Secession & Civil War #15
I. Confederacy, 2/4/1861
Montgomery
Jefferson Davis
Alexander Stephens
Confederate States
Judiah P. Benjamin, Toombs, Walker, Memminger
Joseph E. Johnston
C.S.A. Constitution
II. Abraham Lincoln, 3/4/1861
Hannibal Hamlin
“Preservation of Union”
Lincoln…
Winfield Scott
Irvin McDowell
Henry W. Walleck
Fort Pickens & Fort Sumter
III. Fort Sumter
Robert Anderson
P.G.T. Beauregard
Anderson
Lincoln
Only 16,000 Troops
IV. “War Between The States”
Virginia
Richmond
“Border States”
Maryland’s Secession…
Difficult Choices…
Robert E. Lee
Mary Todd Lincoln
John J. Crittenden
J.E.B. Stuart
Franklin Buchanan
V. Union Military Strategy
“Anaconda Plan”
Take Control…
Union Army
Southern Pro-Union…
Lincoln
VI. Union Advantages
Northern Industries
22 Million
Union Navy
Natural Resources
Agricultural Crops
VII. Confederate Military Strategy
Lengthy War
“King Cotton”
Confederate Army
VIII. Confederate Advantages
More Officers
Confederate Troops
Confederacy
Knowledge of Local
“King Cotton”
IX. Battle of Bull Run (7/21/1861)
Pierre G.T. Beauregard & J.E. Johnston
Confederate Army
Northern Aristocrats
Lincoln…
Congress…
X. Trent Affair (Nov. 1861)
Trent
James M. Mason & John Slidell
William H. Seward
Confederacy
XI. Ironclads
Monitor
Merrimac
XII. 2nd Battle of Bull Run, 8/30/1862
Robert E. Lee
XIII. Antietam, 9/17/1862
George B. McClellan
Bloodiest Battle
Emancipation Proclamation
Frederick Douglass
John Bright & Richard Cobden
The 54th Regiment
XIV. Rotating Generals…
Seven…
“Copperheads”
“Clement L. Vallandigham
Jefferson Davis
Robert E. Lee
Union Losses
Fredericksburg, 12/13/1862
Chancellorsville, 5/5-6/1863
Henry W. Halleck & Don Carlos Buell
General U.S. Grant & William T. Sherman
XV. Union Victories
Fort Henry (Feb. 6) & Fort Donelson (Feb. 16)
Shiloh (April 6-7)
Albert S. Johnson
Grant & Sherman
Vicksburg, 7/4/1862
David Farragut
“Unconditional Surrender” Grant
XVI. Gettysburg (July 1-3, 1863)
Robert E. Lee
General George Meade
General George Pickett
General “Jeb” Stuart
Gettysburg Address, 11/19/1863
XVII. Chickamagua, 9/19-20/1863
Lincoln…
XVIII. Chattanooga, 11/23-25/1863
Braxton Bragg
Railroads Controlled
XIV. William T. Sherman (May 1864)
“March to the Sea”
Atlanta
Election of 1864
Savannah
John B. Hood
XV. The South Surrenders
Lee
Grant
Richmond
Appomattox Court House (April 9, 1865)
XVI. Lincoln Assassinated
John W. Booth, 4/14/1865
Lincoln
Booth, Atzerodt, Herold, Paine
XVII. Final Costs
Reconstruction #16
I. After Effects
614,000
258,000 Confederate
Thousands…
Former Confederate South
Plantations
Major Cities
“Sherman’s March”
“Scorched Earth”
Confederate Currency
“Cash Crops”
Labor Force?
South’s “Ante-bellum”
“Planters”
Refuges…
Jefferson Davis
Freedmen’s Bureau, 3/3/1865
Oliver Otis Howard
“Freedmen”
Provided…
250,000 students, 1870
600,000 students, 1877
Howard, Atlanta, Fisk Univ, Hampton Inst.
