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AN OVERVIEW OF THE AMERICAN CIVIL WAR IN THE EAST 1861-1863

AN OVERVIEW OF THE AMERICAN CIVIL WAR IN THE EAST 1861-1863

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Page 1: AN OVERVIEW OF THE AMERICAN CIVIL WAR IN THE EAST 1861-1863

AN OVERVIEW OF THE AMERICAN CIVIL WAR IN

THE EAST 1861-1863

Page 2: AN OVERVIEW OF THE AMERICAN CIVIL WAR IN THE EAST 1861-1863

The fighting begins…

Fort Sumter, April 12, 1861 Confederates attack the fort at 4:30 a.m. 30 hour bombardment Bloodless Major Anderson, U. S., surrenders

Page 3: AN OVERVIEW OF THE AMERICAN CIVIL WAR IN THE EAST 1861-1863

Off to war we go!!

Each side knew it would win. God was on their side! One Southerner could lick ten Yanks! Onward Christian Soldiers!

Page 4: AN OVERVIEW OF THE AMERICAN CIVIL WAR IN THE EAST 1861-1863

On to Richmond!

Neither side prepared Gen. Irvin McDowell,

U.S., leads troops to Manassas

Gen. Pierre Beauregard, C.S., defends Manassas

Armies collide on July 21, 1861

Union defeated Stonewall Jackson

Page 5: AN OVERVIEW OF THE AMERICAN CIVIL WAR IN THE EAST 1861-1863

George McClellan to the Rescue

George B. McClellan is appointed to command the Federal armies.

Charismatic Great organizer Democrat Little Napoleon The “Slows”

Page 6: AN OVERVIEW OF THE AMERICAN CIVIL WAR IN THE EAST 1861-1863

New technology helps the war effort

Balloons floated in the

skies…

and ironclads floated

on the seas.

Page 7: AN OVERVIEW OF THE AMERICAN CIVIL WAR IN THE EAST 1861-1863

The Shenandoah Valley Campaign

Thomas “Stonewall” Jackson outfoxes 3 Union armies

Classic military campaign Shenandoah was the “bread

basket” of the Confederate Army in Virginia

Jackson’s victories make Lincoln fear for Washington, D.C.

Page 8: AN OVERVIEW OF THE AMERICAN CIVIL WAR IN THE EAST 1861-1863

McClellan opens the Peninsula Campaign The Peninsula is formed by the James and York

Rivers Union forces land at the base of the Peninsula and

push the Confederates back to Richmond May 31, 1862- Battle of Seven Pines (Fair Oaks) * C.S. Gen. Joe Johnston wounded * June 1, 1862, Robert E. Lee takes command Confederates push McClellan back during the Seven

Days battles

Page 9: AN OVERVIEW OF THE AMERICAN CIVIL WAR IN THE EAST 1861-1863

John Pope comes East

General John Pope is brought from the Western Theatre to the East.

“In the West, I only saw the backs of the Rebels.”

“My headquarters will be in the saddle.”

Pope creates the Union Army of Virginia

Page 10: AN OVERVIEW OF THE AMERICAN CIVIL WAR IN THE EAST 1861-1863

Second Manassas

Jackson captures Pope’s supply base at Manassas Jackson waits for Pope on the previous battlefield Pope attacks Jackson on August 28 and 29 of 1862 Lee and Longstreet arrive to help rout Pope

Page 11: AN OVERVIEW OF THE AMERICAN CIVIL WAR IN THE EAST 1861-1863

Lee Invades Maryland in September 1862 On September 4, 1862, the Army of Northern Virginia splashed

across the Potomac River into Maryland. The Southern bands were playing a new song called “Maryland, My Maryland”. The Southerners were dirty and ragged but very confident. Confederate forces marched into Frederick, MD and waited for something to happen. Lee sent much of his army back to Harper’s Ferry to capture the Federal garrison there.

Page 12: AN OVERVIEW OF THE AMERICAN CIVIL WAR IN THE EAST 1861-1863

Little Mac moves to save the nation!

