Ch.11-sec-4-5-2
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The Tide of War Turns
Section 4
• How did the Battles of Vicksburg and
Gettysburg change the course of the Civil
War?
• Vocabulary:
siege
Gettysburg Address
Vicksburg
total war
Gettysburg
George Pickett
William Tecumseh Sherman
Turning Points of the War
Union Victory at Vicksburg
Main Idea: After two years of war, the Confederacy still had strongholds at
Port Hudson, Louisiana, and Vicksburg, Mississippi. Lincoln proclaimed
that Vicksburg was the key to reaching the war’s end.
A Turning Point in the East
Main Idea: While Union troops advanced in the West, the situation was
different in the East. Despite claiming victory at Antietam, Lincoln soon
replaced General McClellan for failing to pursue the retreating
Confederates. McClellan’s replacement, General Ambrose Burnside,
headed south, hoping to win a decisive victory.
The Union Presses the Advantage
Main Idea: The Union victories at Gettysburg and Vicksburg dealt a severe
blow to the Confederacy. Lee’s troops were in retreat and the Mississippi
was in Union hands. The Confederacy would still win some victories, such
as that at Chickamauga, Georgia, in the fall of 1863. In general, however,
the situation of the South was dire.
Continued…
Battle of Fredericksburg
General McClellan
replaced with Ambrose
Burnside
Burnside attacks Lee in
VA by charging into
Confederate gunfire
Union casualties 13,000
Battle of Chancellorsville
Burnside resigns
Joseph “Fighting Joe”
Hooker takes over for
North
Lee split forces to
counter Hooker,
approaching from the
rear; builds fires in
camp
Lee and Jackson
Chancellorsville
May, 1863; On the second day, Stonewall
Jackson attacked on right of Hooker
Jackson scouting at night and is hit by own
troops; arm amputated; died
Battle of Gettysburg
North at low point
due to losses
Lee weakened by
blockade and lack of
supplies
Lee hoped North
would give up if he
won in Pennsylvania
July 1, 1863
General George Meade, new
Northern general
Northerners held hills south
of town; Cemetery Ridge
Southerners held Seminary
Ridge; field in between;
General James Longstreet,
Lee’s second in command
He advised Lee not to attack
the North’s strong position
Lee orders the attack
July 2, 1863
Meade brings reinforcements
Little Round Top, undefended
Maine soldiers under Colonel Joshua
Chamberlain hold it and then attack with
bayonets
Saved Union army from retreat
July 3, 1863
Lee opens with
artillery barrage
15,000 Confederates
attack
Pickett’s Charge;
cut up by Northern
artillery; ½
casualties
Gettysburg
Bloodiest battle of war
Union had 23,000 casualties
South had 28,000 casualties
July 4, 1863, Lee retreats to Virginia
Vicksburg
North wanted control of
the Mississippi River
General Ulysses S.
Grant
Several attacks failed
Began a siege in May
1863
Surrender July 4, 1963
With the fall of Port
Hudson, the South was
split in two
Turning Point
Gettysburg and Vicksburg
Mississippi River taken by North, cutting
Confederacy in two
Gettysburg Address
Nov. 19, 1863
President Lincoln
explained the meaning
of the Civil War
Freedom and equality
belong to all
TRANSPARENCY
The Gettysburg Address
•“Fourscore and seven years ago our fathers brought forth
on this continent a new nation, conceived in liberty and
dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal.
•Now we are engaged in a great civil war, testing whether
that nation or any nation so conceived and so dedicated can
long endure. We are met on a great battlefield of that war.
We have come to dedicate a portion of it as a final resting
place for those who died here that the nation might live. This
we may, in all propriety do. But in a larger sense, we cannot
dedicate, we cannot consecrate, we cannot hallow this
ground. The brave men, living and dead who struggled here
have hallowed it far above our poor power to add or detract.
The world will little note nor long remember what we say
here, but it can never forget what they did here.
•It is rather for us the living, we here be dedicated to the
great task remaining before us--that from these honored
dead we take increased devotion to that cause for which they
here gave the last full measure of devotion--that we here
highly resolve that these dead shall not have died in vain,
that this nation shall have a new birth of freedom, and that
government of the people, by the people, for the people shall
not perish from the earth."
Grant Takes Command
Lincoln must win
battles to win the
election of 1864
Grant plans to use
North’s superior
population and industry
to wear down the South
Battle of the Wilderness
May 5, 1864 in Virginia
Grant beaten, but moved south anyway
No retreat
Battle of Spotsylvania
May 12, 1864
Northern losses were huge, with bodies piled
four deep
Again Grant moves his army further south
Battle of Cold Harbor
June, 1864, armies met eight miles from Richmond
Large Northern losses
Grant lost 7,000 Union soldiers in less than one hour
QUICK STUDY
Goals of Total War
Sherman in Georgia
Sherman wanted to
seize Atlanta, a rail and
industrial center
98,000 Union men
Confederate General Joseph Johnston
Battle of Kennesaw Mountain
Atlanta
Johnston wanted to delay
Sherman until after the Nov. elections
Mid-July, Sherman is near Atlanta
Johnston replaced with General James Hood
Hood engaged Sherman in several battles
and lost thousands of men
Sherman laid siege to the city
In September the South’s army left Atlanta
March to the Sea
Some thought Sherman was mentally
unstable
He ordered Atlanta burned
Cut a 300-mile long path of destruction
Captured Savannah in Dec.
