American Civil War
American Civil War
American Civil War
US History/Civil War
Politics Before The War
In the presidential election of 1860 the Republican Party nominated Abraham Lincoln as its candidate. Party spirit
soared as leaders declared that slavery could spread no farther. The party also promised a tariff for the protection of
industry and pledged the enactment of a law granting free homesteads to settlers who would help in the opening of
the West. The Democrats were not united. Southerners split from the party and nominated Vice President John C.
Breckenridge of Kentucky for president. Stephen A. Douglas was the nominee of northern Democrats. Diehard
Whigs from the border states, formed into the Constitutional Union Party, nominated John C. Bell of Tennessee.
Lincoln and Douglas competed in the North, and Breckenridge and Bell in the South. Lincoln won only 39 percent
of the popular vote, but had a clear majority of 180 electoral votes, carrying all 18 free states. Bell won Tennessee,
Kentucky and Virginia; Breckenridge took the other slave states except for Missouri, which was won by Douglas.
Despite his poor electoral showing, Douglas trailed only Lincoln in the popular vote. Lincoln's election made South
Carolina's secession from the Union a foregone conclusion.
Dixie's Constitution
By the end of March, 1861, the Confederacy had created a constitution and elected its first and only president,
Jefferson Davis. The Constitution of the Confederate States of America was the supreme law of the Confederate
States of America, as adopted on March 11, 1861 and in effect through the conclusion of the American Civil War.
The Confederacy also operated under a Provisional Constitution from February 8, 1861 to March 11, 1861.
In regard to most articles of the Constitution, the document is a word-for-word duplicate of the United States
Constitution. The original, hand-written document is currently located in the University of Georgia archives at
Athens, Georgia. The major differences between the two constitutions was the Confederacy's greater emphasis on the
rights of individual member states, and an explicit support of slavery.
US History/Civil War
Each side proceeded to determine its strategies. The Confederate Army had a defensive-offensive strategy. The
Confederacy only needed to defend itself and win to gain independence, but occasionally when the conditions were
right, they would strike offensivesively into the North. 3 people who had important roles in Confederate plans, had
different strategies. General Robert Lee claimed that they have to fight the Union head on. Davids however, argued
that they have to fight a soley defensive war. Jackson claimed that they need to invade Union's important cities first
and defeat the enemy that tires to reclaim the cities.
Meanwhile, the strategy of aging Union General Winfield Scott became popularly known as the Anaconda Plan. The
Anaconda Plan, so named after the South American snake that strangles its victims to death, aimed to defeat the
Confederacy by surrounding it on all sides with a blockade of Southern ports and the swift capture of the Mississippi
River.
First Battle of Bull Run and the Early Stages of the War
Four slave states remained in the Union: Delaware, Maryland, Kentucky, and Missouri. The four border states were
all important, and Lincoln did not want them to join the Confederacy. Missouri controlled parts of the Mississippi
River, Kentucky controlled the Ohio river, and Delaware was close to the important city of Philadelphia. Perhaps the
most important border state was Maryland. It was close to the Confederate capital, Richmond, Virginia, and the
Union capital, Washington, was located between pro-Confederate sections of Maryland and seceded Virginia.
Lincoln knew that he had to be cautious if he did not want these states to join the Confederacy. But they did anyways
(with the exception of Maryland) after the Battle of Fort Sumter.
Both sides had advantages and weaknesses. The North had a greater population, more factories, supplies and more
money than the South. The South had more experienced military leadership, better trained armies, and the advantage
of fighting on familiar territory. Robert E. Lee is a good example because he was called on by president Lincoln
before civil war began to lead the Union army. But Lee refused and joined Confederate army because he couldn't
fight against his homeland, Virginia after they seceded.
However, the Confederacy faced considerable problems. Support for secession and the war was not unanimous, and
all of the southern states provided considerable numbers of troops for the Union armies. Moreover, the presence of
slavery acted as a drain of southern manpower, as adult males who might otherwise join the army were required to
police the slaves and guard against slavery.
