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The Civil War Social Studies LLDV Mr. Pinto Chapter 11, section 1.

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Presentation on theme: "The Civil War Social Studies LLDV Mr. Pinto Chapter 11, section 1."— Presentation transcript:

1 The Civil War Social Studies LLDV Mr. Pinto Chapter 11, section 1

2 The Civil War Begins Confederates took over all military installations in the south. South Carolina’s Fort Sumter still held by Union – April 12, 1861 at 4:40 am, the Confederacy began an attack on the fort. – The North had a rush of army enlistment – Virginia left the Union

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4 Advantages on both sides Union More fighting power Greater food production More railroads Lincoln was a great leader Confederacy “King Cotton” money Great generals Strong military tradition Motivated to defend their homeland

5 Union and Confederate Strategies Union 1. Blockade Southern Ports to stop the export of cotton and import of manufactured goods Use the Mississippi River to split the Confederacy in 2 Capture the Confederate capital of Richmond, VA. * Called the Anaconda Plan* Confederacy Mostly defensive strategy If the opportunity arose, invade the North and take Washington

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7 Bull Run Union General McDowell led an attack Confederate General Thomas “Stonewall” Jackson led Confederacy to victory

8 Union armies in the west General George McClellan appointed leader of the Union Army – General Ulysses S. Grant led Western forces to victory at Shiloh Taught both armies about using scouts, building forts and digging trenches – General David G. Farragut led 40 ships to take New Orleans for the Union

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10 A Revolution in Warfare Ironclads – Ships plated w/ iron to prevent burning, shield cannon fire, and ram wooden ships North’s Monitor vs. South’s Merrimack New Weapons – Rifle and minie ball – Hand grenades and land mines

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12 The War for the Capitals McClellan defeated by General Robert E. Lee on his drive to Richmond At Antietam, 26,000 Americans died (most in 1 day throughout American history) It was a draw, but the South was far weaker McClellan chose not to go for victory and was fired by Lincoln

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