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Fighting the Civil War

Fighting the Civil War. Advantages and Weaknesses of the North. Advantages - Abundant resources: factories, railroads, population Weaknesses – Invading unfamiliar land and conquering a huge area . Advantages and Weaknesses of the South. Advantages: Defending their homeland

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Fighting the Civil War

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  1. Fighting the Civil War

  2. Advantages and Weaknesses of the North • Advantages - Abundant resources: • factories, railroads, population • Weaknesses – Invading unfamiliar land and conquering a huge area

  3. Advantages and Weaknesses of the South • Advantages: • Defending their homeland • Skills useful for fighting – horse skills, gun skills • Weaknesses: • Lack of resources

  4. Lincoln on War • “In your hands, my dissatisfied fellow country-men, not in mine, is the momentous issue of civil war….We are not enemies, but friends. We must not be enemies. Though passion may have strained, it must not break our bonds of affection.” • Abraham Lincoln’s Inaugural Address, March 1861

  5. Fort Sumter • Civil War Begins • April 12-14, 1861 • Commanders: • PGT Beauregard –Confed • Robert Anderson – Union • Confederates open fire on Union garrison of Fort Sumter • No casualties – opening of the war

  6. First Bull Run • July 1861 • Union troops set off to capture Richmond • Hundreds of spectators in jubilant mood rode along with the troops to watch battle. • Early in fight – Union breaks up Confederate lines – “The war is over!” • TJ Jackson stood ground on top of a nearby hill – rallied the Confederates • “Look, there is Jackson standing like a stone wall.” • Union troops panicked and ran back to D.C. • War would be long and bloody

  7. Stonewall Jackson • Best General in Confederate army • Deeply religious and fearless • Inspired loyalty and pride amongst troops who would follow him into any battle • Hero of Antietam and Chancellorsville • After battle of Chancellorsville, shot by his own sentry upon returning from scouting expedition • Died of wound

  8. Gettysburg • July 1863 • Commanders • Maj. General George Meade – Union • General Robert E Lee – Confederate • 51,000 casualties over 3 days • Day 1 – Lee drove Union out of town to Cemetery Ridge • Day 2 – Lee attacked again, but Union fought back with reinforcements and retained position • Day 3 – General Pickett (Conf.) led 15,000 men in “Pickett’s Charge” through open ground to center of Union line – Failure: almost all of Pickett’s men were killed • “The dead and wounded lay too thick to guide a horse through them.” • Lee retreated – Union Victory

  9. Total War • Grant given command of Union army • Wage Total War – Destroy food, equipment, anything useful to enemy • Civilians would be forced to suffer same hardships as army

  10. William Tecumseh Sherman • Ordered to capture Atlanta and then march to the Atlantic coast • Destroy everything useful to the South along the way • Ripped up railroad tracks (Sherman’s Bowtie) • Destroyed crops, killed livestock, burned barns homes, bridges, factories

  11. Appomattox Court House • April, 1865 • Commanders: • Ulysses S. Grant • Robert E. Lee • Lee attempt to escape Union forces who had captured Richmond • Lee surrounded and forced to surrender • Grant silenced his cheering troops as Confederates surrendered: “The war is over. The rebels are our countrymen again.”

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