On July 21, 1861, the armies of General Beauregard and Union General Irvin McDowell met at Manassas, Virginia.
At the Battle of Bull Run, the North originally had the upper hand, but Confederate General Thomas Jackson and his
troops blocked Northern progress, Jackson's began to retreat but Jackson stayed, standing "as a stone wall" (the
origin of the nickname "Stonewall Jackson"). As Confederate reinforcements arrived, McDowell's army began to
retreat in confusion and was defeated thoroughly, causing the North to discard their overly optimistic hopes for quick
victory over the Confederacy. Even though the Confederates achieved victory, General Beauregard did not chase
stragglers. So he was replaced by General Robert E. Lee. Also, General McDowell,who was defeated by
Confederates was replaced by McClellan.
The Union even faced the threat of complete defeat early in the war. The Confederacy appointed two persons as
representatives to the United Kingdom and France. Both of them decided to travel to Europe on a British ship, the
Trent. A Union Captain, Charles Wilkes, seized the ship and forced the Confederate representatives to board the
Union ship. However, Wilkes had violated the neutrality of the United Kingdom. The British demanded apologies,
and Lincoln eventually complied, even releasing the Confederate representatives. Had he failed to do so, the United
Kingdom might have joined with the Confederacy and the Union might have faced a much more difficult fight.
US History/Civil War
Railroad artillery
A successful submarine
A "snorkel" breathing device
The periscope, for trench warfare
Land-mine fields
Field trenches on a greater scale
Flame throwers
Wire entanglements
Military telegraph
Naval torpedoes
Aerial reconnaissance
Antiaircraft fire
Repeating rifles
Telescopic sights for rifles (Snipers)
Long-range rifles for general use
Fixed ammunition
Ironclad navies
A steel ship
US History/Civil War
Revolving gun turrets
Military railroads
US History/Civil War
After the Union took Fort Donelson, Grant wanted to push onto into Charleston and Memphis. But General Helleck
denied it. If they had pushed and held the area, they would have gained control of the eastern railroad.
Grant's troops killed Confederate General Albert Johnston and defeated the Confederate troops, but at a steep price.
Approximately thirteen thousand Union soldiers and eleven thousand Confederate soldiers died, and Grant lost a
chance of capturing the West quickly.
Peninsular Campaign
General Stonewall Jackson threatened to invade Washington. To prevent Jackson from doing so, Union General
George McClellan left over fifty-thousand men in Washington. Little did he know that the deceptive Jackson did not
even have 5000 men in his army. McClellan's unnecessary fear caused him to wait over half a year before continuing
the war in Virginia, earning him the nickname "Tardy George" and allowing enough time for the Confederates to
strengthen their position. Jackson's deceptions succeeded when General McClellan led Union troops in the
Peninsular Campaign, the attempt to take the Confederate capital Richmond, without the aid of the force remaining
in Washington.
In early April 1862, McClellan began the Peninsular Campaign. His troops traveled over sea to the peninsula formed
by the mouths of the York and James Rivers, which included Yorktown and Williamsburg and led straight to
Richmond. (The Union strategy for a quick end to the war was capturing Richmond, which appeared easy since it
was close to Washington.) In late May, McClellan was a few miles from Richmond, when Robert E. Lee took
control of one of the Confederate Armies. After several battles, it appeared that McClellan could march to
Richmond. But McClellan refused to attack, citing a lack of reinforcements. The forces that he wanted were instead
defending Washington. During the last week of June, Confederate General Robert E. Lee initiated the Seven Days'
Battles that forced McClellan to retreat. By July, McClellan had lost over fifteen thousand men for no apparent
reason; there was little consolation in the fact that Lee had lost even more.
During the Peninsular Campaign, other military skirmishes occurred. Flag Officer David Farragut of the Union Navy
easily took control of the Mississippi River when he captured the key port of New Orleans in April, providing a key
advantage to the Union and practically depriving the Confederacy of the river.
