33
(Please have your “Lincoln” packet out) What are the most important advantages and disadvantages to the Union and Confederacy? Answer the 4 questions on sheet

Answer the 4 questions on sheet

  • Upload
    quinto

  • View
    33

  • Download
    1

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

(Please have your “Lincoln” packet out) What are the most important advantages and disadvantages to the Union and Confederacy?. Answer the 4 questions on sheet. Civil War 1861-65. How did Executive power increase during the Civil War? How did war turn into one over slavery? - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Citation preview

Page 1: Answer the 4 questions on sheet

(Please have your “Lincoln” packet out)

What are the most important advantages and disadvantages to the Union and Confederacy?

Answer the 4 questions on sheet

Page 2: Answer the 4 questions on sheet

Civil War 1861-65

• How did Executive power increase during the Civil War?

• How did war turn into one over slavery?– Battle of Antietam: Emancipation Proclamation– Battle of Gettysburg: Gettysburg Address– 13th Amendment

Page 3: Answer the 4 questions on sheet

Lincoln:

• (#2) Most significant “crossroad”?• (#3) What if he chose differently?• (#4) Examples of increases in Executive

power?

Page 4: Answer the 4 questions on sheet

The Union and Confederacy

Page 5: Answer the 4 questions on sheet

April 1861- Sumter

Page 6: Answer the 4 questions on sheet

Confederate President Jefferson Davis

Union President Abraham Lincoln

Page 7: Answer the 4 questions on sheet

Advantages, Disadvantages

Page 8: Answer the 4 questions on sheet

North strategy- “Anaconda”

• Blockade:– No exports of cotton; economy strangled– No imports of food, materials

• Mississippi– Cut Confederacy in 2

• Richmond– The capital

Page 9: Answer the 4 questions on sheet

Northern strategy: “Anaconda”

1. Blockade2. Mississippi3. Richmond

Page 10: Answer the 4 questions on sheet

Confederate strategy

1. Defensive war; prepare and wait for attack– All they have to do is “not lose”

2. “War of attrition”– Inflict continuous casualties on Northern attackers– North will lose the will to fight

3. Europe will side with them (cotton)– Cut off trade in 61- HUGE blunder

Page 11: Answer the 4 questions on sheet

18th century tactics + 19th century technology= massive casualties

• (Antietam- 23,000 casualties in one day;– Gettysburg: @ 5,800 dead- Iraq and Afghanistan-

5,281 dead)

Page 12: Answer the 4 questions on sheet

1862- Battle of Antietam/ Emancipation

• 1861- 1862- Robert E. Lee and Confederate Army defeat Union attempts at taking Richmond…

Page 13: Answer the 4 questions on sheet

Under Confederate General Robert E. Lee • Late summer ’62- Army on a roll…• INVADE NORTH (MD); victory would…– Start uprising in Maryland– Convince Europe to support South– Get food for army

Page 15: Answer the 4 questions on sheet

Union

• Doesn’t know where Lee is…• Secret plans found on cigar

Page 16: Answer the 4 questions on sheet

Antietam

• 40,000 Confederates• 100,000 Union • September 1862• Northern Maryland

Page 17: Answer the 4 questions on sheet
Page 18: Answer the 4 questions on sheet

1st 3 hours, 12,000 total casualties

Page 19: Answer the 4 questions on sheet

By day’s end

• 12,000 Union casualties• 14,000 Confederate casualties

Page 20: Answer the 4 questions on sheet

September 17, 1862

• Sept. 17, 1862=Bloodiest Day in U.S. History- 23,000 casualties– 3,654 Dead– 2nd Bloodiest=Sept. 11, 2001 (3,056)

Page 21: Answer the 4 questions on sheet

Antietam National Cemetary

Page 22: Answer the 4 questions on sheet

Lee’s retreat

• 1/3 of Confederate Army casualties• Retreats (limps) back to south• Invasion a failure• Northern “victory”

Page 23: Answer the 4 questions on sheet

Lincoln: Why not free the slaves?

• #1 Objective: save the Union, not free slaves• Political/ Military- Border states (MI, KY, DE,

MD) may secede• May seem like an act of desperation-

Confederacy has been winning all the battles• Legal- Does not have the Constitutional right

to do so

Page 24: Answer the 4 questions on sheet

Emancipation Proclamation• Lincoln

– Has his victory- in a position of strength– Issues Emancipation Proclamation Nov. ’62

• Ultimatum to Confederacy – “On the first day of January (1863), all persons held as slaves within any State in rebellion against the United States, shall be forever free…”

• Issued “by virtue of the power in me vested as Commander in chief”

– How does this solve all 4 Problems?

Page 25: Answer the 4 questions on sheet

the meanwhile, Grant in the west…

• All that’s left is Vicksburg on Mississippi

Vicksburg was high on a bluff at a bend in the Mississippi; Gunboats were useless

Page 26: Answer the 4 questions on sheet

Vicksburg

Bend in the Mississippi

Page 27: Answer the 4 questions on sheet

Grant’s risky campaign• March to May 1863– Crosses Miss. South of V’burg– Attacks Jackson first

Page 28: Answer the 4 questions on sheet
Page 29: Answer the 4 questions on sheet

Seige of Vicksburg, May- July 1863

• 2,800 shells a day for 47 days; how many per minute??\• people inside starving… resort to eating shoe leather• July 4, 1863- 30,000 Confederates surrender

Statue of Grant at Vicksburg today

Page 30: Answer the 4 questions on sheet

Lingering memories

• Vicksburg Mississippi did not celebrate the 4th of July again until 1944 (after D-Day)

Page 31: Answer the 4 questions on sheet

Summer 1863- The turning point of the war

• Gettysburg– http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7ALyq3seK2g

• Vicksburg• The speech

Page 32: Answer the 4 questions on sheet

Nov. 1863- the Gettysburg Addresshttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U2a-S3rjDBw

Page 33: Answer the 4 questions on sheet

Importance of 1863

• July 3, 1863- Lee retreats from G’burg– Weakened army of Northern Virginia will never

threaten Union soil again• July 4, 1863- Vicksburg surrendered– Mississippi River now in Union hands