“40 Acres & a Mule”
II. Two Major Theories of Reconstruction
President Lincoln
CSA never left…
Proclamation of Amnesty, 12/8/1863
Full Pardon
10% of Voters
Some…
Louisiana, Arkansas, Tennessee
US Congress…
Radical Republicans
Former Confederate officers
White Union Loyalists
Full Citizenship
Wade – Davis Reconstruction Bill
Majority
Benjamin F. Wade, Henry Davis, Charles Sumner, Thaddeus Stevens
Lincoln’s Response…
Andrew Johnson
John W. Booth
Radical Republicans
13th Amendment, 12/18/1865
Radicals
Humanitarian
Johnson vetoes… 2/19/1866
Civil Rights Bill, 4/9/1866
Charles Sumner
“State Suicide”
Thaddeus Stevens
“Conquered Province”
14th Amendment, 5/16/1866
Freedmen’s Privileges
“Due process of law”
Johnson…
1866 elections
2/3 Majority
Congressional Reconstruction Acts, 3/11/1867
Military Reconstruction Act
10 Southern States
20,000 Federal Troops
Statehood
Command of the Army Act, 3/2/1867
Tenure of Office Act, 3/2/1867
Supreme Court’s Power…
Andrew Johnson, 8/5/1867
Impeachment
Lorenzo Thomas
U.S. Senate
Radical Republicans
House of Representatives
Ben Butler & Thaddeus Stevens
Henry Stanberry
Johnson’s Trial
Salmon P. Chase
Nine of 11 Articles
House warning…
Trail begins…
2/3rds Majority (of 35)
Edmund G. Ross, 23-12
“Lame Duck”
III. Ulysses S. Grant
Horatio Seymour
214 – 80
Materialism & Greed
Political Corruption
William “Boss” Tweed
“Black Friday”
Credit Scandal
“Whiskey Ring”
U.S. Grant
Panic of 1873
Radical Republicans, 1868 – 77
Freedmen
Two Black US Senators
Hiram Revels & Blanche K. Bruce
Never equal…
P.B.S. Pinchmack
“Carpetbaggers”
“Scalawags
White Southerners
Ku Klux Klan, 12/24/1865
Thomas M. Jones & James R. Crowe
First “Black Codes”
15th Amendment, 1870
Three Enforcement Acts, 1870-71
Amnesty Act, 5/22/1872
Civil Rights Act, 3/1/1875
IV. 1876 Presidential Election
U.S. Grant
“Mulligan Letters”
Rutherford B. Hayes
Samuel J. Tilden
“19 Disputed Votes” 11/7/1876
Special Electoral Commission, 1/29/1877
Commission votes…
Compromise of 1877
Voting in the South
“Solid South”
“Grandfather Clause”
“Poll Tax”
“Literacy Test”
Plessy v. Ferguson, 5/18/1896
Booker T. Washington, 1856-1915
W.E.B. DuBois, 1868-1963
New Slavery
Tenant Farmers
Sharecroppers
“Debt Peonage”
“Waving the Bloody Shirt”
“New South”
“Buffalo Soldiers”
Lynching…
The American West #17
I. “Cattle Kingdom” (1866-90)
“Longhorns”
U.S. Eastern Markets…
Cattle Ranch
“Vaquero”
American Cowboys…
Teenage Boys
“Nickel / Dime Novels”
African Americans
English gentlemen
“Rough Riders” 1898
II. “Long Drive”
First, 1866
“Round – Up”
Rodeo…
1,000 Miles
Ten weeks – 3 months
San Antonio
Abilene, Kansas
Kansas Pacific R.R.
“Queen of the Cowboys”
Lonely cowboys…
$4.00 bought
Slaughterhouses
Jesse Chisholm & Charles Goodknight
Goodkinght-Loving Trail
Western Trail
Chisholm Trail
Sedalia-Baxter Springs Trail
“Long Drive’s” Crew
“Trail Boss”
Monthly salary
Each Crew…
“Cowhand”
$25 - $40 a month
“Point”
“Drag”
Cook
“Colt 45”
“Goodnight’s Code of Conduct”
No Gambling…
Banishment
“Open Range”
Quick Money
Joseph McCoy, 1866
Tim Hersey
Flyers & Pamphlets
Final Preparations
First “Long Drive”, 1866
Over 300,000 steers, 1870
Over 700,000, 1871
About 2 million
6 Million
“Real McCoy”
Dodge City, Kansas
Last “Long Drive”, 1887
“Barbed Wire”, 1874
“Range Wars”
Frederick Jackson Turner, 1890
III. “Sodbusters”
“Soddies”
Homestead Act, 1862
Morrill Land Grant Act, 7/2/1862
Homestead Act, 1870
Timber Culture Act, 3/4/1873
Desert Land Act, 3/3/1877
Timber & Stone Act, 6/3/1878
Oklahoma Land Rush, 4/22/1889
IV. Mining Strikes
Henry P. Comstock, June 1859
Pike’s Peak, Fall 1858
V. Native Americans
Plains Indians / Sioux
Tribes & “Bands”
Each “Band”
About 30 Million, 1800
Bison / Buffalo
Buffalo Bones
Good Hunters…
Professional Hunters…
“Buffalo Bill” Cody
Government Encouraged…
Western Tribes
VI. Indian Reaction, 1850 – 90