Total War
If Richmond had indeed been captured quickly and the war had ended, slavery and the Southern lifestyle would
probably not have changed significantly. After the unsuccessful Union attacks in Virginia, Lincoln began to think
about the Emancipation Proclamation, and the Union changed its strategy, from a quick capture of Richmond, to the
destruction of the South through total war. Total war is a war strategy in which both military and non-military
resources that are important to a state's ability to make war are destroyed by the opposing power. General William
Sherman used total war in his "March to the Sea" November and December in 1864. This destroyed the South so
much that it could not make war. It may involve attacks on civilians or the destruction of civilian property.
The Union strategy finally emerged with six parts:
blockade the Confederate coastlines, preventing trade;
free the slaves, destroying the domestic economy;
disconnect the Trans-Mississippi by controlling the Mississippi River;
further split the Confederacy by attacking the Southeast coast (Georgia, South Carolina, and North Carolina),
denying access to foreign supply
capture the capital of Richmond, which would severely incapacitate the Confederacy; and
US History/Civil War
engage the enemy everywhere, weakening the armies through attrition.
US History/Civil War
taken to Britain, since it was safe from bounty hunters (Canada was too close to the U.S. for some).
Although the Union initially did not accept black freedmen for combat, it hired them for other jobs. When troops
became scarce, the Union began enlisting blacks. At the end of the war, the 180,000 enlisted blacks made up about
10% of the Union Army, and 29500 enlisted blacks to Navy. Until 1864, the South refused to recognize captured
black soldiers as prisoners of war, and executed several of them at Fort Pillow as escaped slaves. Lincoln believed in
the necessity of black soldiers: in August 1864, he said if the black soldiers of the Union army all joined the
Confederacy, "we would be compelled to abandon the war in three weeks." See Black Americans and the Civil War
below for more on this subject.
Vicksburg
The North already held New Orleans. If they could take control over the entire Mississippi River, the Union could
divide the Confederacy in two, making transportation of weapons and troops by the Confederates more difficult. The
Vicksburg and the Fort Hudson was the only way that confedrate can reach the Mississipi river. General Winfield
Scott's strategic "Anaconda Plan" was based on control of the Mississippi; however, planning control was easier than
gaining the control.
The city of Vicksburg, Mississippi, was located on high bluffs on the eastern bank of the river. At the time, the
Mississippi River went through a 180-degree U shaped bend by the city. (It has since shifted course westward and
the bend no longer exists.) Guns placed there could prevent Federal steamboats from crossing. Vicksburg was also
on one of the major railroads running east-west through the Confederacy. Vicksburg was therefore the key point
under Confederate control.
Major General Ulysses Grant marched on land from Memphis, Tennessee, while Union General William Tecumseh
Sherman and his troops traveled by water. Both intended to converge on Vicksburg. Both failed, at least for the time
being in December, 1862, when Grant's supply line was disrupted and Sherman had to attack alone.
Since Vicksburg did not fall to a frontal assault, the Union forces made several attempts to bypass Vicksburg by
building canals to divert the Mississippi River, but these failed.
Grant decided to attack Vicksburg again in April. Instead of approaching from the north, as had been done before,
his army approached Vicksburg from the south. Grant's Army of the Tennessee crossed from the western bank to the
Eastern at Big Bluff on April 18, 1863 and then in a series of battles, including Raymond and Champion's Hill,
defeated Confederate forces coming to the relief of Confederate general Pemberton. Sherman and Grant together
besieged Vicksburg. Two major assaults were repelled by the defenders of Vicksburg, including one in which a giant
land mine was set off under the Confederate fortifications.
From May to July, Vicksburg remained in Confederate hands, but on July 3, 1863, one day before Independence
Day, General Pemberton finally capitulated. Thirty thousand Confederates were taken prisoner, but released after
taking an oath to not participate in fighting the United States unless properly exchanged (a practice called parole}.
