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The Civil War

16. The Civil War. The Civil War. Communities Mobilize for War The Governments Organize for War The Fighting through 1862 The Death of Slavery The Front Lines and the Home Front The Tide Turns Conclusion. Chapter Focus Questions.

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The Civil War

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  1. 16 The Civil War

  2. The Civil War • Communities Mobilize for War • The Governments Organize for War • The Fighting through 1862 • The Death of Slavery • The Front Lines and the Home Front • The Tide Turns • Conclusion

  3. Chapter Focus Questions • What advantages did the North possess at the outset of the Civil War? • How did the power of the federal government expand as the war progressed? • What successes did the South enjoy in the early years of the war?

  4. Chapter Focus Questions (cont'd) • How did the end of slavery affect the war efforts of the North and South? • What impact did the war have on northern political, economic, and social life? And on the same aspects of southern life? • How did Grant and Sherman exemplify a new war strategy?

  5. North America and Illinois

  6. Mother Bickerdyke Connects Northern Communities to their Boys at War • Large number of war deaths due to disease • Mary Ann Bickerdyke—taught basic sanitation and nutrition. • “Mother” Bickerdyke’s work exposed the need for support services and helped to create the U.S. Sanitary Commission.

  7. Communities Mobilize for War

  8. The opening moment of the Civil War. On April 12, 1861

  9. Fort Sumter: The War Begins • A conflict was brewing at the Union Fort Sumter in South Carolina. • Low on supplies • Lincoln intended to send food. • The Confederacy attacked and the defenders of Fort Sumter surrendered. • War was greeted enthusiastically by communities on both sides.

  10. Fort Sumter: The War Begins (cont'd) • A conflict was brewing at the Union Fort Sumter in South Carolina. • As volunteers swarmed recruiting offices, civilians organized war relief and supplies in support of the troops.

  11. The Border States • Four strategically important border states did not secede: Missouri, Kentucky, Maryland, and Delaware. • These states could have added 45 percent to the white population and military manpower of the Confederacy as well as 80 percent to its manufacturing capacity.

  12. The Border States (cont'd) • Four strategically important border states did not secede: Missouri, Kentucky, Maryland, and Delaware. • The border states also hurt the Confederate argument that the southern states were forced to secede in order to protect their right to own slaves.

  13. The Border States (cont'd) • In Maryland, Lincoln cracked down on dissent by declaring martial law and arresting pro-Confederate leaders. • In Missouri, guerilla warfare broke out. • Lincoln ignored illegal trade with the Confederacy to keep Kentucky in the Union.

  14. The Battle of Bull Run • The first Battle of Bull Run shattered both sides’ enthusiastic notions of the war. • The Union marched off to the shout of “On to Richmond.” • Confederate resistance drove them back in an uncontrolled retreat. • The war would not be a quick and glorious conquest.

  15. The Relative Strengths ofNorth and South • The North seemed to enjoy an overwhelming material advantage. • The North had a far greater population and industrial capacity. • They also seemed able to feed, clothe, and arm as many soldiers as necessary.

  16. The Relative Strengths ofNorth and South (cont’d) • The South had strong advantages as well. • They would be fighting a defensive war. • They had strong military leadership. • The North would have to fight a war of conquest with untrained troops. • The South also believed that cotton would be a powerful weapon in gaining foreign support.

  17. FIGURE 16.1 Comparative Resources, North and South, 1861

  18. The Governments Organize for War

  19. Lincoln looking presidential

  20. Lincoln Takes Charge • Lincoln faced an awesome task as president, including gaining support from his own party. • Lincoln quickly took on extra-legal power: • expanding the budget • calling up state militias • taking other actions without congressional sanction

  21. Lincoln Takes Charge (cont'd) • Lincoln was the first president to act as commander-in-chief, directing military policy, tempered by his intention to seek North-South reconciliation.

  22. Expanding the Power of the Federal Government • The greatest expansion of government came in the War Department, which required unprecedented mobilization. • The Union had to find new ways of raising funds. • Bond sales in small amounts, new taxes, and printing paper money financed the government.

