Wednesday, December 19, 2007

Civil War Notes 3 12/18/07

African Americans had to serve in seperate regiments

Led by white officers

54th Massachussetts

South only armed slaves very late in the war

Freedom as an incentive

Battle of Gettysburg

Most pivotal battle of the CW

Southern Pennsylvania

South takes the offense

July 1-3, 63

Union Victory

Confederates never take offensive again

28,000 C, 23,000 U dead

1st Day

Union army has followed Lee into Pennsylvania from Virginia

Confederates are "Looking for shoes"

Union takes the high ground

Confederates occupy Oak Hill and Seminary Ridge

2nd Day

Armies continue to gather

Conf. occupy town

Union (under Meade)

3rd Day

General Lee still sure an assault from the center will win

Pickett's charge

After Gettysburg

July 4, 63

The next day, Vicksburg, MS, captured by Grant after siege of several months. July 4th not celebrated in Vicksburg for 60 years after

Months later Lincoln goes to Gettysburg to dedicate a cemetery

Union wages total war

Confed. lacks everything

Grant fights Lee in VA

Union 65000 to Confed 35000 dead

Union could replace dead, Confed couldn't

Meanwhile, Sherman raided Georgia

General Sherman, Union

"War is Hell"

Fight civilians as well as gov and army

Break the will of enemy

Burned down Atlanta

Annihilating everything in his path to break their will 

Battle of Atlanta

Shermans March to the Sea

Southeast march through Georgia

60 mile wide path of destruction

Destroy what can't consume

Captured Savannah, Georgia in Dec. 21

Turns North to South Carolina

Destroys Charleston and Columbia

End of the War

April 1865

Grant defeats Lee at Petersburg

Davis abandons and burns Confed capitol

Lee surrenders at Appomattox Court House, April 9

Lincoln's terms are generous

Lets the Confederates go home

Reconstruction

Lincolns 10 Percent plan

10 percent of Confederates must pledge oath to Union

Pay reperations

No more Southern military

Assasination

Lincoln shot a few days after surrender

John Wilkes Booth is Southern sympathizer, shoots Lincoln in the back of the head

Escapes, captured 12 days later

Tragedy

Would work with South for reconstruction

Replaced by Andrew Johnson, from Tennessee  

Civil War Notes 2 12/17/07

Lincoln inaugurated May 4th

Didn't want to use his Union forces to protect Fort Sumter

Confed. attacked FS April 12, '61,

First armed conflict of the CW

Confed. wins conflict

Fort Sumter unifies the North

Overwhelming response to Lincoln's call for troops ("Over in 90 days")

Four more states secede: VA, NC, Arkansas, and TE

Western counties of VA oppose slavery, and secede from Virgina, admitted to Union as West Virginia

1st Battle is Battle of Bull Run/Manassas

North names battle after closest town, South names after river

South wins

25 Miles from DC

Union is winning, but Gen. Stonewall Jackson turns the tide

Confederate morale soars.

Union needs to step up efforts

2 big Gens.

McClellan

More politician than general

Won't engage in battle, for fear of losing men or popularity

Wants to be president

Leads the Army of the Potomac

Ulysses Grant

Captures key Confed. forts in the West

Willing to sacrifice troops for victory

Enlistments are up to 3 years

Mississippi critical to South, Union blockades sea board

Ironclads-1862

Wooden warships covered with iron

Confederate: Virgina (Formerly Merrimack)

Union Monitor

Neither side could claim outright victory, no serious damage to either ship

Revolutionized naval warfare

Battle of Shiloh

April 62

Confederates under Johnston attempt to regain upper hand in Tennessee

Grant/Union narrowly avoids disaster with Confed attack in which Johnston is killed

1/4 of the 100,00 men are killed/wounded/captured

13000 Union dead, 11000 Confed dead

Bloodiest battle fought in N. America up to that time

New Orleans

Spring 62

New Orleans captured by combined Union land/naval forces - Farragut

Significant bc it is Confed's largest city and busiest port

First step in Union taking control of the Mississippi and the West

Next Target: Vicksburg, MS

2nd Battle of Bull Run

Aug 30, 62

Threat to Richmond

Confed. capitol

Confederate Victory, Stonewall Jackson

Casualties, 16000 U, 9000 C

Union forces commanded by Pope

Antietam, Maryland

McClelland fails to take Richmond

Retreats to Potomac to regroup

Rob. E. Lee follows

McClellan stumbles on Lee's war plan

Lee's and Jackson's armies are seperated

Acts aggressiely for once

McClellan puts wedge between them

Confronts Lee, 26000 Union die, worse that Shiloh

Infections, bad amputation

Union victory at high cost

Lee has to retreat

Instead of pursuing, McClellan lets him go

Afraid of losing men and reputation

Lincoln fires McClellan

Disease kills just as many as battles

Fredericksburg, VA

Dec. 62

Union led by Ambrose Burnside  loses 3x as many men as Confed.

