Chapter 14 Reading Guide

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Which effect of the war do you view as most significant?

Freedom from Slavery. It led to an imbalance in the national economy.

Foreign Affairs and Diplomacy

- Confederate hopes for victory depended on diplomacy and military - Confederate leaders wanted cotton to be king - Wanted British or French to give aid in the war - Union's POV: Critical not for confederacy to get foreign help

The Confederate States of America

- Constitution modeled after U.S. constitution - denied tariff power and federal internal improvements - prohibited foreign slave trade - president Davis was rejected greater authority - Georgia was urged to secede - Confederacy had a financial war; NO MONEY

Economic Change

- Costs of war were staggering and called for extreme measures by both sides

Thirteenth Amendment

- Country needed to ratify an amendment to free enslaved people - Dec. 1865 Amendment ratified to end slavery - Could not be clearer or simpler

Fort Sumter

- Danger of a war breaking out was acute - Two forts were harbored and cut off from vital supplements - Lincoln urged South Carolina to let go - It didn't, and the war began

Fredericksburg

- Dec. 1862 large Union army attacked Lee's army in Virginia - Union lost 12,000 compared to Confederates losing 5,000 - Both sides slow to see why big guns weren't working - 1862 no prospect of military victory for either side

Keeping Border States in the Union

- Delaware, Missouri, Maryland, and Kentucky stayed in the Union - Maryland had Union attacks and threats on the Washington railroad - Union army used martial law to keep the state under federal control - Missouri: presence of U.S. troops - Pro south elements - Lincoln avoided emancipation of slaves to protect unionists in the border states

Election of 1864

- Democratic nominee was General McClellan - Republicans renamed Unionists to attract war dogs - Chose Lincoln again - Lincoln became president again

Political Change

- Electoral process continued during the war - Secession created Republican majorities in both house of Congress - Sharp differences between the radical faction and moderate faction - Most democrats supported the war - Peace democrats and copperheads opposed the war and wanted peace - Congressman Vallandigham of Ohio was banished from U.S. because of his pro-confederacy speeches

Morrill Land Grant Act

- Encourage states to use the sale of federal land grants

Consequences

- Freed only about 1 percent of slaves - Slavery still allowed in border states - Of major importance; Enlarged purpose of war - Union army had new recruits because of freed slaves

Peninsula Campaign

- General McClellan wanted training for his troops - Army invaded Virginia in 1862 - General Lee halted the Union army

Ex Parte Milligan

- Government had acted improperly in Indiana - Certain civilians could be subject to military trial in court

Grant in the West

- Grant used a combination of gunboats and army maneuvers to capture forts on MS tributary - Victories opened up MS to Union attack - Confederates responded by killing 23,000 soldiers in Tennessee - Grant's victories complemented by Union capture of New Orleans.

Modernizing Northern Society

- Historians debate on whether the war helped or hindered the Northern economy - Workers' wage did not keep pace with inflation - War placed a premium on mass production and complex organization - Sped up consolidation of North's manufacturing business - Weapon makers became millionaires

The End of the War

- Hunger spread through the South - Grant continued to outflank Lee's lines until they collapsed - Everyone knew the end was near

Failure of Cotton Diplomacy

- King Cotton didn't work, because Europeans got cotton from elsewhere instead - Two factors in Britain's decision not to recognize the Confederacy 1. Lee's setback at Antietam 2. Lincoln's Emancipation Proclamation

Sherman's March

- Led 100,000 Union men across Georgia and into South Carolina - Pioneer of total war tactics - marched through Georgia - Took Atlanta to help Lincoln's prospects - Broke the spirit of the Confederacy and its will to fight on

Gettysburg

- Lee led army into Maryland and Pennsylvania - Hope for peace or foreign intervention - 1863 50,000 died; Lee's surge was futile - Destroyed key part of Confederate army - Never regained the offensive

Second Battle of Bull Run

- Lee took advantage of a change in Generals - Sent Union army backwards - Pope started to defend Washington

The War Begins

- Lincoln assured Southerners he would not interfere with slavery

Use of Executive Power

- Lincoln drew upon his powers: - Called for "75,000 volunteers" to put down the Confederacy - Authorized spending for a war - Suspended the writ of habeas corpus

Civil Liberties

- Lincoln focused more on prosecuting war - Lincoln suspended Habeas Corpus in pro-confederate states - Democrats said Lincoln was just a tyrant - Supreme Court ruled that federal government hadn't acted fully properly

The End of Slavery

- Lincoln hesitant to take action against slavery - Lincoln's concerns: 1. Support of border states 2. Constitutional protections of slavery 3. Racial prejudice of Northerners 4. Premature action to be overturned

Assassination of Lincoln

- Lincoln urged that the South be treated well - John Wilkes Booth killed Lincoln - Aroused Union anger when sympathy was needed for Confederates - Lincoln's leadership was missed

Homestead Act

- Promoted settlement of the Great Plains

Morrill Tariff Act

- Raised tariffs and increased revenue to protect manufacturers

Freedmen in the War

- 1/4th of slaves sought Union army protection - 200,000 Blacks served in Union army - Performed courageously - Gained respect of white soldiers

