The Civil War: Union Dissolves

Contributed by:
Steve
This booklet provides a brief overview of the Civil War and its various aspects, describing its battles, victories, leadership, strategies, ranks, politics, emancipation.
1. THE CIVIL WAR
The Union Dissolves
Chapter 11
Section 1
2. Crittenden Compromise
 As a last ditch
compromise,
compromise Sen.
Crittenden proposed
drawing the Missouri
Compromise line to
the Pacific.
 Lincoln rejected this
since it would expand
slavery
3. Confederate States
 The South was
excited about
forming their
new country
 They held
rallies and
shot off
fireworks.
4. Southern Secession
 Lincoln believed that it
was illegal to secede from
the Union
 If a state had to apply for
admittance, he thought
states should also have to
ask for permission to
leave.
5. Fort Sumter
 Located at the
mouth of the
Charleston
harbor, the
South wanted
this fort
 Lincoln would
not allow the
South to take
federal property
6. Fort Sumter
 When the fort ran
low of supplies,
supplies
Lincoln alerted
the SC governor
that unarmed
supply ships would
be entering the
port
 Confederate
soldiers fired upon
the fort for 34
7. Fort Sumter
 Union Major
Anderson
surrendered on
April 14, 1861
 Lincoln asked
the Union states
to provide troops
 They were asked
to enlist for just
3 months
8. Fort Sumter Flag
 Anderson
brought the flag
to New York City
for an April 20,
1861 patriotic
rally, where it
was flown from
the statue of
George
Washington.
9. Choosing Sides
 Southern states that
had not yet seceded
had to decide what
to do
 With Lincoln's help
Virginia split in two
(formed the state of
Kanawha, later
renamed West
Virginia)
Once war broke out, many men had
to decide for which cause to fight
10. Choosing Sides
11. Filling the Ranks
 At the beginning of the war in
1861, the Northern Army more
than twice as large as the
Southern Army
 Men had to pledge that they
were over the age of 18 to fight,
but boys as young as 9 acted as
drummer boys
 The South enacted laws to
prevent large landowners from
leaving their plantations (and
some slaves) to fight.
 This left most of the ranks filled
with poor farmers.
12.
13. Robert E. Lee
 Perhaps the
biggest southern
advantage was
Gen. Robert E. Lee
 Asked by Lincoln
to lead the Union
Army, Lee refused
to “turn his back
on his home,
Virginia”
14. Strategies
South
defensive war,
war
wearing the North
down until they
gave up.
Get European Help
(France & England)
Fight like
15. Strategies
North
Anaconda Plan:
 Block southern
ports to all
imports/exports
 Control the
Mississippi River
splitting the
confederacy in 2
 Capture Richmond,
the confederate
capital
16. a Plan
17. Union Leadership
 Lincoln chose Irwin
McDowell to lead
the Union’s Army of
the Potomac.
 He was replaced 3
days after his defeat
at Bull Run with
Gen. George
McClellan
18. Union Leadership
 General McClellan was
the replacement
 His was nicknamed “the
Creeper” because he
was so hesitant to
attack, fearing he was
out-numbered and
seeing the death and
destruction the war was
causing.
19. Union Leadership
 After 5 months of fighting,
McClellan withdrew even though
he out-numbered and out-
powered the confederate army
 One of his men found Lee’s
plans wrapped around some
cigars.
 He had the plans for the next
battle at Antietam Creek
20. 1st Battle of Bull
Run/Manassas
 Most Civil War battles are called
by 2 different names
 The North named the battle after
the nearest river
 The South named the battle after
the nearest town
 The first battle of the war was
near the town of Manassas and
Bull Run River
21. 1st Battle of Bull
Run/Manassas
 The North (in blue) and South
(in grey) met on a clearing in
northern Virginia
 Confederate General
Thomas “Stonewall”
Jackson routed the
Yankee army, causing
them to run in fear
 They trampled picnickers who
had gathered to watch the battle.
22. 1st Battle of Bull
Run/Manassas
 Northern troops, according to
legend, commented that Gen.
