Major Battles of the Civil War
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Transcript Major Battles of the Civil War
Learning Objective: We will understand how the major
battles impacted the events and results of the Civil War.
1ST battle of the Civil War
A Union army of 28,000 men
Confederate army of 33,000, led by General Thomas
Jackson
Union:
Attempted to seize Manassas, VA, vital railroad
Confederate troops aligned the creek waiting for Union
forces at Bull Run
Confederate forces defeated the Union
Merrimack: An abandoned Union warship used by the South
Salvaged the ship, covered it with thick iron plates, iron-clad.
Renamed it the Virginia
North’s wooden ships could not damage the Confederate ship
Monitor: North’s Iron-clad ship
Ships could not sink each other
North successful in keeping the Merrimack in harbor
Battle marked a new age for Naval warfare
Used ships as models to build more iron-clad ships
Single bloodiest day of the entire war
Both armies suffered heavy losses, neither was destroyed
Lee, Confederate General, retreated allowing Union to
claim victory
Crucial victory for the Union
British government ready to intervene as mediator if
General Lee’s invasion had been successful
Impact on War
Lincoln used the battle to take action against slavery
5 days later Lincoln announced his plan to free all
enslaved people in the Confederacy
Vicksburg stood on high bluff above the Mississippi
River
Gain control of the Mississippi River was a major war
goal
Ulysses S. Grant forced Vicksburg surrendered
Impact on War
The Union had complete control of the Mississippi River
Sealed Texas, Louisiana and Arkansas from the
Confederacy
Cut the South in two
Largest battle of the war, lasting three days
Union was victorious
General Lee (Confederate): The defeat forced Lee to
withdraw his army toward Virginia
Destroying Lee’s hope of carrying the fight further up
North
Gettysburg Address:
Lincoln beautifully addressed what the war had come to
mean
Helped war-weary Americans look beyond the images
of the battlefield and focus on their shared ideals