11
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

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

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.