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The Civil War

The Civil War. The Nation Argues Winning Mexican American War Leads to Huge Land Gain – Slavery or No Slavery? Revisit the Missouri Compromise?

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Page 1: The Civil War. The Nation Argues Winning Mexican American War Leads to Huge Land Gain – Slavery or No Slavery? Revisit the Missouri Compromise?

The Civil War

Page 2: The Civil War. The Nation Argues Winning Mexican American War Leads to Huge Land Gain – Slavery or No Slavery? Revisit the Missouri Compromise?

The Nation Argues• Winning Mexican American War Leads to

Huge Land Gain– Slavery or No Slavery?

• Revisit the Missouri Compromise?

Page 3: The Civil War. The Nation Argues Winning Mexican American War Leads to Huge Land Gain – Slavery or No Slavery? Revisit the Missouri Compromise?

Sectionalism

• Favoring a region’s interest over the entire nation’s interest– The South– The North– The Western Frontier

Page 4: The Civil War. The Nation Argues Winning Mexican American War Leads to Huge Land Gain – Slavery or No Slavery? Revisit the Missouri Compromise?

Popular Sovereignty

• States vote on having slavery or not in their own state/territory

Page 5: The Civil War. The Nation Argues Winning Mexican American War Leads to Huge Land Gain – Slavery or No Slavery? Revisit the Missouri Compromise?

Free Soil Party• Democrats and Whigs Do Not

Take Position on Slavery in the West

• Support Wilmot Proviso– No slavery or indentured servitude

in the West• Nominate Martin Van Buren

– Only get 10% of the total vote in 1848

Page 6: The Civil War. The Nation Argues Winning Mexican American War Leads to Huge Land Gain – Slavery or No Slavery? Revisit the Missouri Compromise?

California Gold Rush

• Large Population Increase in the West• California Skips Being a Territory and Becomes

a State– Based on Population

• California Wants to Be a Free State– Upsets State Balance– Southern States Upset

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mdwBEKZGz0Q

Page 7: The Civil War. The Nation Argues Winning Mexican American War Leads to Huge Land Gain – Slavery or No Slavery? Revisit the Missouri Compromise?

The Compromise of 1850

• Henry Clay1. California = Free State2. Popular Sovereignty in Remaining

Mexican Territory3. Set a Border Between New

Mexico and Independent Texas4. End Slave Trade in Country’s

Capital5. New Fugitive Slave Law

Page 8: The Civil War. The Nation Argues Winning Mexican American War Leads to Huge Land Gain – Slavery or No Slavery? Revisit the Missouri Compromise?

Compromise Opposition

• John C. Calhoun = South Says No• William Seward = No Compromise Needed• Daniel Webster = Preserve the Union Even if It

Means More Slavery, Crops in Need of Slavery Cannot Grow in Western Soil

• Finally Approved Without Much Change

Page 9: The Civil War. The Nation Argues Winning Mexican American War Leads to Huge Land Gain – Slavery or No Slavery? Revisit the Missouri Compromise?

The Fugitive Slave Act

• Illegal to Help Runaway Slaves– 6 months in jail and/or $1000 Fine

• Slaves Could Be Arrested Anywhere in the Union Regardless of Slavery Laws in the Territory

• When Caught, Only White Owners and Witnesses Allowed to Testify

• $10 = Slave Returned• $5 = Not A Runaway Slave

Page 10: The Civil War. The Nation Argues Winning Mexican American War Leads to Huge Land Gain – Slavery or No Slavery? Revisit the Missouri Compromise?

Uncle Tom’s Cabin

• Most Influential Anti-Slavery Novel• Harriet Beecher Stowe

– Learned of Harsh Slavery Life Through Runaway Slaves

• South = Outrage• North = Praise

Page 11: The Civil War. The Nation Argues Winning Mexican American War Leads to Huge Land Gain – Slavery or No Slavery? Revisit the Missouri Compromise?