This victory cut the Confederate States in two, accomplishing one of the Union total war goals. Confederate forces
would not be able to draw on the food and horses previously supplied by Texas.
This victory was very important in many ways.
US History/Civil War
Gettysburg
Concurrent with the opening of the
Vicksburg Campaign, General Lee
decided to march his troops into
Pennsylvania for several reasons:
He intended to win a major victory
on Northern soil, increasing
Southern morale, encouraging
Northern peace activists, and
increasing the likelihood of political
recognition by England and France.
He intended to feed his army on
Northern supplies, reducing the
burden on the Confederate
economy.
He intended to pressure
Washington, DC, forcing the recall
of Federal troops from the Western
Theater and relieving some of the
pressure on Vicksburg.
A Harvest of Death: dead soldiers await burial following the Battle of Gettysburg. NARA,
public domain.
Using the Blue Ridge Mountains to screen his movements, Lee advanced up the Shenandoah Valley into West
Virginia and Maryland before ultimately marching into south-central Pennsylvania. The Union forces moved north
on roads to Lee's east. However, Lee did not know of the Federal movement, because his cavalry commander and
chief scout, Jeb Stuart, had launched a raid eastward intending to "ride around" the Union army. On July 1, 1863, a
Confederate division (Henry Heth's) ran into a Federal cavalry unit (Buford's) west of the city of Gettysburg.
Buford's two brigades held their ground for several hours, until the arrival of the Union 1st Corps, and then withdrew
through the town. The Confederates occupied Gettysburg, but by then the Union forces had formed a strong
defensive line on the hills south of town.
For the next three days, the Confederate Army of Northern Virginia faced the Union Army of the Potomac, now
under the command of General George G. Meade, a Pennsylvanian who replaced Hooker, who had resigned as
commander. (Hooker was given a corps command in the Army of the Cumberland, then in eastern Tennessee, where
he performed satisfactorily for the remainder of the war.)
South of Gettysburg are high hills shaped like an inverted letter "J". At the end of the first day, the Union held this
important high ground, partially because the Confederate left wing had dawdled moving into position. One July 2,
Lee planned to attack up Emmitsburg Road from the south and west, hoping to force the Union troops to abandon the
important hills and ridges. The attack went awry, and some Confederate forces, including Law's Alabama Brigade,
attempted to force a gap in the Federal line between the two Round Tops, dominant heights at the extreme southern
end of the Union's fish hook-shaped defensive line. Colonel Joshua Lawrence Chamberlain, commander of the 20th
Maine Regiment, anchored this gap. He and the rest of his brigade, commanded by Colonel Strong Vincent, held the
hill despite several hard-pressed attacks, including launching a bayonet charge when the regiment was low on
ammunition.
US History/Civil War
Meanwhile, north of the Round Tops, a small ridge immediately to the west of the Federal line drew the attention of
General Daniel Sickles, a former New York congressman, who commanded the Third Corps. He ordered his corps to
advance to the peach-orchard crested ridge, which led to hard fighting around the "Devil's Den," Wheatfield, and
Peach Orchard. Sickles lost a leg in the fight.
On the third day of the Battle of Gettysburg, Lee decided to try a direct attack on the Union and "virtually destroy
their army." Putting Lieutenant General James Longstreet in charge of the three-division main assault, he wanted his
men, including the division of Major General George Pickett, to march across a mile and a half up a gradual slope to
the center of the Union line. Lee promised artillery support, but any trained soldier who looked across those fields
knew that they would be an open target for the Union soldiers--much the reverse of the situation six months before in
Fredericksburg. However, the choice was either to attack or withdraw, and Lee was a naturally aggressive soldier.
By the end of the attack, half of Longstreet's force was dead, wounded or captured and the position was not taken.
George Pickett never forgave Lee for "slaughtering" his men. Pickett's Charge, called the "High Water Mark of the
Confederacy," was practically the last hope of the Southern cause at Gettysburg.
