Ch. 16, Section 2
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Transcript Ch. 16, Section 2
CH. 16, SECTION 2: EARLY YEARS OF THE WAR
PG. 466
Main Idea: Neither the
Union nor the
Confederate forces
gained a strong
advantage during the
early years of the war.
Key Terms:
Blockade Runner
Ironclad
Casualty
THE FIRST BATTLE OF BULL RUN
•
A. The first major battle of the
Civil War was called the First
Battle of Bull Run.
•
It was fought in northern
Virginia near a river called
Bull Run.
BULL RUN
The Confederates were victorious.
Union troops attacked
Confederate forces led by General
P.G.T. Beauregard.
Rebels rallied under General
Thomas “Stonewall” Jackson’s
reinforcement troops and
counterattacked the Yankees.
The Union army retreated back to
Washington, D.C., first in an
orderly fashion and then in a
panic.
BULL RUN
The Confederate victory shocked
the North.
Northerners realized that the war
could be a long, hard, and costly
one.
Abraham Lincoln signed two bills
requesting a total of one million
army volunteers to serve for three
years.
Appointed General B. McClellan to
head the Union army of the East
called the Army of the Potomac
WAR AT SEA
•
Lincoln ordered a blockade of
Southern ports to prevent the
South from exporting its cotton
and importing necessary
supplies such as guns,
ammunition, and food.
•
Did not close off all Southern
trade reduce trade by two-thirds
Over time the
•
North also built more ships to
better enforce the blockade
ships.
MONITOR V. MERRIMACK
A new era in naval warfare
began when the North’s
Monitor and the South’s
Merrimack, renamed Virginia,
exchanged fire in March 1862.
Both ships were wooden ships
covered with thick iron plates,
making them sturdy and hard
to sink.
The Union was the victor
because the Merrimack never
again threatened Northern
WAR IN THE WEST
•
Main goal of the North
was to gain control of the
Mississippi and
Tennessee Rivers in the
west
•
Make it hard for the South
to transport goods.
•
The North had early
victories in 1862 under
the command of Ulysses
S. Grant.
WAR IN THE WEST
1. Grant captured Fort Henry on the Tennessee
River ten days later.
WAR IN THE WEST
2. Grant also captured Fort Donelson on the
Cumberland River 10 days later.
WAR IN THE WEST
3. The control of the lower Tennessee River
allowed Union troops to march into Tennessee,
Mississippi, and Alabama.
4. The Union victories also drove the
Confederacy out of Kentucky, a state that the
South had hoped they would be able to
persuade to secede.
BATTLE OF SHILOH
•
•
•
•
Another major battle in the West, the Battle of Shiloh
The Union win a narrow victory.
A very bloody two-day battle with 20,000 casualities on both
sides
Ended with Union forces gaining control of Corinth, Mississippi,
on May 30, 1862, and Memphis, Tennessee, on June 6.
BATTLE OF SHILOH
The fighting began on
April 6 when
Confederate forces led a
surprise attack on Union
troops.
The Confederacy drove
Grant and his troops
back to the Tennessee
River.
BATTLE OF SHILOH
The second day the Union forces defeated the Confederacy with
the help of 25,000 troops from Nashville and shelling from
gunboats on the river.
The Confederacy withdrew to Corinth.
CUTTING OF THE MISSISSIPPI RIVER
The North won important
victory on April 25, 1862,
captured of New Orleans,
Louisiana, under the
command of David
Farragut’s naval forces.
Capture meant that the
Confederacy could no longer
use the Mississippi River to
carry its crops to sea.
WAR IN THE EAST
The war in the East was not as successful for
the Union.
The Union’s goal of capturing the Confederate
capital of Richmond, Virginia, was never met.
The Southern strategy of making the North
tired of fighting seemed to be working.
PENINSULAR CAMPAIGN
General McClellan did not act
promptly on Lincoln’s orders to
advance directly to Richmond.
He took his troops on a several
weak circular routes by ship
known as the Peninsular
Campaign
Peninsula between the York and
James Rivers southeast of the
city.
WAR IN THE EAST
When the Union and
Confederate forces finally
met in June, known as the
Seven Days’ Battle,
Confederate General Robert
E. Lee took command.
He eventually drove the
Yankees back to the James
River.
WAR IN THE EAST
•
Richmond was never captured, and the
Confederates were only 20 miles away from
Washington, D.C.
–
McClellan’s army was pushed back, but it was
larger than Lee’s and still close to Richmond.
–
When McClellan did not renew his attack toward
Richmond, Lincoln ordered him North to Virginia to
join Major General John Pope’s troops.
SECOND BATTLE OF BULL RUN
Stonewall Jackson’s
troops met Lee’s army
and were attacked by
Pope’s troops on August
29 at Bull Run.
The Second Battle of
Bull Run was won by the
Confederacy.
WAR IN THE EAST
•
Another major battle, the Battle
of Antietam occurred on
September 17.
•
Both armies suffered severe
losses, but neither was
destroyed. General Lee withdrew
to Virginia, so the Union claimed
victory.
•
Additionally Lincoln used the
battle to change Northern war
aims and take action against
slavery.
ANTIETAM
1. Lee’s army marched into
Maryland in September 1862
McClellan with his 80,000 troops
moved slowly after them.
After a McClellan soldier found a
copy of Lee’s orders, McClellan
knew Lee’s plans, but because he
was so cautious and acted so
slowly, Lee was able to gather his
forces along the Antietam Creek.
ANTIETAM
On September 17 the bloodiest day of the war
saw close to 6,000 soldiers dead or dying and
another 17,000 seriously wounded.
MCLELLAN IS OUT
The next day Lee withdrew.
When McClellan refused to obey Lincoln’s order to
pursue Lee, Lincoln replaced McClellan with General
Ambrose Burnside as commander of the Army of the
Potomac.