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Chapter 21: The Furnace of Civil War (1861-1865)

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Chapter Outline

I. Bull Run Ends the “Ninety-Day War”

  1. When President Abraham Lincoln called for 75,000 militiamen on
    April 15, 1861, he and just about everyone else in the North expected a
    swift war lasting about 90 days, with a quick suppression of the South
    to prove the North’s superiority and end this foolishness.
  2. On July 21, 1861, ill-trained Yankee recruits swaggered out toward
    Bull Run to engage a smaller Confederate unit. They expected one big
    battle and a quick victory for the war.

    • The atmosphere was like that of a sporting event, as spectators gathered in picnics to watch.
    • However, after initial success by the Union, Confederate
      reinforcements arrived and, coupled with Stonewall Jackson’s line
      holding, sent the Union soldiers into disarray.
  3. The Battle of Bull Run showed the North that this would not be a
    short, easy war and swelled the South’s already too-large ego.

II. “Tardy George” McClellan and the Peninsula Campaign

  1. Later in 1861, command of the Army of the Potomac (name of the
    Union army) was given to 34 year old General George B. McClellan, an
    excellent drillmaster and organizer of troops, but also a perfectionist
    who constantly believed that he was outnumbered, never took risks, and
    held the army without moving for months before finally ordered by
    Lincoln to advance.
  2. At Lincoln’s urging, he finally decided upon a water-borne
    approach to Richmond (the South’s capital), called the Peninsula
    Campaign, taking about a month to capture Yorktown before coming to
    Richmond.

    • At this moment, President Lincoln took McClellan’s expected
      reinforcements and sent them chasing Stonewall Jackson, and after
      “Jeb” Stuart’s Confederate cavalry rode completely
      around McClellan’s army, Southern General Robert E. Lee launched
      a devastating counterattack—the Seven Days’
      Battles—on June 26 to July 2 of 1862.
    • The victory at Bull Run ensured that the South, if it lost, would
      lose slavery as well, and it was after this battle that Lincoln began
      to draft an emancipation proclamation.
  3. With the quick-strike plan a failure, the Union strategy now turned
    to total war. Summed up, the plan was to blockade, divide, and conquer.
    The plan included…

    • Suffocate the South through an oceanic blockade.
    • Free the slaves to undermine the South’s very economic foundations.
    • Cut the Confederacy in half by seizing control of the Mississippi River.
    • Chop the Confederacy to pieces by marching through Georgia and the Carolinas.
    • Capture its capital, Richmond, Virginia.
    • Try everywhere to engage the enemy’s main strength and grind it to submission.
    • This was essentially General Winfield Scott’s “Anaconda Plan.”

III. The War at Sea

  1. The Union blockade started with many leaks at first, but it clamped down later.
  2. Britain, who would ordinarily protest such interference in the seas
    that she “owned,” recognized the blockade as binding, since
    Britain herself often used blockades in her wars.
  3. Blockade-running, or the process of smuggling materials through the
    blockade, was a risky but profitable business, but the Union navy also
    seized British freighters on the high seas, citing “ultimate
    destination” (to the South) as their reasons; the British
    relented, since they might have to do the same thing in later wars (as
    they did in World War I).
  4. The biggest Confederate threat to the Union came in the form of an
    old U.S. warship reconditioned and plated with iron railroad rails: the
    Virginia (formerly called the Merrimack), which threatened to break the
    Union blockade, but fortunately, the Monitor arrived just in time to
    fight the Merrimack to a standstill, and the Confederate ship was
    destroyed later by the South to save it from the North.

    • The lessons of the Monitor vs. the Merrimack were that boats needed to be steam-powered and armored, henceforth.

IV. The Pivotal Point: Antietam

  1. In the Second Battle of Bull Run, Robert E. Lee crushed the arrogant General John Pope.
  2. After this battle, Lee hoped to thrust into the North and win,
    hopefully persuading the Border States to join the South and foreign
    countries to intervene on behalf of the South.

