The Battle of Gettysburg. This most famous and most important Civil War Battle occurred over three hot summer days, July 1 to July 3, 1863, around the.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
THE TURNING POINT CHAPTER VICKSBURG FALLS UNION FORCES WANTED TO CAPTURE VICKSBURG, MS, IN ORDER TO GAIN CONTROL OF THE MS RIVER AND CUT THE SOUTH.
Advertisements

The Battle of Gettysburg
The Gettysburg Address November 19, Gettysburg Battle The Battle of Gettysburg, Pennsylvania was from July 1-3, It was the bloodiest battle.
Vicksburg Gettysburg. Siege at Vicksburg The Confederates were in high spirits because of victories at Fredericksburg and Chancellorsville The Union needed.
The Battle of Gettysburg The Turning Point of the War.
The Battle of Gettysburg Mapping the turning point of the Civil War.
+ Gettysburg Address By David, Terrance, Aliya, Victoria, and Kelsey.
BE PREPARED…  Take out the Gettysburg packet (from yesterday)  Take a new battle chart TODAY WE WILL…  Evaluate the decision by Lee to attack the center.
The battle of Gettysburg By Maggie p. Patton When and where it took place Gettysburg, Battle of, a large battle in the American Civil War ( ),
The battle of Gettysburg By: daniel MuÑoz-Vidal. Prior to the battle About the town of Gettysburg Union and Confederate Generals Confederates March Towards.
The Battle of Gettysburg By Kayleigh Jones & Lydia Smith.
By: chase GETTYSBURG  Before the civil war Gettysburg was a sleepy town in Pennsylvania. After the civil war almost everyone knew about it because it.
Strategy and Battles of the Civil War
The Battle of Gettysburg Krista Farner EDUC 462 November 30, th Grade Social Studies Dr. Coffman.
The Civil War Turning Point
A B C D E
The Battle of Gettysburg
BELL WORK Name the two groups that fought during the Civil War Which side was winning the war from ? Which side was winning the war.
The History of The Gettysburg Address. Architecture Part 1: The Battle of Gettysburg Part 2: The Hype Surrounding the Memorial Part 3: The Address Part.
Chapter 9 Section 4 The Turning Point.
Section 4-The Turning Point. I can evaluate the importance of events at Vicksburg and Gettysburg.  I can describe how battles in Tennessee helped turn.
The War Continues. Civil War At Sea  The Trent Affair – 2 Confeds (Mason & Slidell) boarded British ship The Trent in Cuba to try to get British help.
Emancipation Proclamation Republicans were divided on the issue of slavery Strong Abolitionist versus those Republicans like Lincoln Lincoln was an abolitionist.
The Battle of Gettysburg. Before the Battle Confederates inflict bloody defeat on Union at Fredericksburg, VA. (12/13/62) North defeated again in the.
The Turning Point of the Civil War.  After Shiloh, Lee and the Confederacy did not have the military might to crush the Union armies.  Britain and France.
Gettysburg Project
By : Thomas Maxwell & Chris Bounds.  This most famous and most important Civil War Battle occurred over three hot summer days, July 1 to July 3, 1863,
Section 16.4: The War Continues. President Lincoln know that the victory at Antietam had been important He issued a warning to the Confederate States.
And the Gettysburg Address.  In 1863, after Robert E. Lee’s big victory in Chancellorsville, VA, he decides to take another shot at a Northern invasion.
Battle of Gettysburg. How was the war going in 1863? The North had the advantage as the South’s morale sank to new lows. The North continued to win small.
What makes something a turning point?. Can you think of any events in history that are considered turning points?
Civil War Project  By: Joann Alegria, Chelsea Stancil, and Gabby Barrera.
Ironclad – warships covered with protective iron plates casualty – a person killed, missing, or wounded in action Terms and People.
American Civil War. Battle of Fort Sumter Battle of Fort Sumter lasted from 3:25 AM on April 12, 1861 to April 13 at around 10:30 PM when the Union soldiers.
Civil War Battles September 1862 Great Britain was ready to formally recognize the Confederacy as an independent nation, but were waiting for.
THE CIVIL WAR VICTORY AT APPOMATTOX. A. Fredricksburg 1. December 1862, Union forces set out once again to head towards Richmond. 2. Union troops were.
The Battle of Gettysburg and the Gettysburg Address
The Turning Point Chapter 9 Section 4 The Battle Of Vicksburg The battle of Vicksburg lasted from May July1864.
Confederate troops initially went to Gettysburg after learning there was a supply of shoes in the town. When they did this, they ran into Union troops.
American Civil War Mr. Contipodero.  “Yesterday we rode on the pinnacle of success – today absolute ruin seems to be our portion.”  Josiah Gorgas, Confederate.
The American Civil War A NATION DIVIDED
The Turning Point Chapter 9 Section 4.  Complete the Battle Graph on page 336  Write the Battle and the Results in Your Graph HOMEWORK.
Do Now– 05/07 Observe the picture on your desk and draw as many conclusions as you can about: How men (and a very few women) fought during the Civil War?
Antietam / Sharpsburg September 17,1862 Bloodiest single day in American History Bloodiest single day in American History.
Miss Wentworth. WHAT CAUSED THE BATTLE OF GETTYSBURG? SHOES!
FIRST THINGS FIRSTFIRST THINGS FIRST Retrieve your assessment folders…
Chapter 15 Section 5 Union victories in 1863, 1864, and 1865 brought the Civil War to an end.
CIVIL WAR Harry Sunder, Jack Morris, Raj Bhagroo, Nick D’Alessandro.
The Battle of Gettysburg July 1 – 3, Background After Lee’s first attempt to invade the north failed, he set up for a second invasion in June of.
The Turning Point of the Civil War
Vicksburg Gettysburg. Siege at Vicksburg The Confederates were in high spirits because of victories at Fredericksburg and Chancellorsville The Union needed.
The Civil War – Day 5 Explain the outcomes of the Battle of Gettysburg.Explain the outcomes of the Battle of Gettysburg. Assess the significance of the.
The Battle of Gettysburg July 1 st –3 rd, 1863 Before the Battle Confederates inflicted bloody defeat on Union at Fredericksburg, VA. (12/13/62) North.
Battle of Gettysburg By Dalton Lucas Garret Lewis.
Confederates  Gen. Lee planned to collect supplies in abundant Pennsylvania farmland.  Lee also planned to take away fighting from Virginia.  He had.
Gettysburg July 1-3, 1863 “The greatest battle in Civil War history began as a clash over shoes…..” Read from Ken Burns book pgs
The Battle of Gettysburg
Gettysburg July 1-3, 1863.
The Battle of Gettysburg
Battle of Gettysburg July 1-3, 1863
December 1862 to July 1863.
THE CIVIL WAR VICTORY AT APPOMATTOX.
Final Civil War Project
What were the two sides in the Civil War? Union Confederates Key
Chancellorsville Lee’s Perfect Victory Lee Hooker May, 1863
The Battle of Gettysburg
Chapter 11, Section 5 Part 1 Decisive Battles p
Continuing the War in the East
The Civil War Turning Point
Presentation transcript:

The Battle of Gettysburg

This most famous and most important Civil War Battle occurred over three hot summer days, July 1 to July 3, 1863, around the small market town of Gettysburg, Pennsylvania. It began as a skirmish but by its end involved 160,000 Americans. On July 1, some Confederate infantry under the command of General Robert E. Lee headed to Gettysburg to seize much-needed shoes and clashed west of town with Union cavalry. The Union commander, recognizing the importance of holding Gettysburg because a dozen roads converged there, fought desperately to hold off the Rebel advance. Other Union troops briefly stopped some Rebels north of town. During heavy fighting, the Confederates drove the Union troops through the streets of Gettysburg to Cemetery Hill south of the town. Lee ordered General Richard Ewell to attack this position "if practicable." Ewell decided not to attack once he saw the Union artillery atop the hill. Had he attacked and succeeded, it might have changed the course of the war.

General Robert E. Lee General Richard Ewell

The most famous incident of the battle was Picket’s Charge. "Charge the enemy and remember old Virginia!" yelled Pickett as 12,000 Rebels formed an orderly line that stretched a mile from flank to flank. They slowly headed toward the Union Army a mile away on Cemetery Ridge as the Federals gazed in silent wonder at this spectacular sight. But as the Rebels got within range, Federal cannons using grapeshot (a shell containing iron balls that flew apart when fired) and deadly accurate rifle volleys ripped into the Rebels killing many and tearing holes in the advancing line. What had been, just moments before, a majestic line of Rebel infantry, quickly became a horrible mess of dismembered bodies and dying wounded accompanied by a mournful roar. But the Rebels continued on. As they got very close, the Rebels stopped and fired their rifles once at the Federals then lowered their bayonets and commenced a running charge while screaming the Rebel yell. A fierce battle raged for an hour with much brutal hand to hand fighting, shooting at close range and stabbing with bayonets. For a brief moment, the Rebels nearly had their chosen objective, a small clump of oak trees atop Cemetery Ridge. But Union reinforcements and regrouped infantry units swarmed in and opened fire on the Rebel ranks. The battered, outnumbered Rebels finally began to give way and this great human wave that had been Pickett's Charge began to recede as the men drifted back down the slope. The supreme effort of Lee's army had been beaten back, leaving 7,500 of his men lying on the field of battle.

General George Pickett

Lee rode out and met the survivors, telling them, "It is all my fault." And to Pickett he said, "Upon my shoulders rests the blame." Later when he got back to headquarters Lee exclaimed, "Too bad. Too bad! Oh, too bad!" The gamble had failed. The tide of the war was now permanently turned against the South. Confederate causalities in dead, wounded and missing were 28,000 out of 75,000. Union casualties were 23,000 out of 88,000. That night and into the next day, Saturday, July 4, Confederate wounded were loaded aboard wagons that began the journey back toward the South. Lee was forced to abandon his dead and begin a long slow withdrawal of his army back to Virginia. Union commander Meade, out of fatigue and caution, did not immediately pursue Lee, infuriating President Lincoln who wrote a bitter letter to Meade (never delivered) saying he missed a "golden opportunity" to end the war right there. On November 19, President Lincoln went to the battlefield to dedicate it as a military cemetery. The main orator, Edward Everett of Massachusetts, delivered a two hour formal address. The president then had his turn. He spoke in his high, penetrating voice and in a little over two minutes delivered the Gettysburg Address, surprising many in the audience by its shortness and leaving others quite unimpressed.

General George Meade

Lincoln meeting with his generals

The only known photograph of Lincoln delivering the Gettysburg Address