Trent Affair

- 1861 British came close to siding with Confederacy - Union warship took Confederate diplomats to Britain prisoner - Britain threatened war over the incident - Lincoln let them go - Diplomats failed to obtain their goal

The Draft

- 1861 When volunteers for soldiers were short, both sides in the war drafted people - First conscription act made all men between 20 and 45 liable for military service - Allowed draftees to be exempt by either finding a substitute or paying a fee - July 1863 People rebelled against draft; It was temporarily suspended

Emancipation Proclamation

- 1862 Lincoln used his powers to free all slaves from states - Justified as military necessity - Encouraged border states to free slaves - 1862 Lincoln delivered an Emancipation Proclamation

Vicksburg

- 1863 Union forces controlled New Orleans and Mississippi River - Union artillery bombed Vicksburg - Federal warships fully controlled Mississippi River

The Union Triumphs, 1863 to 1865

- 1863 War turning against Confederates - Economy in desperate shape

Grant in Command

- 1864 Grant made commander of all Union armies - Strategy of war by attrition - his army faced heavy casualties - reduced Lee's army - Became a modern "total" war

First Battle of Bull Run

- 30,000 troops marched from D.C. to attack Confederate forces - Confederate forces countered and scared the Union troops away - Showed that the war would not be short and that the rebels were not to be messed with

Confederate Raiders

- Able to gain enough recognition to buy British warships - These did great damage to Union vessels - Adams realized that Confederates were buying superships - Persuaded British to not sell them

Secession of the Upper South

- After Lincoln's power was imminent, four more states joined the Confederacy - Confederates moved their capital to Richmond, Virginia - Western Virginia stayed loyal to union, and thus became a separate state

Antietam

- After victory, Lee went to Maryland. Hoped victory here would get British support - McClellan got Lee's battle plan from a copy left by a Confederate Officer - 22,000 soldiers were killed at Antietam - McClellan was removed by Lincoln after failing to take advantage of weak confederacy - Antietam gave Union a moral victory - Lincoln used this triumph to strike into slavery

Effects of the War on Civilian Life

- American society underwent deep and wrenching changes

Pacific Railway Act

- Authorized the building of a transcontinental railroad

End of Slavery

- Blacks born into slavery were most affected by the civil war - 1865 13th amendment led to 4 million people freed - Economic hardship and political oppression would continue - Slaves with no rights were now protected by the Constitution - 750,000 lives and 15 billion in war costs - Civil War destroyed slavery and destroyed South's economy

Wartime Advantages

- Both North and South had strengths and weaknesses

Military

- Confederacy only had to defend; Union had to conquer - Had experienced leaders and high troop morale - Union hoped their higher population would work in their favor - Union could count on U.S. Navy

Turning Point

- Confederacy suffered 2 crushing defeats

Surrender at Appomattox

- Confederate government tried to negotiate for peace - Lee retreated from Richmond with 30,000 men - Forced to surrender by Grant, who treated him with respect

Political

- Confederate goal: Fighting for independence - Union goal: Fighting to preserve - Confederates needed a strong federal government; Didn't have that - Ultimate hope of the Confederates was that people would quit the war

Union Strategy

- Scott's strategy: - U.S. Navy blockade Southern ports - Control of Mississippi River; Cause division - Raise 500,000 troop army - Key in achieving Northern victory

First Years of a Long War

- Took 4 years for the war - Union troops finally won

Confiscation Acts

- Union General Butler refused to return prisoners - first Confiscation Act allowed enemy property to be seize - thousands of "contrabands" found their way into Union camps - 1862 second Confiscation Act Freed people enslaved by those against U.S.A.

Financing the War

- Union borrowed 2.6 billion through the sale of government bonds - U.S. treasury issued paper currency called Greenbacks - This currency contributed to inflation - Prices in the North rose by 80% during the war - First unified bank system since Andrew Jackson's vetoes in the 1830s

Economic

- Union dominated - Controlled most of the banking and capital - Northern logistical skills came in handy - Confederates counted on outside help to be successful

Monitor vs. Merrimac

- Union hopes depended on maximization of economic and naval advantage - Ironclad ship defeated Union ships under McClellan - Monitor went against Merrimac, and stopped it from defeating Union - Vulnerable wooden ships were now replaced by more formidable ironclad ones

Social Change

- Women and blacks were most affected by the war - Absence of men gave women added responsibilities - Women also played a critical role as nurses and soldier volunteers - Most women continued Urban or Rural jobs after the war - Civil war had two effects on Women 1. Field of Nursing open to women 2. Responsibilities led to equal voting rights for women

Political Dominance of the North

- suspensions were only temporary - long term effects of the war more important - supremacy of federal government was an accepted fact - abolition of slavery enhanced American democracy - 1863 Lincoln implored the idea of equality for all

List and eplain the four main ways the civil war impacted the nation.

1. 750,000 people died 2. Freed 4 million people from slavery 3. Accelerated industrialization and modernization in the North 4. Destroyed much of the South


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