4. Sides compared
North/Union - South/Confederacy
Population:
North: 20 million people
South: 9 million people -
including 3.6 million slaves.
5. Sides compared
North/Union - South/Confederacy
Railroads:
North: 22,000 miles of railroad track.
South: 9,000 miles of railroad track.
6. Railroads
Attacking armies had to carry
enormous supplies of ammunition,
food and bandages.
The railroad, which had never been
used much in war before, was now an
important factor.
7. Sides compared
North/Union - South/Confederacy
The North had more factories,
factory workers, more money,
more banks, more bank credit,
more ships, more locomotives,
more steel and iron, more farm
machinery, and more firearms.
8. Sides compared
North/Union - South/Confederacy
North: Grew a variety of crops.
South: Grew only a few staple crops -
tobacco, cotton and rice- which it had to
import in order to obtain all the things it
lacked.
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9. Sides compared
North/Union - South/Confederacy
North:relied on labor saving
devices like the reaper, for
farming - freeing up men for the
army.
South: relied on slave labor -
which could turn on the south at
anytime.
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14. •The rifle was called so
The Rifle because the inside of the
barrel was rifled - or cut with
spiral grooves.
• When the bullet was pushed
out of the barrel, it was
released spinning.
•This gave it a longer
range(500 yards instead of
50 yards)and more accurate
aim.
15. Digging in!
The style of war was changing.
With more accurate long-range
rifles, the defenders sat protected
behind battlements in well
supplied positions.
Armies could no longer confront
each other in solid ranks.
20. The “war of exhaustion”
This new kind of
was a war of
exhaustion.
Enemy supplies
had to be cut off by
railroads, as well as
water.
21. The “war of exhaustion”
The North had to capture or blockade
the southern ports and coasts in order
to stop supplies from being delivery to
the South.
24. Everybody’s War
In both the North and the South nearly
every family lost a soldier.
For the first time in history, the battle
were thoroughly covered by
newspaper correspondents.
They telegraphed back eyewitness
accounts so that civilians could read
about the horror the next morning.
25. Women at War
Dorothea Dix, on June 10, 1861, was
appointed the first Superintendent of
Women Nurses.
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26. Women at War
Clara Barton, in 1877, founded and
became president of the American Red
Cross.
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28. The Border States
When the war began, Lincoln was not
even sure who was on his side or
whether Washington D.C. could even
be held.
It was surrounded on three sides by
Maryland, a slave state.
If Maryland was to succeed,
Washington D.C. would be lost.
29. The Border States
Lincoln imposed martial law in
Maryland in order to control it,
suppressing newspapers,
arresting civilians and even
refusing to let them appear before
civilian judges.
This is called suspending the writ
of habeas corpus.
31. The Question of Emancipation.
At the beginning of the
war, in order to keep in
the Union the border
slaves states -
Delaware, Maryland,
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refused to emancipate
the slaves.
32. The Question of Emancipation.
When (Union)General Fremont,
commander of the Western Department,
on August 30, 1861, freed the slaves of
rebels in Missouri, Lincoln stepped in
firmly and overruled him.
33. The Question of Emancipation.
As much as
Lincoln, would of
like to free the
slaves, his first job
was to save the
Union.