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The War Ends Setting the Scene Chapter 17 section 5 Pg.505

The War Ends Setting the Scene Chapter 17 section 5 Pg.505

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Page 1: The War Ends Setting the Scene Chapter 17 section 5 Pg.505

The War EndsSetting the Scene

Chapter 17

section 5

Pg.505

Page 2: The War Ends Setting the Scene Chapter 17 section 5 Pg.505

The War EndsSetting the Scene

Chapter 17

section 5

Pg.505

In 1864, Lincoln appointed General Ulysses S. Grant as the top general or commander-in-chief of the Union (US) army. He chose grant because Grant seemed to find a solution for every problem the troops encountered. Grant had a “never-say-die” attitude.

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The War EndsSetting the Scene

Pg.505

Grant was good at finding solutions to problems the army faced. He strung telegraph wires behind the troops as he advanced farther and farther into the South to communicate with the other generals, Washington D.C., and supply lines in the North.

Chapter 17

section 5

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The Fall of VicksburgChapter 17

section 5

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The Fall of VicksburgChapter 17

section 5

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The Fall of Vicksburg

Vicksburg, Mississippi was located high up on a cliff overlooking the Mississippi River. It was a great defensive position. At first, the Union could do nothing to capture Vicksburg from the west.

Chapter 17

section 5

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The Fall of Vicksburg

Since there’s a solution to every problem for General Grant, he moved south and marched inland to capture Jackson, Mississippi so that he could attack Vicksburg from behind.

Chapter 17

section 5

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The Fall of VicksburgChapter 17

section 5

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The Fall of VicksburgChapter 17

section 5

After a 6 week siege (surrounding Vicksburg and cutting off supplies), the Union finally captured the city and had complete control of the Mississippi River.

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The Fall of VicksburgChapter 17

section 5

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The Fall of VicksburgChapter 17

section 5

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Union Victory at GettysburgChapter 17

section 5

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Union Victory at Gettysburg

After Confederate victories at

Fredericksburg and Chancellorsville,

General Lee again hoped to score a

Confederate victory in the North, this time at

Gettysburg, Pennsylvania. If it was successful, he

might be able to head south and capture Washington D.C.

Chapter 17

section 5

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Union Victory at Gettysburg

On day 1 of the battle, the Confederates pushed the Union army out of the town of Gettysburg and back to high ground called Cemetery Ridge.

Gettysburg

Chapter 17

section 5

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Union Victory at Gettysburg

On day 2 of the battle, the Confederates attacked both sides of the Union lines on Cemetery Ridge, but the Union was able to hold on and keep the high ground.

Chapter 17

section 5

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Union Victory at GettysburgChapter 17

section 5

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Union Victory at Gettysburg

On day 3 of the battle, the Confederates tried to attack the center of the Union line on Cemetery Ridge with a 15,000 man army, hoping to split the Union army in two. This was known as Pickett’s Charge. The Confederates were unsuccessful and lost many soldiers. General Lee blamed himself for the failure.

PICKETT’S

CHARGE

Chapter 17

section 5

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Union Victory at Gettysburg

Pickett’s Charge

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Union Victory at Gettysburg

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Union Victory at Gettysburg

The victories at Vicksburg and Gettysburg were turning points in the war. After these

Confederate loses, the South was weakened and could only try to defend their territory.

They lost so many soldiers that they were not strong enough to attack the North again.

Chapter 17

section 5

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The Gettysburg AddressChapter 17

section 5

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The Gettysburg Address

Four score and seven years ago our fathers brought forth on this continent, a new nation, conceived in Liberty, and dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal. Now we are engaged in a great civil war, testing whether that nation, or any nation so conceived and so dedicated, can long endure. We are met on a great battle-field of that war. We have come to dedicate a portion of that field, as a final resting place for those who here gave their lives that that nation might live. It is altogether fitting and proper that we should do this. But in a larger sense, we can not dedicate, we can not hallow this ground. The brave men living and dead, who struggled here, have consecrated it, far above our poor power to add or detract. The world will little note, nor long remember what we say here, but it can never forget what they did here. It is for us the living, rather, to be dedicated here to the unfinished work which they who fought here have thus far so nobly advanced. It is rather for us to be here dedicated to the great task remaining before us -- that from these honored dead we take increased devotion to that cause for which they gave the last full measure of their 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, and for the people, shall not perish from the earth.