Federal Concentration, 1851
Little Crow
John M. Chivington, 11/29/1864
Red Cloud
Indian Peace Commission, 1867
Bureau of Indian Affairs
Treaty of Fort Laramie, April 1876
George A. Custer, 11/1868
Board of Indian Commissioners, 4/10/1869
Indian Appropriation Act, 3/3/1871
Crazy Horse & Sitting Bull, 1875
Little Bighorn, 6/25/1876
George A. Custer
265 men
Alfred H. Terry
Crazy Horse
Nelson A. Miles
At Fort Buford, 1881
Chief Joseph, Spring 1877
Bear Paw Mountain, Idaho
Cochise & Mangas Coloradas
Geronimo, 1829-1909
Nelson A. Miles, 9/4/1886
Dawes Severalty Act, 2/8/1887
US Citizenship
“Ghost Dance” 1890
Wounded Knee, 12/29/1890
US 7th Cavalry
Indian Reorganization Act, 1934
Helen Hunt Jackson, 1881
VII. Lawmen
Wyatt Earp, 1848-1929
“Doc” Holiday
O.K. Corral, 11/1881
“Bat” Masterson, 1856-1921
“Bat” 1903
“Wild Bill” Hickok, 1837-76
“Wild Bill” 1872-73
Jack McCall, 8/2/1876
VIII. Outlaws
William Bonney, 1859-81
Pat Garret, 1881
Jesse James, 1847-82
“Butch Cassidy” & Sundance Kid
“Wild Bunch”
IX. William Cody
“Wild West Show”
1. Annie Oakley, 1860-1926
Captains of Industry #18
I. American Industrial Revolution
“Laissez Faire”
Capitalism
Alexander Hamilton
Protective Tariff
Agriculture
II. Inventions
Henry Bessemer, 1859
Edwin L. Drake, 8/27/1859
Alexander G. Bell, 3/7/1876
Thomas A. Edison, 10/19-21/1879
Henry Ford, 1903
Frederick W. Taylor, 1920s
III. Philosophies
Charles Darwin, 1859
Adam Smith, 1776
Andrew Carnegie, 1901
Horatio Alger, 1880s
IV. “Old Immigrants”, 1860-80
Germans, British, Irish, Scandinavians
Ellis Island, 1/1/1892
Labor Contractors
“Debt Peonage”
“Company Housing”
Colorado Miners
“Company Stores”
“Script Money”
Division of Labor
Dangerous / Unhealthy Conditions
No compensation
Factory Workers
Hours worked…
Pay…
“Sweatshops” 1882
Children
Pennsylvania & Massachusetts
“Survival Wages”
Over – Crowded Tenements
“34-room”
4 – 16 families
Average…
Women’s role
“Know – Nothing” Party
Nativism
Chinese Exclusion Act, 1882
Immigration Law, 1882
“Political machines”
Tammany hall
“Boss” Tweed & George Washington Plunkitt
“New Immigrants”, 1880-1900
Italians, Russians & Other Baltic countries
V. Railroads
US Congress, 1860s
$16,000
$32,000
$48,000
20 Acres
Only 30,636 Miles, 1860
35,000 miles, 1865
George M. Pullman, 1865
George Westinghouse, 1868
William David, 1868
George M. Pullman, 1868
Promontory Point, Utah, 5/10/1869
Central Pacific
Union Pacific
Powerful Steam engines
93,000 miles, 1880
166,000 miles, 1890
193,000 miles, 1900
254,037 miles, 1916
VI. “Robber Barons”
Corporations
Limited Liability
Managerial Techniques
Monopoly
Trust
Pool
Holding Company
Interlocking Directorate
VII. “Captains of Industry”
Cornelius Vanderbilt, 1794-1877
Andrew Carnegie, 1835-1919
The Gospel of Wealth
John D. Rockefeller, 1839-1937
J. P. Morgan, 1837-1913
Leland Stanford
James J. Hill, 1838-1916
William R. Hearst, 1863-1951
Gustavus Swift & Philip Armour 1875
James B. Duke, 1890
Isaac M. Singer, 1860s
VIII. Variety of Stores
Department Stores
Chain Stores
Mail Order Catalog
IX. Marketing
$50 Million, 1867
N.W. Ayer & Son, 1870s
$500 million, 1920
X. Labor Unions
National Labor Unions, 8/20/1866
William Sylvis
Knights of Labor, 12/1869
Uriah S. Stephens
Terence V. Powderly, 1879
American Federation, 12/8/1886
Samuel Gompers
XI. Labor Strikes
“Yellow Dog Contract”:
“Strike Breakers”
“Lockout”
“Picket Lines”
“Injunctions”
Railroad Strike, 7/14/1877
“General Strike”
“Collective Bargaining”
XII. U.S. Presidency, 1869-1901
Most Presidents
Ulysses S. Grant, 1869-77
Rutherford B. Hayes, 1877-81
James A. Garfield, 1881
Chester A. Arthur, 1881-85
Grover Cleveland, 1885-89
“Mulligan Letters” 1884
“Mugwumps”
6. Benjamin Harrison, 1889-93
Yankee Imperialism #19
I. New “Manifest Destiny”
Frederick Jackson Turner, 1893
Depression of 1893
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