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Life during the War

Life during the War. 19.4 Notes. Freeing the Slaves. Ending Slaves Lincoln supported ending slavery if it would assure a Northern victory. Some northerners wanted to end slavery to punish the South or to prevent another civil war in the future . Freeing the Slaves.

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Life during the War

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  1. Life during the War 19.4 Notes

  2. Freeing the Slaves • Ending Slaves • Lincoln supported ending slavery if it would assure a Northern victory. • Some northerners wanted to end slavery to punish the South or to prevent another civil war in the future.

  3. Freeing the Slaves • Problems with Emancipation • Northerners prejudiced against African Americans might turn against the war if emancipation became a goal. • The president did not have constitutional authority to end slavery in the nation.

  4. Freeing the Slaves • Lincoln’s Decision • Issued a military order freeing slaves only in areas under Confederate control. • Did not apply to loyal, slaveholding border states because Lincoln did not think he had the authority to end slavery there and did not want to anger those states • The Emancipation Proclamation went into effect on January 1, 1863.

  5. Freeing the Slaves • Reactions • Many southern slaves ran away, which hurt the Confederate war effort. • Many northern Democrats opposed the Emancipation Proclamation, because they only wanted to restore the Union, not to end slavery.

  6. African Americans and the War • In the Army • Congress approved the use of African Americans as army laborers in 1862. • Let contrabands, or escaped slaves, join the army in South Carolina • Free African Americans in Louisiana and Kansas also formed army units. • By spring 1863, African American units were fighting in the field.

  7. African Americans and the War • The 54th Massachusetts Infantry, made up mostly of free African Americans, played a major role in the attack on South Carolina’s Fort Wagner in July 1863. • Wartime Service • Some 180,000 African Americans served in the Union army during the war. • Received lower pay than white soldiers and usually led by white officers

  8. Problems in the North • Northern Democrats who opposed the war were called Copperheads. • Lincoln saw the Copperheads as a threat to the war effort and suspended the right of habeus corpus, the constitutional protection against unlawful imprisonment. • In March 1863 Congress passed a law allowing men to be drafted into military service, which angered many northerners; led to violent draft riots in July 1863.

  9. Southern Struggles • Supplies • Northern blockade prevented supplies and food from reaching southerners. • Severe shortages led to food riots in some cities in the spring of 1863.

  10. Southern Struggles • The Draft • A draft law, passed in 1862, did not apply to men who held many slaves. • Angered poor southerners and caused divisions in the Confederacy

  11. Life on the Home Front • Civilians on both sides aided the war effort by working in factories and on farms. • Medical Help • Women such as Clara Barton, whose work work formed the basis for what would become the American Red Cross, provided needed medical attention to soldiers. • About twice as many Civil War soldiers died of disease than died in combat. • Dorothea Dix headed more than 3,000 women who served as paid nurses in the Union army.

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