The Kansas-Nebraska Act

• Stephen Douglas Wants to Build A Railroad From Illinois to the Pacific

• Southerners Want a Railroad From New Orleans to Texas

• Popular Sovereignty For Kansas and Nebraska• Removes the Missouri Compromise Restrictions• Railroad Never Approved• Violence Erupts in Kansas

Page 12: The Civil War. The Nation Argues Winning Mexican American War Leads to Huge Land Gain – Slavery or No Slavery? Revisit the Missouri Compromise?
Page 13: The Civil War. The Nation Argues Winning Mexican American War Leads to Huge Land Gain – Slavery or No Slavery? Revisit the Missouri Compromise?

Dred Scott Case

• Dred Scott Sues for His Freedom• Became Free When He Lived in Free Territory• Supreme Court Determined Slaves are Not US

Citizens Under the Constitution• Banning Slavery Unconstitutional

Page 14: The Civil War. The Nation Argues Winning Mexican American War Leads to Huge Land Gain – Slavery or No Slavery? Revisit the Missouri Compromise?

Lincoln and Douglas DebatesIllinois's Senate Race in 1858

A series of debates where both men spoke on the issue of slavery throughout the state of IllinoisLincoln lost but was nominated to run for President by the Republican Party in 1860

Republican Candidate Democrat Candidate

Page 15: The Civil War. The Nation Argues Winning Mexican American War Leads to Huge Land Gain – Slavery or No Slavery? Revisit the Missouri Compromise?

Abraham Lincoln’sQuotes on slavery

• “Whenever I hear anyone arguing for slavery, I feel a strong impulse to see it tried on him personally.”

• “A house divided against itself cannot stand. I believe this government cannot endure permanently half-slave and half-free. I do not expect the Union to be dissolved - I do not expect the house to fall - but I do expect it will cease to be divided. It will become all one thing or all the other."

Page 16: The Civil War. The Nation Argues Winning Mexican American War Leads to Huge Land Gain – Slavery or No Slavery? Revisit the Missouri Compromise?

Lincoln ElectedSouthern States Secede

• To pull away from or to leave• First state was South Carolina

December 20, 1860• Last state was North Carolina

May 20, 1861• Total number of states was eleven that

became the Confederate States of America

Page 17: The Civil War. The Nation Argues Winning Mexican American War Leads to Huge Land Gain – Slavery or No Slavery? Revisit the Missouri Compromise?
Page 18: The Civil War. The Nation Argues Winning Mexican American War Leads to Huge Land Gain – Slavery or No Slavery? Revisit the Missouri Compromise?

Rating the North & the South

Rating the North & the South

Page 19: The Civil War. The Nation Argues Winning Mexican American War Leads to Huge Land Gain – Slavery or No Slavery? Revisit the Missouri Compromise?

Resources: North and South

Page 20: The Civil War. The Nation Argues Winning Mexican American War Leads to Huge Land Gain – Slavery or No Slavery? Revisit the Missouri Compromise?
Page 21: The Civil War. The Nation Argues Winning Mexican American War Leads to Huge Land Gain – Slavery or No Slavery? Revisit the Missouri Compromise?

- population - 22 million- efficient railroad system- controlled the navy, which could be used to blockade southern ports and shut down the southern economy.- but would have to fight an offensive war (long supply lines, unfamiliar territory...)- capable military leaders, inc. Ulysses S. Grant

Page 22: The Civil War. The Nation Argues Winning Mexican American War Leads to Huge Land Gain – Slavery or No Slavery? Revisit the Missouri Compromise?

Confederates had excellent Military Leaders-Robert E. Lee and Thomas Jackson

Defending is always easier than attacking - (familiar w/climate and territory, possible psychological advantages)

Farmers fight better than factory workers

Profitable eco. based on cotton exports

But disadvantages…a smaller pop. of 9 million (inc. 3.5 million slaves)

had to import industrial goods

Page 23: The Civil War. The Nation Argues Winning Mexican American War Leads to Huge Land Gain – Slavery or No Slavery? Revisit the Missouri Compromise?

Jefferson Davis• Elected President of the Confederacy• Opposed Secession, But Believed States Had the Right

to Secede• Allegiance to the South > Hopes for Peace• Did Not Seek Out Presidency• Strong Devotion to Politics and Friends

DAVIS

STEVENs

Page 24: The Civil War. The Nation Argues Winning Mexican American War Leads to Huge Land Gain – Slavery or No Slavery? Revisit the Missouri Compromise?

