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Let’s look at the numbers… War Participants Deaths in service American Revolution 290,000 4,000 Civil War 3,213,000 620,000 World War I 4,744,000 116,000 World War II 16,535,000 420,000 Korean War 6,807,000 55,000 Vietnam War 9,200,000 109,000 *What – is the Civil

Let’s look at the numbers… WarParticipantsDeaths in service American Revolution 290,0004,000 Civil War3,213,000620,000 World War I4,744,000116,000 World

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Page 1: Let’s look at the numbers… WarParticipantsDeaths in service American Revolution 290,0004,000 Civil War3,213,000620,000 World War I4,744,000116,000 World

Let’s look at the numbers…War Participants Deaths in service

American Revolution

290,000 4,000

Civil War 3,213,000 620,000

World War I 4,744,000 116,000

World War II 16,535,000 420,000

Korean War 6,807,000 55,000

Vietnam War 9,200,000 109,000

*What – is the Civil War

Page 2: Let’s look at the numbers… WarParticipantsDeaths in service American Revolution 290,0004,000 Civil War3,213,000620,000 World War I4,744,000116,000 World

What is a civil war?

Union names for the war• The Civil War• The Southern Rebellion• The War of Abolition• The War Against

Slavery

Confederate names for the war

• The War for States’ Rights

• The War for Southern Independence

• The Yankee Invasion

- a war between opposing groups of citizens in the same country

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Civil War Basics

• April 12, 1861 - April 9, 1865(Ft. Sumter, SC) (Appomattox Court House, VA)

• Two sides: Union (United States of America)

(North); Confederacy (Confederate States of America) (South)

• Fought on two fronts: East (coast) and West (Mississippi River)

• Winner: Union

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Civil War Basics

• Why?– Keep the Union together (Lincoln)– States’ Rights (strong state govt.; weaker federal

govt. – limit the ability to end slavery throughout the country)

• Turning Point: Gettysburg, PA (East/NE)

Vicksburg, MS (West)

Ft. Wagner, SC (East/SE)

• Strategy: North – Scott’s Great SnakeSouth – Defensive War

Page 5: Let’s look at the numbers… WarParticipantsDeaths in service American Revolution 290,0004,000 Civil War3,213,000620,000 World War I4,744,000116,000 World
Page 6: Let’s look at the numbers… WarParticipantsDeaths in service American Revolution 290,0004,000 Civil War3,213,000620,000 World War I4,744,000116,000 World
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Recruiting an ArmyLincoln called for 75,000 volunteers to serve as soldiers in a campaign to squash the Southern

rebellion. By the end of 1861, 527,000 volunteers had joined the Union Army.

Despite preparing for a defensive war, Davis too, made a call for troops. “We seek no conquest, all

we ask is to be let alone.” By the end of 1861, 258,000 men had joined the Confederate Army.

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Volunteer Armies

Northerners believed they needed to fight to save the Union (united is better/stronger, stick together, end

slavery, safe from capture, North economically benefited from the South, etc.).

Southerners believed they were fighting a war of independence (states’ rights, for slavery, for foreign trade

without tariffs, etc.) similar to the American Revolution.

Men on both sides were eager to enlist…

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The sides………• Blue- NorthBlue- NorthUnion Army – United States of America, Federal

Army, Yankee Army, Northern Army, or Army of the “river” (Potomac, Cumberland, Tennessee)

• Gray- SouthGray- SouthConfederate Army – Confederate States of

America, The Confederates, Rebel Army, or Army of the “land mass” (Northern Virginia, Tennessee)

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“We shall crush out this rebellion as an elephant would trample on a

mouse.”

“Just throw three or four [bomb] shells among those blue-bellied Yankees

and they’ll scatter like sheep.”

Both sides believed the war would end quickly.

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As the war dragged on……

• Public support dwindled and so did the number of volunteers

• By the spring of 1862 the Confederacy passed its first conscription act and by 1863 the Union was forced into doing the same. This required all able bodied men between 18 and 35 to serve if called (later draft ages 17-50).

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Leaders

• North- President Lincoln had very little military or national political experience, but proved to be a good leader

• South- President Davis was thought to be a stronger president because he went to West Point and was a former Secretary of War

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Finding a GeneralFollowing the quick attack and defeat at Fort Sumter, Lincoln asked

Robert E. Lee to lead the Union Army. When Virginia seceded (spring 1861), Lee’s loyalty remained with his home state not

the Union. He declined the offer and later became commander of the Confederate Army.

Lee commands the South in all major battles in the Northern Virginia Area and could arguably be the best General of the entire war.

In the end, Lee will eventually surrender to General Ulysses S. Grant at Appomattox Courthouse, VA to end the war.

After the war, Lee is stripped of US citizenship which was restored to in 1975 (105 years after his death). Ironically his

homestead property in Virginia has been made into the county’s most prestigious military cemeteries….Arlington

National Cemetery.

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Lincoln had trouble finding a good General

• Winfield Scott

• George B. McClellan

• Henry W. Halleck

• Ulysses S. Grant

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The Civil War consisted of nearly 10,500 battles, engagements, and other military actions including nearly 50 major battles and about 100 others that had major significance.

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Plans

• The South’s plan was simple….defense, defense, defense!

• The North’s plan…the Anaconda Plan (Scott’s Great Snake)…wrap around the south and suffocate it like a snake!

• Seal off the coast with a naval blockade

• Protect the Union Capitol: Washington, D.C.Capture Confederate Capitol: Richmond, Virginia

• Conquer the Mississippi River

• Squeeze/Suffocate the South to submission

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