The Civil War 1861-65 Quiz
Arrange the following in chronological order: (A) the Battle of Bull Run, (B) the Battle of Gettysburg, (C) Lee's surrender at Appomattox, and (D) the Battle of Antietam.
A, D, B, C
During the Civil War,
African-American troops were enlisted by the Union army only after the Emancipation Proclamation was issued.
The Confederacy's most effective commerce-raider was the
Alabama
The South believed that the British would come to its aid because
Britain was dependent on Southern "King Cotton".
When it was issued in 1863, the Emancipation Proclamation declared free only those slaves in
Confederate states still in rebellion against the United States.
Clement L. Vallandigham, a Southern sympathizer and a tempestuous opponent of the draft and of the war, was derisively labeled by supporters of President Lincoln as a
Copperhead
The political group in the North most dangerous to the Union cause was the group known as...
Copperheads
In the l864 election, the Democratic party nominated ____ to oppose Lincoln's reelection.
George McClellan
The two major battles of the Civil War fought on Union soil were
Gettysburg and Antietam
Confederate batteries fired on Fort Sumter when it was learned that
Lincoln had ordered supplies sent to the fort.
As a result of the Union fighting to a draw militarily at Antietam Creek (1862) with Robert E. Lee's Confederate army
Lincoln was now prepared to issue his Emancipation Proclamation.
In the election of 1864, the Republicans joined with the prowar Democrats and founded the ____ party.
Union
Union General Ulysses S. Grant's basic strategy in the Civil War involved
assailing the enemy's armies simultaneously, massively, and directly.
General Robert E. Lee decided to invade the North through Pennsylvania in the summer of 1863 in order to
deliver a decisive blow that would strengthen the Northern peace movement and encourage foreign intervention on behalf of the South.
Of all the hardships faced by the soldiers during the Civil War, the greatest was
disease.
The North's greatest strength in the Civil War was its
economy, particularly its greater manufacturing capacity and more efficient and extensive railroad network.
The greatest weakness of the South during the Civil War was its
economy, particularly its limited manufacturing capacity and inferior railroad network.
Lincoln declared from the outset of the Civil War that
he was not fighting to free black slaves.
African Americans who fought for the Union Army in the Civil War
included the brave and accomplished 54th Massachusetts Infantry Regiment, which suffered heavy casualties during the Union siege of Fort Wagner, South Carolina in 1863.
The Union victory at Vicksburg on July 4, 1863 was of major importance for all of the following reasons except
it was the last major battle of the Civil War.
President Lincoln hoped that a Union victory at Bull Run (Manassas Junction) in 1861 would
lead to the capture of the Confederate capital at Richmond.
As the Civil War began, the South seemed to have the advantage of
more talented military leaders.
A supposed asset for the South at the beginning of the Civil War that never materialized to its real advantage was
naval/military intervention from Britain and France.
The Confederacy enlisted slaves into their army as fighting soldiers
only a month before the war ended.
General George B. McClellan, commander of the Union's Army of the Potomac, is best described as
overly cautious.
All Slavery was legally abolished in the United States by the
ratification of the Thirteenth Amendment to the Constitution.
In Lincoln's attempts to preserve the Union, he did all of the following questionable actions as president except
refused to implement a draft, or conscription law, during the war.
Lincoln's declaration that the North sought to preserve the Union with or without slavery
revealed the influence of the Border States on his policies.
Napoleon III's attempt to install Maximilian on the Mexican throne was a clear violation of
the Monroe Doctrine.
In 1861, many Northerners were willing to allow Southern states to leave the Union until
the South attacked Fort Sumter.
During the Civil War, Britain and the United States were nearly provoked into war by
the Trent affair, involving the removal of Southern diplomats from a British ship by a Union warship in 1861.
The Southern cause was weakened by
the concept of states' rights that the Confederacy professed ran contrary to the vision of a tight, well-knit central government held by its president, Jefferson Davis.This answer is correct.
Most working people in Britain sided with the North because
they had developed a class consciousness and moral revulsion about the evils of slavery and hoped that the Civil War would eventually extinguish slavery in the South and the western territories.
In order to persuade the Border States to remain in the Union, President Lincoln
used legally dubious methods including the declaration of martial law in Maryland and the deployment of Union soldiers in a local civil war in Missouri.
The Civil War was a "women's war" in all of the following ways except
women were encouraged to run for office to fill political posts abandoned by men.