A Northern View of Jeff Davis

Page 25: The Civil War. The Nation Argues Winning Mexican American War Leads to Huge Land Gain – Slavery or No Slavery? Revisit the Missouri Compromise?

The Confederate “White House”

The Confederate “White House”

Page 26: The Civil War. The Nation Argues Winning Mexican American War Leads to Huge Land Gain – Slavery or No Slavery? Revisit the Missouri Compromise?

With God As Our Vindicator”

Confederate Seal

Page 27: The Civil War. The Nation Argues Winning Mexican American War Leads to Huge Land Gain – Slavery or No Slavery? Revisit the Missouri Compromise?

The Union and Confederacy in 1861

The Union and Confederacy in 1861

Page 28: The Civil War. The Nation Argues Winning Mexican American War Leads to Huge Land Gain – Slavery or No Slavery? Revisit the Missouri Compromise?

Strategy of the Union and Confederacy• Union wanted to:

– Destroy the Southern economy by using a naval blockade (Anaconda Plan)

– Gain control of the Mississippi River in order to divide the Confederacy

– Capture Richmond (Confederate capital)• Confederacy wanted to:

– Defend its territory– Wear down the Union’s will to fight– Take Washington, D.C. (Federal capital)– Win foreign allies

Page 29: The Civil War. The Nation Argues Winning Mexican American War Leads to Huge Land Gain – Slavery or No Slavery? Revisit the Missouri Compromise?

General Grant’s Strategy in the West• Grant’s strategy focused on control of the

Mississippi River which would allow the North to cut the eastern states of the Confederacy off from important sources of food production in the western states of Arkansas, Louisiana, and Texas.

• From bases on the Mississippi, the Union army would be able to attack the South’s communication and transportation network.

Page 30: The Civil War. The Nation Argues Winning Mexican American War Leads to Huge Land Gain – Slavery or No Slavery? Revisit the Missouri Compromise?

Overviewof

the North’sCivil WarStrategy:

“Anaconda”Plan

Page 31: The Civil War. The Nation Argues Winning Mexican American War Leads to Huge Land Gain – Slavery or No Slavery? Revisit the Missouri Compromise?

The “Anaconda” Plan

Page 32: The Civil War. The Nation Argues Winning Mexican American War Leads to Huge Land Gain – Slavery or No Slavery? Revisit the Missouri Compromise?

Battle of Bull Run (1st Manassas),

July, 1861

Battle of Bull Run (1st Manassas),

July, 1861

Page 33: The Civil War. The Nation Argues Winning Mexican American War Leads to Huge Land Gain – Slavery or No Slavery? Revisit the Missouri Compromise?

The War Begins

Events at Fort Sumter Lincoln became president.

The South took over federal forts.

Federal troops refused to surrender.

Confederate guns opened fire.

The Civil War began.

Page 34: The Civil War. The Nation Argues Winning Mexican American War Leads to Huge Land Gain – Slavery or No Slavery? Revisit the Missouri Compromise?

Men Present for Duty in the Civil War

Men Present for Duty in the Civil War

Page 35: The Civil War. The Nation Argues Winning Mexican American War Leads to Huge Land Gain – Slavery or No Slavery? Revisit the Missouri Compromise?

Events Leading to the Bombardment of Ft. Sumter

The fort controlled the entrance to Charleston Harbor.

Federal troops at Ft. Sumter were weak and low on supplies.

The Union refused the Confederacy’s order to evacuate.

***This event was extremely important because it led Lincoln to declare that the South was in rebellion and asked for a militia to put down the South’s revolt.

Page 36: The Civil War. The Nation Argues Winning Mexican American War Leads to Huge Land Gain – Slavery or No Slavery? Revisit the Missouri Compromise?

Arkansas and the Upper SouthArkansas and the Upper South joined the Confederacy claiming “the South must go with the South.”

Border StatesBoth the North and South wanted to claim the border states because: The border states controlled key

stretches of the Ohio and Mississippi Rivers.

Washington, D.C., the federal capital, was located within Maryland.

Page 37: The Civil War. The Nation Argues Winning Mexican American War Leads to Huge Land Gain – Slavery or No Slavery? Revisit the Missouri Compromise?