Jackson sat upon his horse like a
‘stone wall”
 The nickname stuck
 The southern victory assured
the South that this would be a
quick war fought against inferior
troops
 They were wrong on both accounts
23. Antietam Creek
 Even with the plans,
McClellan’s hesitancy costs
him the battle
 He could never break through
Confederate lines even though
he knew where they were
 It was the bloodiest single day
of the Civil War with about
22,000 dead and wounded.
24. Victory in the West
 While the North was losing
badly in the east, Gen.
Ulysses S. Grant was winning
decisive victories along the
Mississippi River.
 After the battle at Ft. Henry he
earned the nickname of
Unconditional Surrender because
he refused to speak of terms of
surrender with the South
25. Shiloh/Pittsburg Landing
 The South surprised Union troops
at Shiloh on April 6, 1862
 Their rebel yell was eerie
 As they ran in retreat, they met
Union reinforcements
 Under Gen. Grant, they regrouped
 It ended in a draw with almost
25,000 casualties in the 2 day
battle.
26. Admiral Farragut
 As part of the
Anaconda Plan,
Gen. Farragut took
the navy up the
mouth of the
Mississippi River
 He took New
Orleans and Baton
Rouge,
Rouge the first
part of cutting the
Confederacy in
half.
27. Filling the Ranks
 The North allowed
Blacks to enlist but did
not allow them to fight
 By 1863, after the
Emancipation
Proclamation,
Proclamation pressure
was on to allow Black
units to train and
fight.
 They were killed in
greater numbers and
paid less for their
efforts
28. Filling the Ranks
 Wealthy people, in both
North and South, could pay a
substitute to take their place
in the Army.
 Conscription,
Conscription forced service,
was first used in the South.
 The North began conscription
in 1862
29. Filling the Ranks
 Slaves could not help the
southern army fight but
were used for manual labor.
 The Civil War was called, “a
rich man’s war but a poor
man’s fight.”
 Conscription was so resisted
in the North, riots broke out
 It became especially violent
after the
Emancipation Proclamation.
Proclamation
30. Filling the Ranks
 Desertion was a
common problem on
both sides, with over
300,000 soldiers
leaving their units
 Because states offered
a signing bonus, many
men enlisted,
deserted, enlisted
someplace else,
deserted,…
31. Filling the Ranks
 By the end of the war,
the South was so short of
men they openly enlisted
young boys.
boys
 Women could not openly
enlist but some disguised
themselves as men and
fought the entire war.
 Others became spies,
nurses, and cooks
32. Filling the Ranks
 Elizabeth Blackwell,
Blackwell
America’s first
female physician,
helped run the US
Sanitary Commission
 Clara Barton tended
to the wounded and
founded the
American Red Cross.
Cross
33. Filling the Ranks
 Although hundreds of
men and women
tended to the sick and
injured, more soldiers
died from illness and
infection than of
battle wounds.
 More often, women
took over men’s
civilian jobs while
they were gone to
war.
war
34. The Civil War
Politics of War
Chapter 11
Section 2
35. Britain’s Neutrality
 The South was depending on
Britain and/or France to come
to their aid & renew the
cotton trade
 Britain found other sources
for cotton and stockpiled
surpluses before the war
began
 Food crops, wheat and corn
from the North, had replaced
cotton as America’s most
important exports
36. Trent Affair
 Shortly after the
war began, the
Confederates
(Rebels) sent 2
diplomats to
Britain to ask for
their support
 James Mason &
John Slidell
traveled on the
British ship, HMS
37. Trent Affair
 Mason and
Slidell were
arrested
 Britain took
this as an act
of war and
moved troops
to Canada for
a possible war
with the
Union (Executive Power)
38. Emancipation
 Lincoln’s original
strategy did not
involve freeing
slaves
 He used this to
change the
purpose of the
war from
preserving the
39. Emancipation
 Lincoln wrote the
Emancipation Proclamation,
freeing all slaves in the
seceded states (not occupied
or border states)
 It also prevented all
European
countries who
had abolished slavery
from aiding the South.
40. Emancipation
 Lincoln did not
want to issue the
proclamation
publicly until the
North had a
successful battle
 He used the
Battle at
Antietam (the
bloodiest battle
of the war) as
41. Emancipation Reaction
 Not everyone was
happy with the
decision to free the
slaves.
