 former Union prisoners of war enlisted in Confederate service in late 1864 and early 1865, most of them recent German or Irish immigrants who had been drafted into Union regiments. The practice of recruiting from prisoners of war began in 1862 at Camp Douglas at Chicago, Illinois, with attempts to enlist Confederate prisoners who expressed reluctance to exchange following their capture at Fort Donelson. Some 228 prisoners of mostly Irish extraction were enlisted by Col. James A. Mulligan before the War Department banned further recruitment March 15. The ban, except for a few enlistments of foreign-born Confederates into largely ethnic regiments, continued until the fall of 1863.Three factors led to a resurrection of the concept: an outbreak of the American Indian Wars by tribes in Minnesota and on the Great Plains, the disinclination of paroled but not exchanged Federal troops to be used to fight them, and protests of the Confederate government that any use of paroled troops in Indian warfare was a violation of the Dix-Hill prisoner of war cartel. Gen. Gilman Marston, commandant of the huge prisoner of war camp at Point Lookout, Maryland, recommended that Confederate prisoners be enlisted in the U.S. Navy, which Secretary of War Edwin Stanton approved December 21. After General Benjamin Butler (whose jurisdiction included Point Lookout) advised Stanton that more prisoners could be recruited for the Army than the Navy, the matter was referred to President Lincoln, who gave verbal authorization on January 2, 1864, and formal authorization on March 5 to raise the 1st United States Volunteer Infantry for three years' service without restrictions as to use.On April 17, 1864, General Ulysses S. Grant ordered suspension of all prisoner exchanges because of disputes over the cartel, ending any hope of long-held Confederate prisoners for early release. On September 1, to bolster his election chances in Pennsylvania, Lincoln approved 1,750 more Confederate recruits, enough to form two more regiments, to be sent to the frontier to fight American Indians. Due to doubts about their ultimate loyalty, galvanized Yankees in federal service were generally assigned to garrison forts far from the Civil War battlefields or in action against Indians in the west. However desertion rates among the units of galvanized Yankees were little different from those of state volunteer units in Federal service. The final two regiments of U.S. Volunteers were recruited in the spring of 1865 to replace the 2nd and 3rd U.S.V.I., which had been enlisted as one-year regiments. Galvanized troops of the U.S. Volunteers on the frontier served as far west as Camp Douglas, Utah; as far south as Fort Union, New Mexico; and as far north as Fort Benton, Montana.
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