North Carolina in the Civil War
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Transcript North Carolina in the Civil War
North Carolina in the
Civil War
Chapter 15
Preparing for War
The goal of the U.S. was to restore the Union;
the Union wanted to abolish (end) slavery
Emancipation Proclamation: a document of
President Lincoln; freed all slaves in the
Confederate states July 1, 1863
Union
Advantages of the North
Outnumbered the Confederates
Had more shipyards, iron mills, metal factories,
textile mills, and arsenals
Had railroads
Had a functioning government
Confederates
Advantages of the South
War was fought in the South
Fighting on familiar territory
Had some military training
Had strong military leaders
Union Strategies
Military
Anaconda Plan: blockade
all Confederate ports and
seize the Mississippi River
Union ships blockaded
the southern coast to cut
off supply routes between
the South and Europe
Political
Stop European nations
from recognizing the
Confederacy
Confederate Strategies
Military
Wear down the invading
Union armies
Ensure that the Union
blockade didn’t work
Used swift raiders, fast,
lightly armed ships to
capture Union merchant
ships
Political
King Cotton Diplomacy: stop
selling cotton abroad in
hopes that the French and
British would be forced to
help the Confederates
break blockades to get the
cotton that they needed
War on the Coast
The North Carolina coast was the most
vulnerable to Union attack.
Forts Clark and Hatteras were set up on the
Outer Banks to guard the inlets into the sounds.
War on the Coast, con’t.
By taking control of NC’s mainland, Union
forces:
1)
2)
Could attack the railroad, preventing supplies from
reaching Lee’s army
Would be able to stop attacks by Confederate naval
forces
Wartime Politics
The Conscription Act of 1862 made men between
the ages of 18 and 35 eligible to be drafted.
The Election of 1862
During the elections of 1862, Zebulon Vance
was elected governor of North Carolina.
Zebulon Vance served as governor during most
of the Civil War.
Conflicts with the Confederacy
During the war, N.C. and the Confederacy
disagreed over:
Conscription
The suspension of the writ of habeas corpus
The defense of the states
The appointment of officers from other states for
N.C. regiments
The violation of rights of North Carolinians
Blockade Running
Wilmington, NC became the Confederacy’s
largest blockade running port.
In 1863, Governor Vance purchased a blockade
running steamship named the Advance.
War in the East
In 1863, the Confederate Navy began building
an ironclad ram named the Albemarle. The
Albemarle was to be used to sink Union ships.
In October 1864, the Albemarle sank.
War in the Mountains
Many people in the mountains of NC
Harbored deserters and draft resisters
Supported the Union during the war
Helped Union prisoners escape from the
Confederate prison at Salisbury
The Home Front
Effects of the war on people in the South:
Shortage of food, salt, cloth (for clothing), shoes
and medicines
Women were left to tend children and farms
Inflation (driving up prices)
Richard Gatling: patented the Gatling gun; his first
invention was a rice seed planter
The Peace Movement
North Carolina’s Peace Movement:
Led by William Holden
Was accused of encouraging southern soldiers to
desert
Selected 6 Confederate congressmen
Beginning of the End
Fort Fisher was captured in January 1865
General Robert E. Lee surrendered on April 9 at
Appomattox
On April 26, General Joseph E. Johnston
surrendered to General Sherman at Bennett
Place