 Northern Democrats
thought it would
make the war longer
 Some soldiers
deserted, refusing to
fight for this cause
 The South renewed
their effort to save
their way of life
 The Emancipation
42. Lincoln Takes Charge
 Lincoln sent Union
troops and
occupied the
border states from
the beginning of
the war
 He also suspended
habeas corpus,
legal authority to
detain a person
 Confederate
sympathizers in
the North were
43. Lincoln Takes Charge
 Supreme Court
Chief Justice Roger
B. Taney said that
Lincoln had
overstepped his
authority, but he
continued to use his
presidential powers
to the fullest extent
 Setting a precedent,
all wartime
presidents have
taken Lincoln’s
44. Copperheads
 Anti-war
Democrat
s were
called
copperhe
ads – a
deadly,
venomou
s snake
45. As 1862 Ends…
 The ironclads
appear
 Both sides made
ships
made of iron,
capable of
repelling cannon
balls and fire
 The Monitor ( N), a
new ship, fought
the Merrimack (S),
fought for 5 hours –
46. The Civil War
Chapter 11
Section 3
Life During Wartime
47. Black Troops
 African American soldiers never
fought for the South, but their
slave labor was used by southern
soldiers
 The North also
used African
American labor
 That changed after
the Emancipation
Proclamation.
48. Black Troops
 The Emancipation Proclamation
freed the slaves in the non-
occupied states, which mean it
freed none
 But it also meant that Blacks
joined the northern army and
fought against the South
 The South refused to
return any Black
prisoner - contraband
49. Black Troops
 Fought in segregated units led by white
officers
 Paid less than white soldiers
 Died in greater numbers not because
assigned to a dangerous job but by working in
close proximity to one another, they caught
diseases
 More likely to be killed when captured rather
than taken as
prisoner/contraband
50. Fort Pillow
 Over 200 African American and
some white soldiers were killed
after they surrendered
to Southern troops
 Nathan Bedford Forrest
led the slaughter
 After the war he and
others form the
Ku Klux Klan
51. Slave Resistance
 As northern troops neared
plantations, the slaves gained
strength and
 Broke tools
 Joined the
troops
 Neglected the
livestock
52. War Affects the Economy
 The South began to run out of
men, food and supplies not soon
after the war began
 They printed so much currency
that it had little value
 The Northern blockade
effectively stopped Southern
trade with Europe
53. Northern Economy
 The North suffered but not nearly
as bad as the South
 Inflation was worse in the North
– 80% by the end of the war
 Industries that supplied the
military boomed
 Machinery took the place of
workers drafted into the GAR
54. Women in the Workplace
 Women took on many of the jobs
and duties of the men who left to
fight
 They were paid less, one of many
ways business owners made
tremendous profits during the
war
 Northerners paid the first
income tax to pay for the war
55. Soldiers Suffer
 Soldiers’ rations included
hardtack, beans, bacon fat and, if
lucky, a few bones from which to
suck the marrow
 They had ticks, lice, dysentery,
and diarrhea on a regular basis
due to poor hygiene
56. Medical Care
 A doctor’s kit looked more like it would be more
useful in a episode of Home Make Over
 Body wounds were ignored and the person was
left to die
 “Good” surgeons could remove a limb in 1 minute
 They usually used ether to sedate the patient
57. Medical Care
 Once soldier’s received care, the
worst was to come
 Not knowing about germs and
bacteria, doctors and nurses
regularly examined wounds without
washing between patients
 Gangrene and other infections passed
from man to man
 Surgery was usually done outdoors
58. Medical Care
 For every soldier that
died on the battlefield,
2 died in the wartime
hospitals
 Women served the military as
nurses
 Clara Barton, founder of the Red
Cross, and Sally Tompkins
helped improve medical care
59. Prisoners
 Until the Union began using
black soldiers, both sides
regularly exchanged soldiers
rather than keep them in camps
 When the Confederacy refused to
swap black soldiers, the North
stopped the exchange program
 Neither side was equipped to
keep thousands of prisoners
60. Prison Camps
 Both sides treated their captives
terribly
 Ft. Delaware and Elmira prisons
in the North and Libby and
Andersonville prisons in the
South saw mortality rates over
25%
 Poor nutrition and poor hygiene
led to scurvy, dysentery and
other fatal diseases
61. Andersonville Prison, GA
 Henry Wirz was placed in charge of the
camp at Andersonville
 Built to handle 10,000, it eventually had
over 33,000 prisoners
 Their only water was a stream which ran
through where the horses grazed, filled
with manure
 There were no buildings to house
prisoners, only tents and lean-tos
 Guards, some as young as 12, surrounded
the camp on watchtowers
 Anyone who got near the fence, the dead
zone, was shot immediately
62. Andersonville Prison, GA
 Although he camp was operational for less
than a year, over 12,000 died
 Survivors were transferred from the camp
to other camps in the South
 The Commandant, Henry Wirz, was tried
for war crimes in 1865
 The North really wanted him to provide
information about Gen. Lee and Pres.