Chapter 17

section 5

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The Gettysburg AddressChapter 17

section 5

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Grant’s Plan for TOTAL WAR!Chapter 17

section 5

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Grant’s Plan for TOTAL WAR!

I can’t spare this man.He fights.

As we read in the introduction, because of hisgreat success in the West, Lincoln appointedGeneral Grant as commander of the wholeUnion army in 1864.

Ulysses S. Grant

Chapter 17

section 5

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Grant’s Plan for TOTAL WAR!

Ulysses S. Grant

TOTAL WAR!

Grant’s plan for TOTAL WAR was a plan to end the South’s ability to fight. To do this, he ordered the Union Generals to destroy crops, equipment, houses, government buildings, railroads, and anything they find that might be useful to the enemy as they capture new land in the South.

Chapter 17

section 5

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Grant’s Plan for TOTAL WAR!

General Philip

Sheridan

TOTAL WAR!

General William

Tecumseh Sherman

Chapter 17

section 5

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Sheridan in the ShenandoahChapter 17

section 5

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Sheridan in the Shenandoah

General Philip

Sheridan

TOTAL WAR!

General U.S. Grant

Yes sir!

“Leave nothing to invite the enemy to return. Destroy whatever cannot be consumed. Let the valley be left so that crows flying over it will have to carry their rations [food] with them.”

Chapter 17

section 5

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Sheridan in the Shenandoah

General Philip

Sheridan

TOTAL WAR!

General Sheridan did exactly as Grant told him to in a series of battles in the Shenandoah Valley including:

- The Battle of Front Royal / Guard Hill - The Battle of Berryhill

- The Battle of Summit Point - The Battle of Winchester

- The Battle of Smithfield Crossing - The Battle of Fisher’s Hill

- The Battle of Martinsburg - The Battle of Tom’s Brook

- The Battle of Cedar Creek

Chapter 17

section 5

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Sherman’s March to the SeaChapter 17

section 5

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Sherman’s March to the SeaChapter 17

section 5

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Sherman’s March to the Sea

General William

Tecumseh Sherman

General Sherman did exactly as Grant told him to as he marched through Augusta, Georgia, Atlanta, Georgia and down to Savannah, Georgia on the coast of the Atlantic Ocean. Sherman and his troops destroyed everything in their path.

TOTAL WAR!Chapter

17

section 5

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Election of 1864

Abraham LincolnRepublican

- win the war, put the Union back together- end slavery in the South

George C. McClellanDemocrat

- end the war immediately- make peace with the South- allow the South to keep slavery

Chapter 17

section 5

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Lincoln is ReelectedChapter 17

section 5

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Lincoln is ReelectedChapter 17

section 5

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Lincoln is Reelected

Lincoln’s Second Inaugural Address

Chapter 17

section 5

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The Civil War Ends

The Battle of the Wilderness

Chapter 17

section 5

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The Civil War Ends

The Battle of Spotsylvania

Chapter 17

section 5

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The Civil War Ends

The Battle of Cold Harbor

Chapter 17

section 5

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The Civil War Ends

Siege of Petersburg

Chapter 17

section 5

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The Civil War Ends

The Fall of Richmond, Virginia

Chapter 17

section 5

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The Surrender atAppomattox Courthouse, Virginia

Chapter 17

section 5

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Chapter 17

section 5

The Surrender atAppomattox Courthouse, Virginia

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Chapter 17

section 5

The Surrender atAppomattox Courthouse, Virginia

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The terms of surrender:

- Confederate soldiers have to turn over their rifles, but officers can keep their pistols.

- Soldiers who had horses could keep them.

- Confederate soldiers will be allowed to return to

his home without being disturbed by the army.

“The war is over. The rebelsare our countrymen again.”

Chapter 17

section 5

The Surrender atAppomattox Courthouse, Virginia