Confederate Victories in Virginia

• First Battle of Bull Run – July 1861• Seven Days’ Battle – June-July 1862• Second Battle of Bull Run – August 1862

*** Importance of these battles• The Union was pushed out of Virginia.• The Confederacy moved into the North.

Page 38: The Civil War. The Nation Argues Winning Mexican American War Leads to Huge Land Gain – Slavery or No Slavery? Revisit the Missouri Compromise?

Battle of AntietamThe Battle of Antietam, on September 17, 1862, stopped the Confederate’s northward advance and allowed Lincoln to push for the Emancipation Proclamation.

The Monitor and the Virginia (Ironclad ships) The Monitor forced the

Virginia to withdraw from Hampton Roads, an important waterway.

This event saved the Union fleet and blockade.

Page 39: The Civil War. The Nation Argues Winning Mexican American War Leads to Huge Land Gain – Slavery or No Slavery? Revisit the Missouri Compromise?

The Battle of the Ironclads,

March, 1862

The Battle of the Ironclads,

March, 1862The Monitor

vs.the Merrimac

The Monitor vs.

the Merrimac

Page 40: The Civil War. The Nation Argues Winning Mexican American War Leads to Huge Land Gain – Slavery or No Slavery? Revisit the Missouri Compromise?

The War in the West

Strategies

• Union holds its ground, despite surprise attack.

Implications

• gave Union greater control of the Mississippi River valley

Battle of Shiloh

Siege of Vicksburg

Battle of Pea Ridge

• Union attacked southern forces at Jackson, obliterating Vicksburg’s reinforcements.

• Fought to protect Union forts in the Midwest.

• gave the Union total control of the Mississippi River, cutting off the western states (AK, LA, TX)

• gave the Union control over Missouri

Page 41: The Civil War. The Nation Argues Winning Mexican American War Leads to Huge Land Gain – Slavery or No Slavery? Revisit the Missouri Compromise?
Page 42: The Civil War. The Nation Argues Winning Mexican American War Leads to Huge Land Gain – Slavery or No Slavery? Revisit the Missouri Compromise?

The Fall of VicksburgThe fall of Vicksburg, Mississippi, was important because it gave the Union control of the Mississippi River and cut the South in 1/2.

Page 43: The Civil War. The Nation Argues Winning Mexican American War Leads to Huge Land Gain – Slavery or No Slavery? Revisit the Missouri Compromise?

The Emancipation Proclamation

• Union Troops Nearby = Slave Escape• Slave Labor Loss Hurt Southern Economy• Some Opposition From Northerners

– Want to Restore Union, Not End Slavery– Some Argue Lincoln Did Not Do Enough

Page 44: The Civil War. The Nation Argues Winning Mexican American War Leads to Huge Land Gain – Slavery or No Slavery? Revisit the Missouri Compromise?

TheEmancipationProclamation

Page 45: The Civil War. The Nation Argues Winning Mexican American War Leads to Huge Land Gain – Slavery or No Slavery? Revisit the Missouri Compromise?

The Southern View of Emancipation

The Southern View of Emancipation

Page 46: The Civil War. The Nation Argues Winning Mexican American War Leads to Huge Land Gain – Slavery or No Slavery? Revisit the Missouri Compromise?

Emancipation in 1863Emancipation in 1863

Freed the slaves in the Confederacy but was ignored by those states

Page 47: The Civil War. The Nation Argues Winning Mexican American War Leads to Huge Land Gain – Slavery or No Slavery? Revisit the Missouri Compromise?

African American and Women’s Contributions to the War

• participated in military service

• served in the workforce

• women provided medical care and ran plantations and farms

Page 48: The Civil War. The Nation Argues Winning Mexican American War Leads to Huge Land Gain – Slavery or No Slavery? Revisit the Missouri Compromise?

African-Americans in Civil War Battles

African-Americans in Civil War Battles

Page 49: The Civil War. The Nation Argues Winning Mexican American War Leads to Huge Land Gain – Slavery or No Slavery? Revisit the Missouri Compromise?