McClellan moves to Frederick, Maryland

Union soldiers find Lee’s lost Special Orders #191

Union forces capture South Mountain

Lee retreats to Sharpsburg, Maryland and orders all of his men to move there

Jackson comes up from Harpers Ferry

Page 13: AN OVERVIEW OF THE AMERICAN CIVIL WAR IN THE EAST 1861-1863

The Bloodiest Day in American History

September 17, 1862, The Battle of Antietam

35,000 Confederates vs. 85,000 Federals

Total casualties: 23,500 men Three phases of the battle:

1. The Miller farm- East and West Woods,

The Cornfield, the Dunker Church

2. The Sunken Road (The Bloody Lane)

3. Burnside’s Bridge

Page 14: AN OVERVIEW OF THE AMERICAN CIVIL WAR IN THE EAST 1861-1863

The Results of Antietam

The Emancipation Proclamation No foreign recognition for the

Confederacy McClellan will be replaced by

Ambrose Burnside The war returns to Virginia The bloodiest single day of the

war

Page 15: AN OVERVIEW OF THE AMERICAN CIVIL WAR IN THE EAST 1861-1863

Fredericksburg, December 1862 Burnside gathers a very large army

and attacks the Confederates at Fredericksburg. Lee has had time to entrench and has prepared his men. The Federals attack uphill over a large open field and are butchered. The Union loses over 12,500 men and does not drive the Confederates from their lines.

Burnside will try to flank the Southerners a month later and bogs down so deeply that horses and mules are buried in the mud. Burnside will be replaced by Joe Hooker.

Page 16: AN OVERVIEW OF THE AMERICAN CIVIL WAR IN THE EAST 1861-1863

Joe Hooker attacks at Chancellorsville

Hooker re-organizes the army and gathers over 100,000 men. Hooker surprises Lee and gets around his flank. Lee barely

stops Hooker at the Chancellorsville Court House crossroads. Jackson takes the majority of the Southern soldiers on a long

march around the Union army. Jackson attacks the unsuspecting Federals at supper time and

rolls them up. Two Federal corps are routed before darkness ends the advance.

Jackson goes out between the lines to scout the Union lines and is mistakenly shot by his own men. His right arm has to be amputated and he dies a week later.

The Confederates continue the battle and defeat Hooker. Total casualties for the two armies was 24,000 men.

Page 17: AN OVERVIEW OF THE AMERICAN CIVIL WAR IN THE EAST 1861-1863

Lee Raids Pennsylvania In June, 1863, the Confederates

march north through Maryland and into Pennsylvania.

Lee wants to relieve the pressure on Virginia

Lee needs to get food and supplies for his army

Confederate forces get as far north as Harrisburg, the capitol of the state, and as far east as York

Lee needs to gather his forces which are scattered out over a large area and he orders them to converge on the crossroads town of Gettysburg

The Union army chases Lee and Hooker is replaced by George Gordon Meade on June 28, 1863

Page 18: AN OVERVIEW OF THE AMERICAN CIVIL WAR IN THE EAST 1861-1863

July 1, 1863 Union cavalry under John Buford wait west of Gettysburg Confederate infantry under Harry Heth attack Union reinforcements, the First Corps of the Army of the Potomac, come up and a full scale battle

develops General Reynolds, U.S., is killed By the end of the day the Union forces are driven back through Gettysburg and onto Cemetery Hill

Page 19: AN OVERVIEW OF THE AMERICAN CIVIL WAR IN THE EAST 1861-1863

Gettysburg, July 2, 1863

The Confederates attack in the late afternoon on both flanks of the Yankee army

Places such as Devil’s Den, Little Round Top, The Wheatfield, the Rose Farm, The Peach Orchard, and Culp’s Hill become blood baths

By dark the Union lines have held and over 15,000 men have been shot down

Page 20: AN OVERVIEW OF THE AMERICAN CIVIL WAR IN THE EAST 1861-1863

Gettysburg, July 3, 1863

Robert E. Lee orders a charge to break the Union center

Longstreet sends Pickett, Pettigrew and Trimble with 11,000 to 13,000 men across an open field to try to break the Union lines.

“Pickett’s Charge” fails “We gained nothing but glory

and lost our best men.” Gen. Winfield Scott Hancock

directs the Union defense of Cemetery Ridge

Page 21: AN OVERVIEW OF THE AMERICAN CIVIL WAR IN THE EAST 1861-1863

The results of Gettysburg 52,000 casualties in three days The Confederate raid is stopped and the Rebels are driven back

to Virginia The Confederates capture enough food to feed their army for

four to five months This battle, combined with the Union victory at Vicksburg on the

Mississippi River, turns the tide of the war in favor of the Union