233-end! Flashcards

1
Q

Republican candidates chose Abraham Lincoln as their campaigner for his popularity in the north. Democrats, however, chose two candidates, the ones of the north choosing Stephen Douglas, while in the south they chose Kentucky man John Breckenridge. Then, to try to stop the furthering of sectionalism, some chose John Bell, a Tennessean of the Constitutional Union Party. Lincoln won the election and South Carolina seceded from the Union shortly after, thus starting the Civil War.

A

Election of 1860

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2
Q

the 16th President of the U.S. during the years our country was in Civil War. Known for famous speeches such as “A House Divided” and the “Gettysburg Address” he eventually was assassinated during his second term as president of the United States.

A

Abraham Lincoln

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3
Q

the President of the Confederate States of America and a former politician from Mississippi.

A

Jefferson Davis

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4
Q

Self-sufficient (Could make/produce everything they needed for war)
Had a far larger population/army
Had the majority of war ships at their disposal
Had better transportation systems via railroads/canals/ships etc.

A

Union Advantages

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5
Q

Had home field advantage. (Most battles fought in the south)
Had the majority of seasoned/trained fighting soldiers and leaders.
Had valuable cotton as a bargaining chip to trade with other counties.

A

Confederate Advantages

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6
Q

Union strategy to create a blockade of all southern ports, effectively choking out the South of their needed war supplies.

A

Anaconda Plan

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7
Q

April 12-13, 1861, Charleston, SC; Confederate troops surrounded this Union fort. The fort’s commander refused to surrender even though his troops were being starved out. Lincoln tried to send food but it failed. The South wins the first “battle” of the Civil War

A

Fort Sumter

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8
Q

the original General of the Union Army, General McDowell, sent his troops, who were not the most well-trained at the time, to Manassas to capture the railroad there, the Confederate bloodline. His poor training of his men, encouraged by newspapers of the north pressuring his move, cost him dearly. The Union was defeated in the first major battle of the Civil War.

A

First Battle of Bull Run

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9
Q

took place in southwest TN. General Grant moved down southwest from Kentucky to gain control of the Mississippi. Albert Johnson met him before he could get to the major railroad town of Corinth. At this confrontation, the Union won and gained control of the Confederate railroads and the northern part of the Mississippi. After the victory, David Farragut led the Union navy up the Mississippi, thus enacting the Anaconda Plan

A

The Battle of Shiloh

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10
Q

Lincoln replaced original Union general McDowell with McClellan after Bull Run. One of the few battles to happen on non-confederate soil. This battle was costly for both sides and ultimately Lee was forced to retreat. Union could have potentially ended war here if they had pursued.

A

Battle of Antietam

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11
Q

General Lee was feeling desperate as the war drug on and sent all his men north to Pennsylvania and into the bloodiest day of the War. There were massive casualties on both sides. In Pickett’s Charge, 7,500 men were lost in two and a half hours. Ultimately Lee had to retreat, thus ending any real possibility of the Confederates winning the Civil War.

A

Battle of Gettysburg

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12
Q

The last Confederate stronghold left on the banks of the Mississippi River. The Union Army laid siege to the city for several weeks, starving the inhabitants. The Confederate Army was determined not to surrender here, but ultimately had no alternative. This was a final blow for the Confederate Army.

A

Siege of Vicksburg

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13
Q

Led by William Tecumseh Sherman, was the Union’s attempt at total war. Sherman and his force started at Atlanta, moving eastward, burning anything of value along the way.

A

Sherman’s March to the Sea

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14
Q

was the place at which General Lee surrendered in loose terms to General Grant, effectively ending the Civil War.

A

The Appomattox Court House

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15
Q

Last major Civil War battle was fought in TN (Nov 1864). Mostly fought in the dark, the Union stopped Confederate attempts to regain control of Middle TN.

A

Battle of Franklin

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16
Q

successful leader and general of the Union Army during the Civil War. Because of his success, he was eventually elected President of the United States.

A

Ulysses S. Grant

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17
Q

a southern-born veteran of the War of 1812 and was a notorious sailor. He is best known for his victory at the Battle of Mobile Bay, in which he cried, “Damn the torpedoes, full speed ahead!” He won the last open seaport for the Union in the Gulf of Mexico.. He was promoted to Vice Admiral of the U.S. Navy for his service.

A

David Farragut

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18
Q

Leader/general of the Confederate Army during the Civil War.

A

Robert E. Lee

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19
Q

a Tennessean, a slave trader and officer for the Confederate Army during the Civil War. He later became the first Grand Wizard of the KKK after the war. He prevented slaves and sympathizers from gaining power.