Lee withdrew across the Potomac River. Meade did not pursue quickly, and Lee was able to reestablish himself in
Virginia. He offered to Confederate President Jefferson Davis to resign as commander of the Army of Northern
Virginia, saying, "Everything, therefore, points to the advantages to be derived from a new commander, and I the
more anxiously urge the matter upon Your Excellency from my belief that a younger and abler man than myself can
readily be attained." Davis did not relieve Lee; neither did Lincoln relieve Meade, though he wrote a letter of
censure, saying "Again, my dear general, I do not believe you appreciate the magnitude of the misfortune involved in
Lee's escape. He was within your easy grasp, and to have closed upon him would, in connection with our other late
successes, have ended the war. As it is, the war will be prolonged indefinitely."
The battle of Gettysburg lasted three days. Both sides lost nearly twenty-five thousand men each. After Gettysburg,
the South remained on the defensive.'
On November 19, 1863 Lincoln delivered his most famous speech in the wake of this battle, it reads as follows.
"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 consecrate -- 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 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."
US History/Civil War
However, as the struggle grew more intense, abolition became a more popular option. Frederick Douglas, a former
slave, urged that the war aim of the Union include the emancipation of slaves and the enlistment of black soldiers in
the Union Army. This was done on a nationwide basis in 1863, though the state of Massachusetts had raised two
regiments (the 54th and 55th Massachusetts) before this.
The 54th Massachusetts Regiment was the first black regiment recruited in the North. Col. Robert Gould Shaw, the
25 year old son of very wealthy abolitionist parents, was chosen to command. On May 28, the well equipped and
drilled 54th paraded through the streets of Boston and then boarded ships bound for the coast of South Carolina.
Their first conflict with Confederate soldiers came on July 16, when the regiment repelled an attack on James Island.
But on July 18 came the supreme test of the courage and valor of the black soldiers; they were chosen to lead the
assault on Battery Wagner, a Confederate fort on Morris Island at Charleston. In addressing his soldiers before
leading them in charge across the beach, Colonel Shaw said, "I want you to prove yourselves. The eyes of thousands
will look on what you do tonight.
While some blacks choose to join the military fight others fought by other means. An American teacher named Mary
S. Peake worked to educate the freedmen and "contraband". She spent her days under a large oak tree teaching others
near Fort Monroe in Virginia. (This giant tree is now over 140 years old and called Emancipation Oak). Since Fort
Monroe remained under Union control this area was some what of a safe location for refugees and runways to come
to. Soon Mary began teaching in the Brown Cottage. This endeavor, sponsored be the American Missionary
Association became the basis from which Hampton University would spawn. Mary's school would house around 50
children during the day and 20 adults at night. This remarkable American died from tuberculosis on Washington's
birthday in 1862.
Confederate President Jefferson Davis reacted to the raising of black regiments by passing General Order No. 111,
which stated that captured black Federal soldiers would be returned into slavery (whether born free or not) and that
white officers who led black soldiers would be tried for abetting servile rebellion. The Confederate Congress
codified this into law on May 1, 1863. President Lincoln's order of July 30, 1863 responded:
It is therefore ordered that for every soldier of the United States killed in violation of the laws of war, a
rebel soldier shall be executed; and for every one enslaved by the enemy or sold into slavery, a rebel
soldier shall be placed at hard labor on the public works and continued at such labor until the other shall
be released and receive the treatment due to a prisoner of war.
Eventually the Federal forces had several divisions' worth of black soldiers. Their treatment was not equal to white
soldiers: at first, for example, black privates were paid $10 a month, the same as laborers, while white privates
earned $13 a month. In addition, blacks could not be commissioned officers. The pay difference was settled
retroactively in 1864.
The Confederate States also recruited and fielded black troops. It has been estimated that over 65,000 Southern
blacks were in the Confederate ranks. Over 13,000 of these met the enemy in combat. Frederick Douglas reported,
"There are at the present moment many Colored men in the Confederate Army doing duty not only as cooks,
servants and laborers, but real soldiers, having musket on their shoulders, and bullets in their pockets, ready to shoot
down any loyal troops and do all that soldiers may do to destroy the Federal government and build up that of the
rebels."