  23. Expanding the Power of the Federal Government • Free from southern opposition, the Republicans enacted their economic programs including: • a doubling of the tariff • chartering companies to build a transcontinental railroad • a Homestead Act • the establishment of land grant colleges

  24. Expanding the Power of the Federal Government (cont'd) • The federal government was permanently strengthened.

  25. Diplomatic Objectives • Lincoln was further challenged by the potential foreign recognition of the Confederacy. • The South hoped that King Cotton would gain them foreign support. • The North worked to insure that England and France refused to support the South.

  26. Diplomatic Objectives (cont'd) • Nonbelligerence helped keep Great Britain and France neutral, including accepting a temporary French incursion into Mexico that violated the Monroe Doctrine.

  27. Jefferson Davis Tries to Unify the Confederacy • Jefferson Davis lacked the skill to hold the Confederacy together. • A shared belief in states’ rights was a poor basis to form unity of a nation. • The Confederacy was never able to live up to its hope of becoming a unified nation.

  28. Contradictions of Southern Nationalism • The failure of “cotton diplomacy” to win foreign support weakened the Confederacy from the outset.

  29. Contradictions of Southern Nationalism (cont'd) • Loyalty was a problem because most southern whites: • felt a loyalty to their states • lacked a sense of loyalty to the Confederate nation • feared that centralization would destroy the very identity they sought to preserve.

  30. The Fighting through 1862

  31. Jackson Entering the City of Winchester

  32. MAP 16.1 Overall Strategy of the Civil War

  33. The War in Northern Virginia • Anaconda Plan: Envisioned squeezing the South with a blockade to prompt surrender without an invasion. • Popular clamor for sudden action was tempered by the Bull Run disaster.

  34. The War in Northern Virginia (cont'd) • Spring 1862: George McClellan, planned a march along Virginia’s James Peninsula toward Richmond. • Robert E. Lee mounted a successful counterattack, driving McClellan back.

  35. The War in Northern Virginia (cont'd) • Davis ordered an invasion of Maryland that was stopped in September at Antietam. • A final Union thrust also ended in December at Fredericksburg. • At years’ end the war seemed stalemated.

  36. Young Southern volunteer soldiers

  37. Young Southern volunteer soldiers

  38. MAP 16.2 Major Battles in the East, 1861–62

  39. Shiloh and the War for the Mississippi • Things went better for the Union in the west. • Troops commanded by Ulysses S. Grant captured forts along Tennessee’s river systems. • In April Grant and Buell defeated the Confederates at Shiloh in a murderous engagement.

  40. Shiloh and the War for the Mississippi (cont'd) • Union conquests of Memphis and New Orleans made control of the Mississippi River seem only a matter of time.

  41. MAP 16.3 Major Battles in the Interior, 1862–63

  42. The War in the Trans-Mississippi West (cont’d) • Sporadic Confederate campaigns, at times aided by relocated Indians, were successfully overcome by federal troops and state militia. • Striking as far as Denver, Texas troops were turned back by Colorado volunteers. • Union forces retaliated by crushing Sioux and Navajo threats

  43. The War in the Trans-Mississippi West (cont’d) • Indian and guerrilla fighting throughout the Missouri area plagued the Union. • No part of the country and none of its inhabitants, could remain untouched by the Civil War.

  44. The Naval War • The Union was aided by its superior navy that in time tightened its grip over southern blockade-runners and seized several coastal areas. • 1862—about 8 percent of Confederate ships were stopped • 1864—around 30 percent were stopped • 1865—50 percent were stopped

  45. The Naval War (cont’d) • The battle between ironclad ships ended without a clear victor but foreshadowed future naval technology. • The most successful naval operation was the seizing of coastal areas and the port of New Orleans.

  46. The Black Response • When the Union navy captured Port Royal in South Carolina, 10,000 slaves greeted the troops. • The Union policy of treating runaway slaves as contraband contributed to the demise of slavery. • By the end of the war, one out of four slaves in the South had supported the Union by leaving their masters.

  47. The Black Response (cont'd) • Washington DC became a refuge for runaways, harboring 9,000 by wars’ end.

  48. The Death of Slavery

  49. “The Great Emancipator”

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