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The Civil War Begins! Or, Let’s Get This Party STARTED! Chapter 11.1 and 11.2.

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The Civil War Begins! Or, Let’s Get This Party STARTED! Chapter 11.1 and 11.2
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Page 1: The Civil War Begins! Or, Let’s Get This Party STARTED! Chapter 11.1 and 11.2.

The Civil War Begins!Or, Let’s Get This Party STARTED!

Chapter 11.1 and 11.2

Page 2: The Civil War Begins! Or, Let’s Get This Party STARTED! Chapter 11.1 and 11.2.

Fort SumterPost-secession, South takes most

Federal (Union) outposts in their territory – Fort Sumter in Charleston Harbor is last significant holdout◦Lincoln doesn’t want to send in navy

to reinforce – why?◦Also can’t just give the fort up –

why?◦Jefferson Davis bombards the fort,

which eventually surrenders

Page 3: The Civil War Begins! Or, Let’s Get This Party STARTED! Chapter 11.1 and 11.2.

ComparisonNorth has large advantages in

industrial production, military-age population, military production, food production

South has Cotton income, great generals, possibly a “better” military, and an advantage in motivation – defending their way of life

Page 4: The Civil War Begins! Or, Let’s Get This Party STARTED! Chapter 11.1 and 11.2.

StrategiesNorth – Anaconda Plan

◦Blockade Southern ports – limit Cotton income, ability to import manufactured goods

◦Take the Mississippi and split the Confederacy in two

◦Capture the Confederate capital at Richmond, VA

South◦DEFENSE! – of land, economy, way of

life, etc.

Page 5: The Civil War Begins! Or, Let’s Get This Party STARTED! Chapter 11.1 and 11.2.

Bull Run/ManassasFirst major bloodshedBack and forth battle, but stalwart

Confederate defense plus reinforcements = Confederate VICTORY!◦Originates nickname Stonewall Jackson

Union retreats to Washington, Confederates too disorganized and exhausted to follow

Lincoln calls for 1,000,000 new enlistments

Page 6: The Civil War Begins! Or, Let’s Get This Party STARTED! Chapter 11.1 and 11.2.

Grant and Farragut in the WestUlysses S. Grant leads Union in Western

campaign◦Takes two forts (Ft Henry and Ft Donelson)

on Tennessee and Cumberland RiversBattle at Shiloh (near Mississippi border)

◦Confederate surprise Union troops, but good Generalling by Grant and a swift counterattack secure a draw

Union fleet under David Farragut starts push up Mississippi River to try to complete the division of South

Page 7: The Civil War Begins! Or, Let’s Get This Party STARTED! Chapter 11.1 and 11.2.

Capturing Richmond?Blockade of ports is working,

progress on Mississippi, but phase 3 of Anaconda is not going so hot

McClellan (Union) very slow to act, forced into retreat by Robert E. Lee◦Confederates had less soldiers and

suffered higher casualties, but McClellan lost his nerve

Lee makes move toward Washington (why is Washington so vulnerable?)

Page 8: The Civil War Begins! Or, Let’s Get This Party STARTED! Chapter 11.1 and 11.2.

AntietamMcClellan catches a break

◦Finds a copy of Lee’s orders – learns he and Stonewall Jackson are separated

Orders an attack on Lee near a creek named Antietam◦Bloodiest single day in American history!

more than 20,000 casualties (~3,650 killed)

Battle essentially a standoff, but McClellan doesn’t pursue the battered Confederate retreat

Soon fired by Lincoln

Page 9: The Civil War Begins! Or, Let’s Get This Party STARTED! Chapter 11.1 and 11.2.

Political IssuesEmancipation Proclamation

◦Slaves in rebelling lands are made free (as soon as Union gets in to liberate them)

◦Why not declare all slaves free?◦Also allows blacks to join Union army◦Confederacy more determined than ever – way of

life more directly threatened than everSuspension of Habeas Corpus

◦Lincoln suspends right to have court determine if a person is jailed legally Uses this power to jail dissenters, Southern sympathizers Jefferson Davis initially denounces measure, but later

does it himself

Page 10: The Civil War Begins! Or, Let’s Get This Party STARTED! Chapter 11.1 and 11.2.

Issues 2: Electric BoogalooConscription – Draft

◦South – 1862 Drafts all able-bodied men 18-35 (1864 changes to 17-

50) You could hire someone to take your place, also exempted

planters who owned more than 20 slaves – “rich man’s war but a poor man’s fight”

◦North – 1863 Drafts white men 20-45

Also allows people to employ substitutes or to buy their way out Riots is NY – many poor white workers object to

fighting a war to free people who might then take their jobs – wreck newspaper offices, homes of antislavery leaders, political offices Also attack many African-Americans and well-dressed people

(who looked like they could afford the $300 buyout

Page 11: The Civil War Begins! Or, Let’s Get This Party STARTED! Chapter 11.1 and 11.2.

Summation QuestionsFind a page in a notebook that you can

keep, not lose, and continue to periodically add to. Then answer the following:

Why wouldn’t Lincoln reinforce Fort Sumter?

In your opinion, what was the biggest advantage held by both the North and the South at the start of the war? Explain.


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