Transcript Notes

Georgia’s Role in the
Civil War
December 2, 2015
Georgia’s Role in the War
► By
the start of the war, Atlanta was a major
economic and transportation center in the
South
► Several different railroads crossed through
the city, making Atlanta important in getting
troops and supplies to the battle front
► Union leaders knew that if Atlanta was
captured, then that would effectively end
the Confederate war effort
Andersonville (Camp Sumter)
Georgia was also home to several Union prisoner-of-war
camps
► The most well-known was Camp Sumter (also known as
Andersonville Prison) in Andersonville, Ga
► The prison opened in February 1864, and was a large
outdoor fenced-in area with tents for prisoners
► Conditions in the prison were unhealthy, with sanitation
issues, lack of food, lack of adequate shelter,
overcrowding, and disease all contributing to the deaths
of many prisoners
► After the camp was liberated in May 1865, the director
of the prison was put on trial for excessive cruelty
► He was convicted and executed
►
The Battle of Chickamauga
► By
late 1863, Union troops were moving farther
and farther south, almost into Georgia
► On September 19-20, 1863, Union troops
encountered Confederate troops at Chickamauga
Creek, just south of the Tennessee border in
Georgia
► It was a Confederate victory, forcing the Union
back into Tennessee
► However, by November, the Union had brought
more troops and began advancing into Georgia
The Atlanta Campaign
► In
early 1864, 112,000 Union troops, under
the leadership of General William T.
Sherman, were camped in Chattanooga, TN,
just across the Georgia/Tennessee border
► During the late spring and early summer,
General Sherman moved his troops
southward, clashing time and again with
Confederate troops, but always slowly
moving towards Atlanta
The Atlanta Campaign
The Battle of Atlanta
► On
July 22, 1864, General Sherman finally
reached the city of Atlanta
► He encountered Confederate troops under
the leadership of General John B. Hood
► The battle continued off and on for two
months, and losses were heavy on both
sides, but Sherman eventually captured
Atlanta on September 2, 1864
The Burning of Atlanta
► After
Sherman captured the city, he and his
soldiers stayed for 2 months
► On November 15, 1864, they destroyed the
railroads and factories by setting fire to
them
► They then marched out on Sherman’s
infamous “March to the Sea”
Sherman’s March to the Sea
► The
army moved quickly to Savannah, burning
everything in a path 60 miles wide
► They destroyed all military targets and farms,
homes, railroads, and bridges that supported the
Confederate army
► They took a little over 1 month to get to
Savannah, arriving on December 22, 1864
► Sherman took over the city the next day, cutting
off the Confederate army in Virginia from its
southern suppliers
Sherman’s March to the Sea
End of the War
► After
the loss of Atlanta and Savannah, the
Confederate war effort struggled to keep going
► The only Confederate troops left were Lee’s troops
in Virginia, and a small group in North Carolina
► Most Confederate troops had given up and gone
home
► They tried one more time to fight in March 1865,
but failed
► On April 9, 1865, the Confederacy surrendered at
the courthouse in Appomattox, Virginia
The Assassination of Abraham
Lincoln
► Lincoln
was re-elected for a 2nd term as
president in November 1864
► He guided the country through the end of the
war
► After the Confederacy surrendered, he tried to
relax by attending a play at Ford’s Theatre on
April 14, 1865
► During the performance, he was shot by John
Wilkes Booth
► Lincoln died later that night