Davis but he did not
 Wirz was hung in Washington DC and after
his death was treated as a martyr (victim)
63. The Civil War
Chapter 11
Section 4
The North Takes Charge
64. 1863
 In 1863, the war shifted in favor
of the North
 Gen. Grant leads Army of the
Potomac
 Important victories in the East
 Total war
 South will not receive help from
Europe
 War of attrition
65. Chancellorsville
 As Lee’s troops moved
to northern Virginia,
Stonewall Jackson
stopped for 9 days to
Statue of Jackson visit his wife and
at Bull Run infant daughter
 He would be dead in 3
weeks by his own men
Gravesite of Jackson
66. Chancellorsville
 Lee met Gen. Hooker at
Chancellorsville, VA
 The North was
outmaneuvered by Lee
 BTW – The term ‘hooker’ comes
from the large number of women
who followed Hooker from battle
to battle – Hooker’s girls
67. Gettysburg
 Gen. Lee and Gen.
A.P. Hill headed north
for 2 reasons
 They wanted to divert the
fighting from the Shenandoah
Valley and Hill’s troops needed
shoes
 They met Union troops, under
Gen. Meade, at Gettysburg, PA
68. Gettysburg
 The 3 day battle was
costly for both sides.
 Pickett’s Charge up Little Round
Top was little better than a
suicide mission
 After 3 days
 23,000 Union casualties
 28,000 Confederate casualties
69. Gettysburg
 Lee retreated, never to enter the
North again
 The Union victory at Gettysburg
was the turning point of the war
 They will continue to win
important victories until the
South surrenders
70. Gettysburg, July 1-3,
1863
 Dead men and horses began to
rot in the summer heat, drawing
flies, rodents and vultures
 The smell carried
to the town of
Gettysburg
 The towns’ women
took on the task of
burying the dead
71. Gettysburg, July 1-3,
1863
 Southern soldiers were
separated and buried in shallow
graves away from town
 Union soldiers were divided by
state and buried
in a series of
semi-circles
72. Gettysburg Address, Nov
1863
 Lincoln came to dedicate the
cemetery
 He was the 2nd speaker that day,
speaking for only about
2 minutes
 He used the speech to re-focus
attention to the Declaration of
Independence – “all men are
created equal”
73. Siege of Vicksburg 1863
 The summer of 1863 saw another
important Union victory in the
west, Vicksburg MS
74. Siege of Vicksburg 1863
 Vicksburg is an overlook on the
Mississippi River
 It was one of the last areas that
prevented the Union from
controlling the entire river and
successfully dividing the South
 Grant laid siege to the town,
firing into it for hours each day
75. Siege of Vicksburg 1863
 The mostly women, elderly and
children in the town sought
refuge in the caves along the
river
 Their food supply gone, they ate
dogs, horses, mules and rats
before surrendering the day after
the victory at Gettysburg, July 4
76. Conditions in the South,
1863
 The South was quickly running
out of men, arms, food, uniforms
and other necessary supplies
 They hoped that a long war
would cause the North to stop
fighting
 The Gettysburg Address made it
very clear that the North was not
giving up
77. Conditions in the South,
1863
 Southerners were asked to grow
food crops rather than cash
crops (cotton and tobacco)
 Rebels deserted in greater
numbers
 Jefferson Davis and the
Confederate Constitution left
little room to lead effectively
78. Ulysses S. Grant
 Lincoln, having gone 5 generals
in 2 years, appointed Grant
 He fought a war of attrition –
killing Southern
soldiers that
could not be
replaced
 It meant that he
also suffered from heavy losses
79. Gen. Sherman
 Grant appointed William
Tecumseh Sherman to lead the
Union Army in the deep South
 He believed in total war –
attacking civilians
since they supplied
goods for the
southern war effort
80. Grant v. Lee
 Grant’s war of attrition was