    • At this time, Lincoln reinstated General McClellan.
  3. McClellan’s men found a copy of Lee’s plans (as
    wrapping paper for cigars) and were able to stop the Southerners at
    Antietam Creek on September 17, 1862 in one of the bloodiest days of
    the Civil War.

    • Jefferson Davis was never so close to victory as he was that day,
      since European powers were very close to helping the South, but after
      the Union army displayed unexpected power at Antietam, that help faded.
    • Antietam was also the Union display of power that Lincoln needed to
      announce his Emancipation Proclamation, which didn’t actually
      free the slaves, but gave the general idea; it was announced on January
      1, 1863. Lincoln said the slaves would be free in the seceded states
      (but NOT the border states as doing so might anger them into seceding
      too).

      • Now, the war wasn’t just to save the Union, it was to free the slaves a well.
      • This gave the war a moral purpose (end slavery) to go with its political purpose (restore the union).

V. A Proclamation Without Emancipation

  1. The Emancipation Proclamation freed the slaves in not-yet-conquered
    Southern territories, but slaves in the Border States and the conquered
    territories were not liberated since doing so might make them go to the
    South; Lincoln freed the slaves where he couldn’t and
    wouldn’t free the slaves where he could.
  2. The proclamation was very controversial, as many soldiers refused to fight for abolition and deserted.
  3. However, since many slaves, upon hearing the proclamation, left
    their plantations, the Emancipation Proclamation did succeed in one of
    its purposes: to undermine the labor of the South.
  4. Angry Southerners cried that Lincoln was stirring up trouble and trying to incite a slave insurrection.

VI. Blacks Battle Bondage

  1. At first, Blacks weren’t enlisted in the army, but as men ran
    low, these men were eventually allowed in; by war’s end,
    Black’s accounted for about 10% of the Union army.
  2. Until 1864, Southerners refused to recognize Black soldiers as
    prisoners of war, and often executed them as runaways and rebels, and
    in one case, at Fort Pillow, Tennessee, Blacks who had surrendered were
    massacred.

    • Afterwards, vengeful Black units swore to take no prisoners, crying, “Remember Fort Pillow!”
  3. Many Blacks, whether through fear, loyalty, lack of leadership, or
    strict policing, didn’t cast off their chains when they heard the
    Emancipation Proclamation, but many others walked off of their jobs
    when Union armies conquered territories that included the plantations
    that they worked on.

VII. Lee’s Last Lunge at Gettysburg

  1. After Antietam, A. E. Burnside (known for his sideburns) took over
    the Union army, but he lost badly after launching a rash frontal attack
    at Fredericksburg, Virginia, on Dec. 13, 1862.
  2. “Fighting Joe” Hooker (known for his prostitutes) was
    badly beaten at Chancellorsville, Virginia, when Lee divided his
    outnumbered army into two and sent “Stonewall” Jackson to
    attack the Union flank, but later in that battle, Jackson’s own
    men mistakenly shot him at dusk, and he died.
  3. Lee now prepared to invade the North for the second and final time,
    at Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, but he was met by new General George G.
    Meade, who by accident took a stand atop a low ridge flanking a shallow
    valley and the Union and Confederate armies fought a bloody and brutal
    battle in which the North “won.”

    • In the Battle of Gettysburg (July 1-3, 1863), General George
      Pickett led a hopeless, bloody, and pitiful charge across a field that
      ended in the pig-slaughter of Confederates.
    • A few months later, Lincoln delivered his Gettysburg Address, which
      added moral purpose to the war saying a new goal was to make sure those
      who’d been killed had not died in vain.

VIII. The War in the West

  1. Lincoln finally found a good general in Ulysses S. Grant, a
    mediocre West Point graduate who drank too much whiskey and also fought
    under the ideal of “immediate and unconditional surrender.”
  2. Grant won at Fort Henry and Fort Donelson, but then muffed-up and
    lost a tough battle at Shiloh (April 6-7, 1862), just over the
    Tennessee border.
  3. In the spring of 1862, a flotilla commanded by David G. Farragut joined with a Northern army to seize New Orleans.
  4. At Vicksburg, Mississippi, U.S. Grant besieged the city and
    captured it on July 4, 1863, thus securing the important Mississippi
    River. Grant redeemed himself here after blundering at Shiloh.