The Famous 54th Massachusetts

Page 50: The Civil War. The Nation Argues Winning Mexican American War Leads to Huge Land Gain – Slavery or No Slavery? Revisit the Missouri Compromise?
Page 51: The Civil War. The Nation Argues Winning Mexican American War Leads to Huge Land Gain – Slavery or No Slavery? Revisit the Missouri Compromise?

Importance of the Battle of Gettysburg• It was a major turning point because General Lee

never again entered the North.• This Union victory took place on the same day as

General Grant’s capture of Vicksburg in Mississippi.• Both these critical victories made northerners

believe that the Confederacy could be defeated.

Page 52: The Civil War. The Nation Argues Winning Mexican American War Leads to Huge Land Gain – Slavery or No Slavery? Revisit the Missouri Compromise?

The Road to Gettysburg: 1863

The Road to Gettysburg: 1863

Page 53: The Civil War. The Nation Argues Winning Mexican American War Leads to Huge Land Gain – Slavery or No Slavery? Revisit the Missouri Compromise?

Gettysburg CasualtiesGettysburg Casualties

Page 54: The Civil War. The Nation Argues Winning Mexican American War Leads to Huge Land Gain – Slavery or No Slavery? Revisit the Missouri Compromise?
Page 55: The Civil War. The Nation Argues Winning Mexican American War Leads to Huge Land Gain – Slavery or No Slavery? Revisit the Missouri Compromise?

that from these honored dead we take increased devotion to that cause for which they gave the last full measure of devotion -- that we here highly resolve that these dead shall not have died in vain -- that this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom -- and that government of the people, by the people, for the people, shall not perish from the earth.

Abe Lincoln

Page 56: The Civil War. The Nation Argues Winning Mexican American War Leads to Huge Land Gain – Slavery or No Slavery? Revisit the Missouri Compromise?

Campaigns Launched inVirginia and Lower South

• Wilderness Campaign – May-June 1864• Battle of Cold Harbor – June 1-3, 1864• Battle in Atlanta – Atlanta fell to General

Sherman on September 2, 1864• Sherman’s March to the Sea – ended

December 10, 1864 when Sherman reached Savannah, Georgia

Page 57: The Civil War. The Nation Argues Winning Mexican American War Leads to Huge Land Gain – Slavery or No Slavery? Revisit the Missouri Compromise?

Sherman’s

Marchthroug

hGeorgiato theSea, 1864

Sherman’s

Marchthroug

hGeorgiato theSea, 1864

Page 58: The Civil War. The Nation Argues Winning Mexican American War Leads to Huge Land Gain – Slavery or No Slavery? Revisit the Missouri Compromise?

The End of the Civil War• Trapped and defenseless in Richmond,

Virginia, Lee surrendered to Grant at Appomattox Courthouse on April 9, 1865.

• The Civil War had come to an end.

Page 59: The Civil War. The Nation Argues Winning Mexican American War Leads to Huge Land Gain – Slavery or No Slavery? Revisit the Missouri Compromise?

Appomattox CourthouseApril 9th, 1865

General Robert E. Lee (Confederacy) Surrendering to: Ulysses S. Grant (Union)

•Meeting lasted 1 ½ hours•The Confederates were to return home with dignity and respect

McLean Home

Page 60: The Civil War. The Nation Argues Winning Mexican American War Leads to Huge Land Gain – Slavery or No Slavery? Revisit the Missouri Compromise?

… More Surrendering!!

Bennitt PlaceConfederate: Joseph Johnston

Union: William T. Sherman

Page 61: The Civil War. The Nation Argues Winning Mexican American War Leads to Huge Land Gain – Slavery or No Slavery? Revisit the Missouri Compromise?

After four bloody years of civil war, the South was defeated and Reconstruction must begin.

Page 62: The Civil War. The Nation Argues Winning Mexican American War Leads to Huge Land Gain – Slavery or No Slavery? Revisit the Missouri Compromise?

Casualties on Both Sides

Casualties on Both Sides

Page 63: The Civil War. The Nation Argues Winning Mexican American War Leads to Huge Land Gain – Slavery or No Slavery? Revisit the Missouri Compromise?

Over 618,000 military deaths during Civil War.Nearly 20,000 North Carolinians killed in battleOver 20,000 die from other causes (mainly disease)North Carolina has more deaths due to the Civil Warthan any other Confederate State!