devastating to the southern
army
 Grant knew that he could
replace each of his dead
soldiers, the South could not
81. Sherman’s March to the
Sea
 Gen. Sherman took his troops from
Tennessee, through Atlanta, to Savannah
 His men burned a path up to 60 miles
wide, burned crops, poisoned wells,
killed livestock and turned railroad
ties into “Sherman’s neckties”
 Sherman sent news to
Lincoln in December, 1864
that his Christmas gift to the
president was the city of
Savannah
 Then he turned north to help
Grant defeat Lee
82. Election 1864
 Democrats – Gen. McClellan
 Republicans – Pres. Lincoln
 Democrats were tired of war,
the costs, and death
 Republicans looked for a
candidate who would appeal to
Democrats, Andrew Johnson
83. Election 1864
 Johnson was a Southerner who
never owned slaves
 He was raised extremely poor,
resenting the planter class
 He looked down upon the slave
class
84. Election 1864
 Lincoln needed a few victories
before the election or he felt he
would loose.
 Sherman’s sacking of Atlanta
and Farragut’s control of the
Mississippi River accomplished
that
 Absentee ballots from the Union
army put Lincoln over the top
85.  The war took its
toll on Lincoln
86. Appomattox Court House
 In April 1865, Lee knew he had
no choice but to surrender
 His men begged him not to do
this, but he replied that it would
only kill them all if he continued
to fight
 Jefferson Davis set fire to
Richmond to prevent Grant from
occupying it
87. Appomattox Court House
 Lee said, “There is nothing
left me to do but to go and
see General Grant, and I
would rather die a thousand
deaths.” April 9, 1865
 Grant was generous with his
terms of surrender, allowing
the rebels to take their
animals and personal items
with them
88. Appomattox Court House
 TheUnion band played
“Dixie” as the men marched
Wilmer
away McLean’s
home in
Appomattox
Courthouse
The
surrender
agreement
was signed
in his parlor
89. The Civil War
Chapter 11
Section 5
The Legacy of War
90. The War Ends
 With the end of the war changes
will affect
 The economy
 Social structure
 Labor market
 Politics
 Technology
91. Political Changes
 The federal government
assumed control over the
seceded states and no state has
seceded again
 The war increased the power of
the federal government and the
president
92. Economic Changes
 The federal gov’t took additional responsibility for
subsidizing (paying for) railroads
 National Bank Act, 1863, which chartered banks,
set requirements for loans & required banks to be
inspected
 Conscription caused a labor shortage in the North,
filled by women and automation
 Northern industries had to re-focus to compete in
a peacetime economy
 The South lost its labor force and trading partners
 Since most of the fighting took place in the South,
land was destroyed, livestock wiped-out, cities
burned and their railroads destroyed
93. Societal Changes
 Slavery is over
 Congress passed the 13th Amendment
outlawing slavery
 Matthew Brady chronicled the war with
hundreds of photos, beginning
photojournalism. The Civil War is the first
photographed war.
 Jefferson Davis was arrested, tried and
found not guilty
 He lived to be an old man
 General Lee lost his family home when it
was turned into Arlington National
Cemetery
94. Societal Changes
 Lee went on to become the
president of Washington
University, now Washington
and Lee University
 Clara Barton took her war
experience and founded the
Red Cross
 Grant (Northern Hero) was
elected president in 1868.
95. Lincoln Assassinated
 Lincoln and his wife,
Mary Todd, went to
Ford’s Theater to see
“My American Cousin”
 John Wilkes Booth
shot him in the
back of the head
 He died within
hours
96. John
Wilkes
Booth
Booth and
conspirators
were
captured, tried
and hung