    • The Union victory at the Battle of Vicksburg came the day after the
      Union victory at Gettysburg, and afterwards, the Confederate hope for
      foreign intervention was lost.

IX. Sherman Scorches Georgia

  1. After Grant cleared out Tennessee, General William Tecumseh Sherman
    was given command to march through Georgia, and he delivered, capturing
    and burning down Atlanta before completing his infamous “March to
    the Sea” at Savannah.

    • His men cut a trail of destruction one-mile wide, waging
      “total war” by cutting up railroad tracks, burning fields
      and crops, and destroying everything.

X. The Politics of War

  1. The “Congressional Committee on the Conduct of the War”
    was created in 1861 and was dominated by “radical”
    Republicans and gave Lincoln much trouble.
  2. The Northern Democrats split after the death of Stephen Douglas, as
    “War Democrats” supported Lincoln while “Peace
    Democrats” did not.

    • Copperheads were those who were totally against the war, and
      denounced the president (the “Illinois Ape”) and his
      “nigger war.”
    • The most famous of the Copperheads was Clement L. Valandigham, who
      harshly denounced the war but was imprisoned, then banished to the
      South, then came back to Ohio illegally, but was not further punished,
      and also inspired the story The Man without a Country.

XI. The Election of 1864

  1. In 1864, the Republicans joined the War Democrats to form the Union
    Party and renominated Abe Lincoln despite a bit of opposition, while
    the Copperheads and Peace Democrats ran George McClellan.

    • The Union Party chose Democrat Andrew Johnson to ensure that the
      War Democrats would vote for Lincoln, and the campaign was once again
      full of mudslinging.
    • Near election day, the victories at New Orleans and Atlanta
      occurred, and the Northern soldiers were pushed to vote, and Lincoln
      smoked his opponent in the Electoral College, 212-21.

      • The popular vote was closer: 2.2 million to 1.8.

XII. Grant Outlasts Lee

  1. Grant was a man who could send thousands of men out to die just so
    that the Confederates would lose, because he knew that he could afford
    to lose twice as many men while Lee could not.

    • In a series of wilderness encounters, Grant fought Lee, with Grant losing about 50,000 men.
    • At Cold Harbor, the Union sent soldiers to battle with papers
      pinned on their backs showing their names and addresses, and over 7,000
      died in a few minutes.
    • The public was outraged and shocked over this kind of gore and
      death, and demanded the relief of General Grant, but U.S. Grant stayed.
      Lincoln wanted somebody who’d keep the “axe to the
      grindstone,” and Grant was his man.
  2. Finally, Grant and his men captured Richmond, burnt it, and
    cornered Lee at Appomattox Courthouse at Virginia in April of 1865,
    where Lee formally surrendered; the war was over.

XIII. The Martyrdom of Lincoln

  1. On April 14, 1865, Abraham Lincoln was shot in the head by John Wilkes Booth and died shortly after.
  2. Before his death, few people had suspected his greatness, but his
    sudden and dramatic death erased his shortcomings and made people
    remember him for his good things.
  3. The South cheered Lincoln’s death at first, but later, his
    death proved to be worse than if he had lived, because he would have
    almost certainly treated the South much better than they were actually
    treated during Reconstruction.

XIV. The Aftermath of the Nightmare.

  1. The Civil War cost 600,000 men, $15 billion, and wasted the cream of the American crop.
  2. However, it gave America a supreme test of its existence, and the
    U.S. survived, proving its strength and further increasing its growing
    power and reputation; plus, slavery was also eradicated.
  3. The war paved the way for the United States’ fulfillment of
    its destiny as the dominant republic of the Western
    Hemisphere—and later, the world.

 

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