The Battle of Vicksburg was an important victory for the Union during the Civil War. This major victory was a massive turning point in the war for the Union. Before this point in the war, the Union only had a few wins against the Confederacy and hope was slowly withering away for the Union; but because of Vicksburg, the Union was able to turn the war around and eventually (as we all know) win the war and reunite the North and the South. Vicksburg was an important Union victory and turning point in the war because it was believed to be the key to the Confederacy by Lincoln and Jefferson Davis and contained valuable resources, it split the Confederacy in half, and it proved that General Grant was a more than adequate leader and strategist.…
These delays lead to a tactical stalemate rather than a decisive victory. Lee and his troops were able to retreat and live to fight another day, giving the Union a partial “victory”. Lincoln felt this was a good enough situation and gave the Emancipation Proclamation linking to the end of the Civil War with the end of slavery. This (limited) victory and Lincoln’s actions blunted France and England from officially recognizing the Confederacy as a nation unto itself because recognition of the South now equaled support for slavery.…
In 1863, Union forces moved against the major railroad center in Chattanooga, Tennessee, just across the Georgia line. On September 19-20, Union General Rosecrans led his troops against confederate General Braxton Bragg seven miles south of Chattanooga at Chickamauga Creek. Bragg’s army defeated Union forces and forced the Union army back into Tennessee. But Bragg did not follow up on the Union retreat. By November 1863, General Ulysses Grant had arrived with more troops and recaptured Chattanooga, forcing Bragg to retreat south to Dalton.…
Sherman’s March was a march lead by General William T. Sherman. During this march he lead 100,000 soldiers from Tennessee to Atlanta , Georgia. The purpose of Sherman’s March was to destroy Confederate industries and railroads. This march affected the Civil War because Confederate troops now had no railroads for fast transport of troops. Also, the Confederates now had no way to make goods because the Union had destroyed their industries and factories. If this didn’t happen, the Confederates could have sent their troops through their railroads to attack the Union. This could have majorly changed the outcome of the war. The Union could have been attacked and the Confederates could have gained more land. Lincoln needed a victory from the union…
There were many lifting and shifting of artillery fires from both sides, concentrating of each General’s decision on the situations that were coming in from the battlefield. The Union totally overwhelmed the Confederate army with massing fires, and concentrated frontal attacks that day, causing huge loses on the Confederate side. The major shortcomings of the Confederate lost was due to solely planning of the artillery crossfire, but poorly executed that plan. The secondary plan of suppression fire was hindered also by the bombardment of the Union massing counter-fire taking much of the Confederate artillery off the battlefield. Even though the Union Artillery had an almost 3:1 odds on the Confederate Army, the first initial volleys of Confederate fire primary stunned the Union army and if continued to could have changed the entire outcome with the Confederate crossfire plan executed successfully. This battle will go down as one of the most notable artillery exchanges from American artillery, and with proper artillery planning/execution, artillery can and will always be the deciding factor on a decisive win or a major…
1. Now, in east Tennessee, CONFS drove UNION out from battlefield at CHICKAMAUGA into city of CHATANOOGA and then SIEGED CHATANOOGA…
The Northern armies reigned victorious, and the rebelling states were returned to the Union. Since the start of the war, the Union devised a strategy. They planned to blockade the South and drive on the Confederate capital. Even though organizing it took about four years, it was the single strategy that won the war. Lincoln and Grant cooperated well.…
what many historians believe to have lead the final push into the civil war. Without the…
Civil War Tennessee is a general overview of the tactics used in and the battles fought in Tennessee and they’re importance. The book also discusses some of the problems both the Union and Confederates faced during this bloody war.…
Historians have argued inconclusively for years over the prime reason for Confederate defeat in the Civil War. The book Why the North Won the Civil War outlines five of the most agreed upon causes of Southern defeat, each written by a highly esteemed American historian. The author of each essay does acknowledge and discuss the views of the other authors. However, each author also goes on to explain their botheration and disagreement with their opposition. The purpose of this essay is to summarize each of the five arguments presented by Richard N. Current, T. Harry Williams, Norman A. Graebner, David Herbert Donald, and David M. Potter. Each author gives his insight on one of the following five reasons: economic, military, diplomatic, social, and political, respectively.…
Based on the information from above , the North should win the war due to their advantages in the number of railroads in the North and a greater amount of soldiers fighting in war. In the Civil War, the North had a far greater amount of soldiers fighting for them than in the South. While the South only had 750,000 to 1,000,000 soldiers fighting for the Confederate Army, the North had, “2 million soldiers fighting for the Union. ”(Society Infographic) Not only did the Union have more soldiers, but 179,000 slaves fought for the South.…
It is a common belief among many historians that history is told through the eyes of the winners. Read any American history book or any world history textbook and they mainly tell you about the hero that saved the nation such as Wellington at Waterloo or General Washington in the Revolutionary War or General Patton in World War II. The case of the American Civil War is no different, especially for a man who changed the war. Ask anybody in the south, even the kindergartners and they will tell you about William Tecumseh Sherman, the man who burned everything. Ask anyone in the North and they’ll tell you how Sherman and Grant together helped the North win the war. General William Tecumseh Sherman constantly said that he disliked war yet when his time came in the Civil War he rose up from a man who was dubbed crazy to become a man who changed war into a concept of total war and would go on to become one of…
In order to win the war, the Union had to think smart and play it to their advantage. In the book The Civil War: A Visual History, author John E. Stanchak declared, “During the 19th century, the new era of rail and steam that marked the Industrial Revolution was centered in the Northern states, and a summary of economics and human resources shows their advantages” (Stanchak 54). The North had a lot of railroads which helped them travel faster. They also had more money and organizations than the South. These advantages boosted them further into victory.…
I agree with your statements of the March to the Sea. However, Sherman knew that the Confederacy got their strength from the moral support of the southerners. So, in that ensure destroying them will destroy the Confederacy. Also, the soldiers could burn Barnes and wrecked bridges before the army could reach them. Furthermore, Sherman’s and his troops made it hard for the Conference to fight back. Additionally, agree with you without what Sherman did slavery would’ve probably carry on a little longer, good post.…
Three years have passed so far in this bloody four year Civil war. The Confederate armies were winning the war against the Union. It was looking good for the Confederate until the battle of Gettysburg. This war was the turning point that would lead to a Union victory. I believe this because of the large abundance of Confederate men that were either missing, wounded, or dead, the momentum given to the Union, and that this is the key victory that stopped the invasion of the south from spreading into the north.…