Transcript File
THE CIVIL WAR ERA
Unit Overview (1844-1877)
Big Picture
As Abraham Lincoln slipped into the District of
Colombia to take the presidential oath of office,
seven states had already slipped out of the union
that his newly elected office presided over.
Abraham Lincoln arguably would face the tallest
order of all presidents: to preserve the union and
ultimately resolve the slavery issue.
The Menace of Secession
Lincoln’s actions
Wait and see
Southern provocations?
Physical geography
Topographical barriers?
National controversies
Debt?
Domain?
Underground RR
European designs
Imperialist interests
Fort Sumter Forces Lincoln’s Hand
South seizures
Public
property—arsenals, mints, etc…
Fort Sumter
Charleston, SC
Lincoln's
Reinforce?
Surrender?
Middle
ground—resupply Sumter
Southern bombardment
Sumter
dilemma
surrendered
Lincoln calls for militia
VA, AR, TN and NC secede
The Border Strategy
The Border States
MO,
KY, MD, DE
White
population=50% of the entire Confederacy
Cumberland and Tennessee Rivers
Supply lines into Dixie
CSA: grain, gunpowder, and iron
Lincoln’s
War
law
Partial Martial (this rhymes)
MD and MO
aims
“Preserve
the Union”
Doesn’t want to rile slave owners in Border States
The Balance of Forces
Southern Advantages
Defensive position
Home field
Determination—self preservation
Most talented officers
Bred to be soldiers
Northern Advantages
Economy (farm and factory)
Wealth
Railroads
Control of the seas
Manpower
Dethroning King Cotton
Foreign sympathies
The
South needed intervention
Britain needed cotton
British
aristocrats favored the South
British
commoners favored the North
Semi-feudal, aristocratic social order
Uncle Tom’s Cabin
Cotton supply
British warehouses were overstocked with fiber (1857-1860)
Emancipation proclamation—Civil War is over slavery
Cotton
“famine”
Northern aid
Egyptian and Indian cotton
The Decisiveness of Diplomacy
The Trent Affair
Union warship stops British mail steamer north of Cuba
Forcibly removes two Confederate diplomats
Britain riled
Lincoln releases men
Confederate commerce-raiders
C.S.S. Alabama (most famous)*
Built in Britain—crewed by Britons
Officered by Confederates
Captured 250 U.S. merchant ships
Neutral?
Precedent?
Foreign Flare-Ups
The Laird Rams
British built warships designed to sink wooden ships
Confederate plots
CSA agents plundered three banks in Vermont
Canada
Irish-Americans invade Canada
U.S. threatens war—possible invasion of Canada
1866 & 1870
Dominion of Canada created in 1867
France
Napoleon III installs puppet regime in Mexico (1863)
Cinco de Mayo
President Davis v. President Lincoln
States’ Rights Curse
Jefferson
Davis and centralized gov’t.
Skilled strategist and administrator
Obsessed over leadership
Secession?
Governors worked against Davis
Defied rather than harnessed popular opinion
Plague of war
“Old
Abe”
Flexible
Led fickle public opinion
Charity and forbearance
Delegator
Limitations of Wartime Liberties
Upholding the Constitution?
Lincoln &“necessity of war”
Blockade
of southern ports
Increased the size of the Federal Army
Advanced $2 million to private citizens (military purposes)
Suspends the writ of habeas corpus
Arrests dissenters
“supervised”
elections in Border States
Censorship of press
Jefferson
Local
Davis and states’ rights
control>national needs
Volunteers and Draftees
North
Volunteers
& state quotas
90% of troops volunteered
Social and patriotic
pressures
Bounty jumpers
Conscription
Mostly
volunteers
Smaller population
law passed
(1863)
South
Substitutes—$300
NYC Draft Riots
Irish mobs
Deserters—200,000
Draft (Apr. 1862)
Exemptions
$$$$
20+ slaves rule
Conscription
agents
Avoided “Mountain Whites”
Paying for the War: the North
Revenue
Excise
taxes on alcohol and tobacco
Income tax
Customs receipts
Morrill Tariff Act (1861)
Inflating the currency
Greenbacks—value
Debt
$2.6
determined by nation’s credit
billion in war bonds sold
National Banking System (1863)
Standard
bank note currency
Stimulate sale of gov’t. bonds
Paying for the War: the South
Customs receipts
Thwarted
Debt
$400
by the Union blockade
million in war bonds
Revenue
Increased
taxes
10% levy on farm produce
The North’s Economic Boom
Business boomed
Protective
tariffs
Technological advancements
Inflation
“Shoddy Millionaires”
Greed and graft
War profiteers
Oil!
Farms
Cyrus
McCormick & the mechanical reaper
U.S. grain helped fight the war
Women in the Civil War
U.S. Government
Clerical
Industry
1:4
capacities
to 1:3
Military
400
known cases of women fighting
Espionage
U.S. Sanitary Commission
Soldier
relief
Nursing
Clara
Barton, Dorothea Dix and Sally Tompkins
A Crushed Cotton Kingdom
Plantation economy destroyed
Wealth lost
Cotton
and slaves
Blockade
Invading
armies
Southerners demonstrated tremendous sacrifice