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Learn
About The
Civil War
The election of a Republican president
opposed to the expansion of slavery into the western territories led seven
states in the lower South to secede from the Union beginning in December
1860 and to establish the Confederate States of America the following
February. After Lincoln notified South Carolina's governor that he intended
to resupply Fort Sumter in Charleston harbor, the Confederacy fired on
the installation. This led Lincoln to declare that an insurrection existed
in the South. Within weeks, Virginia, North Carolina, Tennessee, and Arkansas
joined the Confederacy.
2.1 million men served in the Union army and 900,000 Confederates in the
Confederate. The Civil War was the first war to involve trench warfare;
observation balloons; iron-clad ships; and the use of repeating and breech-loading
rifles, mines, and hand grenades.
Early in the war, the Union succeeded in blockading Confederate harbors,
and by mid-July 1862 it had divided the Confederacy in two by wresting
control of Kentucky, Missouri, and much of Tennessee, as well as Mississippi
River.
In the Eastern Theater in 1861 and 1862, the Confederacy stopped Union
attempts to capture its capital in Richmond, Virginia. In September 1862
(at Antietam in Maryland) and July 1863 (at Gettysburg in Pennsylvania),
Lee tried and failed to provoke European powers intervention in the war
by winning a victory on Northern soil.
After futile pleas to the border states to free slaves voluntarily, Lincoln
in the summer of 1862 decided that emancipation was a military and political
necessity. The Emancipation Proclamation transformed the war from a conflict
to save the Union to a war to abolish slavery. It authorized the enlistment
of African Americans; 220,000 served during the war, helping to ensure
the destruction of slavery.
Consequences
1. During the war Congress adopted policies that altered American society.
The Homestead Act offered free public land to western settlers. Huge land
grants supported construction of a transcontinental railroad. The government
raised the tariff, imposed new taxes, enacted the first income tax, and
established a system of federally-chartered banks.
2. The Union lost about 360,000 troops during the Civil War and the Confederacy
about 260,000. This is almost as many soldiers as have died in all other
American wars combined.
3. The 13th Amendment, ratified in December 1865, ended slavery in the
United States.
Between
the Napoleonic Wars of the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries
and World War I, the American Civil War was the greatest military conflict
in the western world. It cost 600,000 American lives, more than in World
War I and World War II combined. Its social consequences were especially
far-reaching. The war resulted in the emancipation of four million enslaved
African Americans. It also brought vast changes to the nation's financial
system, fundamentally altered the relationship between the states and
the federal government, and became modern history's first total war.
It is truly the central event in American history.

Lincoln
Ponders Emanicipation, 1862
http://www.digitalhistory.uh.edu/documents/documents_p2.cfm?doc=185
Read
more documents of the Civil War
Maps:
1862
The
historical war map. Hudson Taylor
To learn more
Images:
Click
for more images.
Timelines:
19th
century timeline.
Fact sheets and lesson plans:
Fact sheets:
Sectional Conflict
Secession and the Civil War
The Civil War
Recommended
lesson plan:
Not
Just a Mans War: Women in the American Civil War, 1861-65
http://score.rims.k12.ca.us/activity/manswar/
Classroom activities, focusing on womens experience during the
Civil War, appropriate for students of a variety of ages and ability
levels that draw upon resources available on the World Wide Web and
upon primary source documents.
Fact checks:
Test
your knowledge by taking our Civil War quiz

Recommended readings:
James
M. McPherson, Battle Cry of Freedom: The Civil War Era.
To learn more, read a
succinct history of the Civil War, including the conflict's causes
and its military, political, and social history.
Today, the Civil War remains one of the most hotly contested battlefields
in the discipline of history. Historians still dispute why the war began,
whether it could have been averted, and whether its outcome could have
been different.
For a more complete discussion of the debates over the Civil War, read
our historiographical
essay.
To learn more
Recommended
film{maybe an s} :
Glory
Learn
more:
From the silent era onward, Hollywood released some 800 movies dealing with the Civil War. Many of these movies depicted the war in grossly misleading terms.
To learn more about inaccuracies
in Hollywood's depictions of the Civil War.
Recommended
Web site:
The
Civil War Center at Louisiana State University
http://www.cwc.lsu.edu/cwc/civlink.htm
To
learn more
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