Pontoon bridges turn the tide

Chancellorsville, VA

May 63

Troops 130000U Hooker to 60000C under Lee

Important strategic battle for the South

Jackson dies from friendly fire

Jackson's death a blow to the South

Emancipation Proclamation

Early in the war, it was not Lincoln's goal to abolish slavery, his main goal was to save the Union

Later in the war, he decided to use his authority as Commander in Chief to emancipate slaves

Jan 1, 63

N-Gave war higher purpose

S-Infuriated, no compromise possible

Draft angers many

NYC, 100 killed in draft riot


Civil War 12/11/07

Lowest point in American history

Reasons for anger between North and South

North was more factory based

South was angry about election of Lincoln

Wasn't even on the ballot for many Southern states

John Brown

Slavery benefited North

Secession was bad for North

Raw materials all come from the South

North had immigrant labor

Cheap

Henry Clay and Webster held Union together through compromises

Calhoun pro secession

Dredd Scott decision

Popular Sovereignty

Economic Differences

Geographic Limitations

Economic interests were in fierce opposition

Plantation Agriculture is on the out, soil exhaustion

Northern industrial power vs. Southern Agriculture


Civil War 12/11/07

Lowest point in American history

Reasons for anger between North and South

North was more factory based

South was angry about election of Lincoln

Wasn't even on the ballot for many Southern states

John Brown

Slavery benefited North

Secession was bad for North

Raw materials all come from the South

North had immigrant labor

Cheap

Henry Clay and Webster held Union together through compromises

Calhoun pro secession

Dredd Scott decision

Popular Sovereignty

Economic Differences

Geographic Limitations

Economic interests were in fierce opposition

Plantation Agriculture is on the out, soil exhaustion

Northern industrial power vs. Southern Agriculture


Kansas-Nebraska 12/10/07

Election of 1852

Both sides avoid topic of slavery

Centered on personality attacks

Democrats elect Pierce

Republicans/Whig elect Winfield Scott

Divided: North Vs. South

Southern Whigs support Pierce

Biggest Issue of Pierces Administration is the Kansas+Nebraska Act

North and South want control of Transcontinental railroad

South bought southern Arizona from Mexico to support railroad

Gadsden Purchase

K+NE Act states that states west of Missouri will be divided by 40th Parallel

Popular Sovereignity

Free Soil Party

Want K+NE to be free of slavery

Combine Free Soil party and Whig Party to make Republican party

Republican Party

Charles Sumner

Abraham Lincoln

Stephen Douglas

Resurgence of the Know Nothing Party

Anti Catholic, Anti Immigrant

Secret society

Bleeding Kansas

K shares a boundary with Missouri, slave state

Easier for the North to get people into NE

Kansas starts to get "squatters" in, to stay temporarily, and vote for slavery

North pays to have people live in Kansas, vote anti-slavery

In Spring of 1856, civil war breaks out in Kansas

Free State people were receiving arms shipments, "Beechers Bible's"

Rifle in one hand, Bible in the other

Pro-Slavery "Ruffians" went around burning down Free Slavery buildings and newspapers

North hears, and exaggerates

John Brown

Fanatic

Took six companions and retaliated for proslavery destruction and at midnight executed five pro-slavery Americans

