The Civil War - Euroakadeemia
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Transcript The Civil War - Euroakadeemia
The Civil War
Causes
Economic differences – sectional
rivalry on slavery and the
protective tariff
Different beliefs about the type
of union of the country
Election of Lincoln as President
Struggle over control of the
central government
Way of living
Slavery
Involved individual freedom and
democratic beliefs
The South – important
The North – immoral
New states free or not??
Missouri Compromise 1820
House of Reps voted to gradually
end slavery
The North had a larger
population and the South was
losing power
Admission of Missouri as a free
state – upset the balance of 11
free and 11 slave states
The South would have a minority
in both houses
Compromise – Missouri as a slave
state and Maine as a free state to
keep the balance
A boundary at the 36º30´ parallel
To the north – only free states
To the south – slave states
Compromise of 1850
California – free state
15 free and 15 slave states
The South - running out of territory
Afraid of becoming a permanent
minority
California – free state
the Mexican Cession -Texas, the
territory from the border of the
Louisiana Purchase to the Pacific
Ocean and the province of New
Mexico – free or slave states
Popular sovereignty
Abolished the slave trade but not
slavery in the District of
Columbia
Fugitive Slave Law
Suspects had no right to:
- testify
- have a jury (runaway slaves)
No balancing slave statepermanent majority of free
states in the Senate
The abolitionists
Harriet Beecher Stowe Uncle
Tom’s Cabin 1852
William Lloyd Garrison The
Liberator
Frederick Douglass
Popular sovereignty to keep the
balance between free and slave
states
Kansas-Nebraska Act 1854
Problem – both were north of
the boundary
Slave owners and abolitionists
rushed to settle these states
Attmpted to frighten the others
away
Violent acts on both sides
Bleeding Kansas
John Brown’s Raid
Surprise attack on five pro-
slavery men in Kansas
Beginning of the Republican
Party
No slavery in the new territories
Party founded in 1854
The Dred Scott case
Economic differences
The South – agricultural
The North – industry
Problem:
- the North had a larger
population
- the protective tariff
The South – pay tariffs to buy
goods from Europe or buy the
higher priced U.S. product
The feeling of the North trying
to grow and keep the South from
growing
Type of Union
The North – creation of the
people, states cannot secede
The South – agreement between
the states, right to obey the law
or secede
The North – had more political
power
Could pass laws that the South
might not like and would ignore
them
Election of 1860
Abraham Lincoln
Republican Party
Opposed slavery
The South feared losing
economic/political
independence
South Carolina seceded 4 days
after the election
Florida, Georgia, Alabama,
Louisiana, Mississippi, Texas
Confederate States of America
Jefferson Davis
Lincoln – secession illegal
Refused to begin a war
BUT promised to defend all
federal property
First shots by South Carolinians
when Lincoln tried to send
supplies to Fort Sumter
The South:
- all in one geographic area
- defensive war
- no long supply/communication
lines
- Robert E. Lee, Thomas J.
Jackson
The North:
- control of 2/3 of the states
- population more than double
- able to build weapons etc
- almost all the railway lines
- country’s financial resources
Bloody, bitter and long struggle
1861-1863 a stalemate in the
east
First battle at Bull Run
Confederate’s Army of Northern
Virginia defeated the Union’s
Army of the Potomac
The South – overconfident
The North – prepare for a long
and difficult war
The Confederates won several
battles in the East
Main reason – fine generals
The turning point – invasion of
Maryland
Battle at Antietam
In the West – the North
successful
General Ulysses S. Grant
Capture of Fort Henry and Fort
Donelson in 1862
Unconditional and immediate
surrender
Shiloh 1862, Vicksburg 1863,
Lookout Mountain late 1863
General William Tecumseh
Sherman
Brutality
“War .... is all hell.”
Help break the southern spirit
General Grant – in the East
July 1863 – Gettysburg –
decisive victory for the North
3 days
Lincoln’s speech – the
Gettysburg Address
Grant/Lee
Spring of 1865 – Grant captures
the confederate capital at
Richmond, Virginia
Appomattox Court House,
Virginia
“The rebels are our countrymen
again”
The Emancipation Proclamation
1863
All slaves still under Confederate
control were free
Also inspire the North to:
- help in the moral cause
- weaken the southern war effort
- discourage foreign intervention
Provided the basis for freeing all
the slaves
Abraham Lincoln
Against slavery
Pro-slavery groups – slavery
wrong
Anti-slavery – allowed slavery to
exist
Freed slaves to to save the Union
Abraham Lincoln
Extended his powers by doing so
Also by limiting freedom of the
press
Inspired the troops and the
people
Gettysburg Address
Make sure that “the government
of the people, by the people, for
the people, shall not perish from
the earth.”
Wanted to help reunite the
country
Abraham Lincoln
Died 5 days after the end of the
war
Assassinated by a pro-southern
actor John Wilkes Booth
Mourned by North and South
alike
Reconstruction 1865-1877
Controversies
Lincoln – reunite the North and
South on the North’s terms
Radical Republicans – punish
Andrew Johnson
Allow southern states to re-
establish gov-s when 10 percent
of the population had taken an
oath of allegiance (promise of
loyalty) to the U.S.
Congress – NO
New Congressmen from the
South were not recognized by
the RRs
Rejected the plan
The South – ratify the 14th
amendment and guarantee
suffrage to blacks
Only Tennessee complied
Others – divided into 5 military
districts with a Union general
leading each one
Many whites lost their right to
vote
In the South – the blacks had
some political power
Federal laws and Constitutional
amendments to help the exslaves adjust
The 13th amendment abolished
slavery
Ratified 8 months after the end
of the war
The 14th amendment – all
blacks citizens,less reps for the
states that deny their voting right
The 15th amendment – blacks
given the right to vote
Freedmen’s Bureau
Help in obtaining food, housing,
education
Nationalism over sectionalism