A

Nathan Bedford Forrest,

20
Q

When the Union pushed forward at the Battle of Bull Run, a southern commander made the southern lines stand firm. Upon seeing this, a soldier shouted, “Look! There is Jackson with the Virginians, standing like a stone wall.” He gained his nickname because of this event and became a formidable foe for the Union Army during much of the Civil War

A

Stonewall Jackson

21
Q

(November 24, 1863) was a Civil War battle that occurred just southwest of Chattanooga, Tennessee. The battle was a victory for the Union Army which helped the Union control most of east Tennessee including the Tennessee River and much of the railroad systems in that region.

A

Battle of Lookout Mountain

22
Q

In the year of 1863, Abraham Lincoln gave one of the most famous speeches in U.S. history. The speech was for a dedication of a Union cemetery and charged Americans to come together and fight for the freedoms this country stands for.

A

The Gettysburg Address

23
Q

passed by Abraham Lincoln, signed in 1863, this document freed all slaves in Confederate States. Although the initial impact was limited, it was the first step in ending the institution of slavery in our country.

A

Emancipation Proclamation

24
Q

This was a regiment of volunteer African American soldiers in the Union Army, including two of Frederick Douglass’s sons. They are remembered for their bravery in the face of dangerous assignments, particularly, the Battle of Fort Wagner.

A

The Massachusetts 54th Regiment

25
Q

Nashville was the first Confederate capital to be captured after the__________________. This battle shattered Tennessee’s Confederate army. ___________________________ helped defend and secure Nashville for the remainder of the war.

A

Battle of Nashville/The Thirteenth U.S. Colored Troops

26
Q

Confederate soldier that wrote about life as a soldier and journaled his experiences. Mainly fought in Tennessee battles.

A

Sam Watkins

27
Q

an American soldier who served in the Union Army of the Potomac for the entire duration of the American Civil War, rising from corporal to colonel of his regiment by war’s end. Rhodes’ wrote illustrative diary of his war service

A

Elisha Hunt Rhodes

28
Q

By John Wilkes Booth in Ford Theatre on April 14, 1865

A

Assassination of Lincoln

29
Q

After the assassination of Lincoln in April 1865, Andrew Johnson became president of the United States. As a southerner overseeing reconstruction, he was disliked and not trusted by many northern elected officials which eventually led to his impeachment.

A

Impeaching Controversy of Andrew Johnson

30
Q

barred slavery and involuntary servitude.

A

The 13th Amendment

31
Q

gave all ethnicities citizenship.

A

14th Amendment

32
Q

said that no one could be denied the vote, not for race, color, or past servitude.

A

15th Amendments

33
Q

was the process of rebuilding the south after the Civil War. This included government as well as physical structures.

A

Reconstruction

34
Q

as made by Lincoln, essentially stated that states would be reintegrated when they 10% of registered voters vowed allegiance to the Union.

A

The Ten Percent Plan

35
Q

Was an adjustment to Lincoln’s Ten Percent Plan and called for 50% of southern registered voters to pledge allegiance to the Union before a state would be readmitted

A

Wade Davis Bill

36
Q

was a United States federal law that was intended to restrict the power of the president to remove certain office-holders without the approval of the Senate

A

Tenure of Office Act

37
Q

African American males that were previously enslaved but were now free.

A

Freedmen

38
Q

an agency established by the federal government in 1865 to provide emergency relief to former slaves. Established education systems, provided food, medical, helped find jobs, distributed land.

A

Freedmen’s Bureau

39
Q

created a rigid system of segregation in the South. Included a system of poll taxes, literacy tests, and grandfather clause to prevent African Americans from participating in politics.

A

Jim Crow laws

40
Q

racist hate group formed in Tennessee by Nathan Bedford Forrest with the goal of preventing African Americans from obtaining their constitutional rights through the use of fear and violence

A

Ku Klux Klan

41
Q

Northerners who traveled to the South during Reconstruction to take advantage of economic opportunities to open businesses.

A

Carpetbaggers

42
Q

a white Southerner who collaborated with northern Republicans during Reconstruction, often for personal profit. The term was used derisively by white Southern Democrats who opposed Reconstruction legislation.

A

Scalawags

43
Q

Resulted in the outlawing of slavery in Tennessee. Gave universal voting rights to all male citizens. Contained laws that banned interracial marriage, integration of schools, and allowed poll taxes. Discriminatory laws were eventually overruled by the TN State Supreme Court

A

1870 Tennessee Constitutional Convention

44
Q

When the Civil War broke out, he was outspoken against Tennessee’s secession. Even after it seceded, though he got East TN to reject secession two-to-one. He became governor of Tennessee and helped Tennessee become the first state to rejoin the Union.

A

William Brownlow

45
Q

was an unwritten agreement to put Hayes in office if the Republicans promised to remove all troops from the south.

A

Compromise of 1877