Election of 1864
Lincoln and Andrew Johnson, Vice President
McClellan, Democrat
Capture of Atlanta helped Lincoln win
reelection
NOTE TAKING
Reading Skill: Summarize
A New Birth of Freedom
Section 5
• What was the final outcome and impact
of the Civil War?
• Vocabulary:
Thirteenth Amendment
John Wilkes Booth
Mathew Brady
Land Grant College Act
The War’s End and Impact
The War’s Final Days
Main Idea: In the summer of 1864, the Confederates made a desperate stand at
Petersburg, a vital railroad center. Grant knew that if he captured Petersburg, he
could cut all supply lines to Richmond. Therefore he applied his siege tactics to
Petersburg and ultimately achieved victory. Richmond, then defenseless, was
evacuated and set on fire.
Why the North Won
Main Idea: The Union victory was a result of several key factors. Northerners were
able to take advantage of their greater technological prowess, larger population,
and more abundant resources. The Union was also able to develop new
advantages, particularly brilliant and fearless military leaders who were willing to do
everything it took to win the war. Meanwhile, the South used up its resources,
unable to call upon fresh troops and supplies.
The War’s Lasting Impact
Main Idea: The Civil War produced extraordinary levels of casualties and
destruction. Also, social and political disillusionment on both sides fed economic
greed. However, the Civil War managed to ease the history of disunity of in
American political life and helped to cement federal authority.
Siege of Petersburg
Grant moved around capital of Richmond
and attacks Petersburg
In last two months, Grant lost 65,000 men
Lee has trouble replacing casualties and
waits
Thirteenth Amendment
Passed by Congress in February, 1865
Ratified by the states and became law on Dec. 18,
1865
Ended slavery in the U.S.
End of the War
Sherman moved through South Carolina,
burning most houses
Did not destroy North Carolina
Appomattox Court House
April 9, 1865 Lee
met Grant and
surrendered
Grant offered food
and ordered
celebration by
Northern troops
ended
NOTE TAKING
Reading Skill: Recognize Sequence
1809
• Abraham Lincoln was
born on February 12, l809
in a log cabin on the
Kentucky frontier.
• Lincoln was named after
his grandfather.
• His parents were Thomas
Lincoln and Nancy
Hanks.
• He had one sister Sarah.
1834
• Lincoln, age 24,
served in the state
government of Illinois.
• He was elected to the
legislature as a Whig
• He denounced
slavery, saying it was
"founded on both
injustice and bad
policy."
1836
• September 9, Lincoln
received his law
license
• Is made a leader of
the Whig party.
• He first practices law
in Springfield, Illinois.
1842
• November 4, Lincoln
married Mary Todd.
• Had four children
Robert (1843-1926),
Edward (1846-1850),
William (1850-1862),
and Thomas (18531871).
1860
• Lincoln is elected the
16th President of the
United States
• Is the first Republican to
Be elected
• Was a difficult time for
Lincoln, since many
Southern states did not
agree with him on slavery
• Declared they were not a
part of the United States.
1861
• The South leaves the
Union and the Civil
war begins
• Began with an attack
on Fort Sumter
• The U.S. struggled in
The Civil war for four
year, 1861-1865.
1863
• On January 1, Lincoln
issues the final
Emancipation
Proclamation
• Freed all slaves in
territories held by
Confederates
• Emphasized the
enlisting of black
soldiers in the Union
Army.
1864
• Lincoln is reelected
President.
• He won the election
defeating Democrat
George B. McClellan.
• He received 55
percent of the popular
votes and 2l2 of 233
electoral votes.
1865
• Civil War ends.
• General Lee's troops
were surrounded and
on April 7, Grant
called upon Lee to
surrender.
• The two commanders
met on April 9, and
agreed on the terms
of surrender.
Lincoln’s Assassination
April 14, 1865, John
Wilkes Booth shot
Lincoln while he was
watching a play
Lincoln died the next
day and Booth was
killed in Virginia
1865
• On April 13, Lincoln
attended a play at
Ford's Theatre and
was shot.
• John Wilkes Booth,
had shot the
President.
• Lincoln died on the
morning of April 15,
1865.
John Wilkes Booth
NOTE TAKING
Reading Skill: Understand Effects
Effects of the War
Both sides suffered great losses; more than
half a million people died
Union preserved
Slavery abolished
Economy:
-Union costs $6 billion, Confederate costs $2 billion
-Southern farms, factories, and railroads destroyed
-Southern industry crippled
-Confederate states lost two thirds of their wealth
Two Important Acts
• Homestead Act: 1862, Congress
passed act, making western land
available at a very low cost to those
who would farm it.
• Land Grant College Act: 1862,
legislation that gave money from the
sale of public lands to states for the
establishment of universities that
taught agriculture and mechanical arts
CHART
Economic Costs of the Civil War
CHART
War Deaths