The issue of black prisoners of war was a continual contention between the two sides. In the early stages of the war,
prisoners of war would be exchanged rank for rank. However, the Confederates refused to exchange any black
prisoner. The Union response was to stop exchanging any prisoner of war. The Confederate position changed to
allowing blacks who were born free to be exchanged, and finally to exchange all soldiers, regardless of race. By
then, the Federal leadership understood that the scarcity of white Confederates capable of serving as soldiers was an
advantage, and there were no mass exchanges of prisoners, black or white, until the Confederate collapse.
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US History/Civil War
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US History/Civil War
Franklin
The Battle of Franklin was fought on November 30, 1864 at Franklin, Tennessee. This battle was a devastating loss
for the Confederate Army. It detrimentally shut down their leadership. Fourteen Confederate Generals were
extinguished with 6 were killed, 7 were wounded and 1 was captured. 55 Regimental Commanders were casualties
as well. After this battle the Confederate Army in this area was effectively handicapped.
Nashville
In one of the decisive battles of the war, two brigades of black troops helped crush one of the Confederacy's finest
armies at the Battle of Nashville on December 15-16, 1864. Black troops opened the battle on the first day and
successfully engaged the right of the rebel line. On the second day Col. Charles R. Thompson's black brigade made a
brilliant charge up Overton Hill. The 13th US Colored Troops sustained more casualties than any other regiment
involved in the battle.
Fort Pillow
The Battle of Fort Pillow was fought on was fought on April 12, 1864, at Fort Pillow on the Mississippi River at
Henning, Tennessee. The battle ended with a massacre of surrendered Union African-American troops under the
direction of Confederate Brigadier General Nathan Bedford Forrest.
The Crater
The Battle of the Crater was part of the Siege of Petersburg that took place on July 30, 1864. The battle took place
between the Confederate Army of Northern Virginia and the Union Army of Potomac. The battle was an unusual
attempt by the Union to penetrate the Confederate defenses south of Petersburg, VA. The battle showed to be a
Union disaster. The Union Army went into battle with 16,500 troops, under the direct command of Ulysses S. Grant;
the Confederate Army was commanded by Robert E. Lee and entered battle with 9,500 troops. Pennsylvania minors
in the Union general Ambrose E. Burnside's Ninth Corps, worked for several weeks digging a long tunnel, and
packing it with explosives. The explosives were then detonated at 3:15 on the morning of July 30, 1864. Burnside
originally wanted to send a fresh division of black troops against the breach, but his superiors, Ulysses S. Grant,
ruled against it. The job, chosen by short straw, went to James H. Ledlie. Ledlie watched from behind the lines as his
white soldiers, rather than go around, pile into the deep crater, which was 170 feet long, 60 feet across, and 30 feet
deep. They were not able to escape making the Union soldiers easy targets for the Confederates. The battle was
marked my cruel treatment to black soldiers who took part in the fight, most of them were captured and murdered.
The battle ended with a confederate victory. The Confederacy took out 3,798 Union soldiers, while the Union were
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US History/Civil War
only able to defeat 1,491 Confederate soldiers. The United States Colored Troops suffered the most with their
casualties being 1,327 which would include 450 men being captured.
Appomattox
Sherman did not stop in Georgia. As he marched North, he burnt several towns in South Carolina, including
Columbia, the capital. (Sherman's troops felt more anger towards South Carolina, the first state to secede and in their
eyes responsible for the war.) In March 1865, Lincoln, Sherman, and Grant all met outside Petersburg. Lincoln
called for a quick end to the Civil War. Union General Sheridan said to Lincoln, "If the thing be pressed I think Lee
will surrender." Lincoln responded, "Let the thing be pressed."
