The Nation Expands
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Transcript The Nation Expands
The Civil War
The Great Divide
State’s Rights vs.
Federal Government
Industrial NE vs.
Agricultural South
Slavery and Slave
Culture
Patches
Constitution
Compromise of 1820
“Missouri Compromise”
The Civil War
Compromise of 1850
Senator Henry Clay
CA enters as free state
Utah & New Mexico
Territories open to
slavery
Outlawed slave trade in
Washington D.C.
Includes passage of
Fugitive Slave Act
The Civil War
Republican Party Founded
1854 Ripon, Wisconsin
Stop westward spread of
slavery
Kansas-Nebraska Act
1854
Popular Sovereignty – States
could vote on slavery issue
Eliminates Missouri Compr.
The Civil War
“Bleeding Kansas”
Pro-Slavery and AntiSlavery Voters
Two Legislatures
Guerrilla Warfare
John Brown
200 Killed
Kills 5 Slavery Proponents
Popular Sovereignty?
The Civil War
Dred Scott Decision
1857
Slave whose owner
moved to Minnesota
Is a slave still a slave in a
free state?
Chief Justice Taney
Slaves are property
Missouri Compromise
Unconstitutional
Implications?
The Civil War
Tensions Rise
John Brown
Raid on Harper’s Ferry
Arsenal, Virginia in 1859
Plan to liberate slaves
Brown captured and
hanged
Abolitionist Hero
Southern Terrorist
John Brown’s Body
The Civil War
Election of 1860
Southern Fears/Threats
Lincoln – Republican
Breckinridge – S. Democ.
Douglas – Democrat
Bell – Constit. Union
Lincoln 180 Elec. Votes
Southern Response
SC Secedes Dec. 20,
1860
Election of 1860
The Confederate States
February 1861
South Carolina, Georgia,
Florida, Alabama,
Mississippi, Louisiana,
Texas
Virginia, North Carolina,
Tennessee, Arkansas
Hope for Northern Support
Jefferson Davis
Military Background
President
America During Civil War
The Failure of Compromise
Crittendon Plan
Lincoln Rejects
Extend Missouri Comp. line
to Pacific
Won’t end secession
Against Republican ideals
Lack of Action
Buchanan indecisive
“Let them go”
The Civil War
War Begins:
Northern Advantages
April 12, 1861 – Fort Sumter
More
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Soldiers
Factories
Money
Railways
Southern Advantages
Cause
Home Soil
Military Leaders
Resources: 1861
The Civil War: Preserve Union
Anaconda Plan
Naval Blockade of South
Gain control of
Mississippi – Divide
South
Capture Richmond
South
War of Attrition
Offensive Defense
Test North’s Will
Foreign Assistance
“King Cotton”
Mobilizing the Home Fronts
1862
Union
Conscription Begins
Finance: taxes, bonds,
paper money
Industry supplies armies
Confederacy
Govern. Arsenals supply
Runaway inflation
Poor transportation system
The Civil War
Perceptions v. Total War
First Battle of “Bull Run”
Attitude toward war
July 1861
25 Miles south of D.C.
Manassas
Short war
Romantic view of war
Confederate victory
“Stonewall” Jackson
The Civil War
Spring of 1862
Union to Virginia
General McClellan
General Lee
June 26, 1862
Seven Days Battle
Union Retreats
Gen. Pope to Richmond
2nd Battle of Bull Run
Pope’s defeat
The Civil War
War in the West
Ulysses S. Grant
Shiloh – Tennessee
Seizing the Mississippi
David Farragut
General Grant
New Orleans
Vicksburg July 4, 1863
Confederacy Divided
Early Campaigns and Battles
Union by 1862
Total naval supremacy
Confederates cleared from:
West Virginia, Kentucky,
Tennessee
New Orleans captured
Confederates by 1862
Stalled Union control of
Mississippi at Shiloh
Defend Richmond
The Civil War
Battle of Antietam
Sept. 17, 1862
Antietam Creek
Bloodiest single day of
battle in U.S. history
@ 23,000 Casualties
Union Victory
McClellan’s Failure
McClellan relieved of
command
The Civil War
Emancipation Proclamation
Blacks and the War
The issue of slavery - Timing
Free slave in non-occupied
area that were in rebellion
January 1, 1863
180,000 serve in Union Army
Lincoln pushes further
Govern. to abolish slavery
Maryland, Missouri abolish
slavery
War-Weariness
May, 1863
NY conscription riots
Union defeat at
Chancellorsville
Democrats attack Lincoln
“Copperheads”
July, 1863
Gettysburg
Vicksburg
The Civil War
Battle of Gettysburg
Lee’s purpose
Mead’s Response
Occupies heights around
Gettysburg
July 1-3, 1863
Destroy Union Army
Attack Washington D.C.
Pickett’s Charge
Army of Virginia Decimated
Gettysburg Address
The Civil War: 1860-1865
General Sherman
Lincoln re-elected 1864
General Grant
April, 1865
Fall of Richmond
Surrender
1864
March through South
Capture of Atlanta
Turn North
April 9, 1865
Appomattox Courthouse
Winning the Peace
Effects of the War
618,000 Troops Dead
4,000,000 African
Americans Free
Not Equal
Lack of skills
Industrial Workers face
wartime inflation
Nation united
Hostility
Prejudice