On April 2, 1865, the Confederate lines of Petersburg, Richmond's defense, which had been extended steadily to the
west for 9 months, broke. General Lee informed President Davis he could no longer hold the lines; the Confederate
government then evacuated Richmond. Lee pulled his forces out of the lines and moved west; Federal forces chased
Lee's forces, annihilated a Confederate rear guard defense, and finally trapped the Army of Northern Virginia.
General Lee requested terms. The two senior Confederate officers met each other near Appomattox Courthouse in
Virginia on April 9th,1865. The men met at the home of Wilmer McLean. The gathering lasted about two and half
hours. Grant offered extremely generous terms, requiring only that Lee's troops surrender and swear not to bear arms
till the end of the War. This meeting helped to nearly end the bloodiest war in American history.
General Sherman met with Confederate General Albert Johnston to discuss the surrender of Confederate troops in
the South. Sherman initially allowed even more generous terms than Grant. However, the Secretary of War refused
to accept the terms because of the assassination of Abraham Lincoln by the Confederate John Wilkes Booth. By
killing Lincoln at Ford's Theater, Booth made things worse for the Confederacy. Sherman was forced to offer harsher
terms of surrender than he originally proposed, and General Johnston surrendered on April 26 under the Appomattox
terms. All Confederate armies had surrendered by the end of May, ending the Civil War.
Side note: A Virginian named Wilmer McLean had no luck escaping the Civil War. The first battle of the war, Bull
Run, was fought right in front of his house, and the generals slept there, too. Hoping to get away from the war, he
then moved to Appomattox. It was in his parlor that Lee surrendered to Grant.
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US History/Civil War
railways finally met 4 years after the war, in Promontory Point, Utah, in 1869.
The federal government started a draft lottery in July, 1863. Men could avoid the draft by paying $300, or hiring
another man to take their place. This caused resentment amongst the lower classes as they could not afford to dodge
the draft. On Monday, July 13, 1863, between 6 and 7 A.M., the Civil War Draft Riots began in New York City.
Rioters attacked the Draft offices, the Bull's Head Hotel on 44th Street, and more upscale residences near 5th
Avenue. They lynched black men, burned down the Colored Orphan Asylum on 5th Avenue between 43rd and 44th
Streets, and forced hundreds of blacks out of the city. Members of the 7th New York Infantry and 71st New York
Infantry subdued the riot.
On April 22, 1864 the U.S. Congress passes the Coinage Act of 1864 which mandates that the inscription "In God
We Trust" be placed on all coins minted as United States currency.
Dr. Rebecca Lee Crumpler becomes the first black woman to receive a medical degree.
Education
The Morrill Act of 1862 was where the government granted land to the states in the Union where they were to build
educational institutions. This excluded the states that seceded from the Union. The schools would have to teach
lessons about military tactics, agriculture, and engineering.
In the 1860s, schools were small and normally multiple grades were taught in one classroom at one time. When
giving test, the teachers would have the students recite them orally. Many of the lessons were memorized by the
children and recited. The punishment that was seen in school during this time was called Corporal Punishment and
the parents even applauded the use of it. The parents thought the use of it would make their children become better
children.
Students did not attend school very long because of having to work in the fields. The reading levels during this time
were actually quite high. By the fifth grade students were to have been reading books that in modern times would be
considered college level. There were academies during this time that provided children between the ages of thirteen
and twenty. This academies also offered an array of classes. Most of the academies kept the boys and girls separate.
Another group who was discriminated against when it came to schooling was women. Some of the women who
stood out and took time to fight for the education rights of women were Susan Anthony, Emma Willard, Jane
Addams and Mary McLeod. These women helped to establish the higher education institutions where women were
able to take classes otherwise not offered to them. The first boys and girls college was Oberlin College which was
established in 1833. The first all - women's college was Vassar College in 1861.
References
[1] http:/ / americanhistory. about. com/ od/ civilwarmenu/ a/ cause_civil_war. htm
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