Pottawatomie Creek

Fights of 300 pro-slavery men with 40 followers

200 Dead, 2 Million in damage

Bad for Pierce's administration

Doesn't do enough to prevent the violence

Charles Sumner

Denounces slavery

Ridicules southern Democrats

Preston Brooks, Butler

Preston Brooks beats him with a cane

Very popular with Southerners

Northerners saw it as proof of how primitive South is

Mexico

Gadsden purchase to get RR away from Rockies

Japan

Closed of to world since 1600's

US sends Cmmdr. Matthew Perry

Perry asks to enter Tokyo Harbor

Threatens to shoot if not allowed to enter

Gets Japan to sign Treaty of Kanagawa

Cuba

Occupied by Spain

Violation of Monroe Doctrine

Ostend Manifesto

Give up rights to Cuba

Election of 1856

Reps. in North upheld Congress to control slavery in the territories

Condemned Ostend Manifesto

Northern Transcont. RR

Kansas as Free State

Homestead Act

Dem. Can: Buchanan

Rep. Can: Fremont

Fremont doesn't win b/c he is Catholic, and bastard child

Buchanan wins some free states

Sunday, December 9, 2007

Chapter 13 Notes 2 12/07/07

Compromise of 1850

Determine what to do with newly acquired territory

Only newly acquired state to reach high pop. is CA

Gold rush

John C. Calhoun reaffirms the right of slaveholders to take their property wherever they want

Slaves are slaves, wherever slaveowners take them.

States that the Wilmot Proviso will create sectional tension

Polk dies, Taylor is president

Taylor urges popular sovereignty for slavery

Urges CA to decide for slavery before congress can

California adopts free constitution

Taylor reccomends admitting CA

Upsets South

Destroys free/slave balance

Clay Resolutions

Promises to solve problem with Slavery

1. Admit CA as free state

2. Organize remainder of Mexican Territory w/o restriction to slavery

Territory is operative word. If they become states, they must vote on slavery

New Mexico is poor growing land

3. Adjust the New Mexico/Texas boundary

4. Dismiss Texas debt, Texas agrees to agree on Mexico border

5. Slavery is allowed in DC but not slave trade

6. More effective fugitive slave laws

7. No Congressional interference with interstate slave trade

Results of Clay Resolutions

1. CA is a free state

2. TX + NM act passed

Compensated TX w/ 10 Million dollars

When NM is  state, popular sovereignty

3. Utah Act

Popular sov.

4. Fugitive Slave Act

5. Abolishes slave trade in DC

Compromise was too little to stop sectional tension


Mexican War Notes 12/06/07

Mexico lost half it's territory

Nation only 100 years old at industrial revolution

Mexico set in form, prior to industrialization

America keeps advancing

Mexico promotes equality, where as America is competitive

Mexico wouldn't sell territory

A matter of honor

Too many Americans entered Texas, so Mexican's closed border

Illegal American immigrants

Reasons for war with Mexico:

The Alamo

Execution of 300 white Texas prisoners


Chapter 13 Notes 12/05/07

Oregon Territory

Occupied by British and Americans

1845

5000 Americans lived below the Columbia River

British mostly in present day Washington, Americans in Oregon

Texas

Occupying Mexican territory

Lots of white settlers

Texas revolts, wants to join US

Texas originally was planned to join as 4 states

Whigs hated, because slave state Texas would get more representatives

Southerners didn't want Texas to join at all, for fear of war with Mexico

Annexation

Add on

Congress voted to annex, and Tyler vetoes

Tyler sucks

Primed for 1844 Presidential Election

Clay runs for the Whigs with Frelinghusen

Polk for the Democrats with George Dallas as VP

Polk wins pop. vote 3.1 Mil to 1.2 Mil

Electoral college was close

Texas was main issue

Polk agrees to only serve one term

Perhaps because the election was so close

Polk annexes Texas with Rio Grande as Southern boundary

Mexicans want higher border and Mexican War begins

Jan. 1846, General Taylor is ordered to advance to other side of the Rio Grande into Texas

General W. Worth comes into Mexico from the West side, w/ 5000 troops

Between them, nearly the entire US Army

John Slidell attempts to buy New Mexico

15-40 Million dollars

US Navy in Texas near Rio Grande

Also send it down to Vera Cruz

Port close to Mexico City

Mexico refuses to negotiate with Slidell until navy leaves Vera Cruz

Mexico troops: 32000, US: 8600

Railroads and communication lines did not extend to Texas

Friction among Generals

June, 1846, John Fremont, Naval Commander, starts Bear Flag Revolt

Tries to take California and join US

Little resistance, plays on Mexicans who wanted independent Californian nation

Fremont leads army all the way to Senoma Valley

Followed by Stockton

Stockton becomes Governer, w/ Fremont still Mil. Commander

Mexican revolt, strong in S. California

US has full control of North

Should CA join as slave state?

Middle of 36-30 Parallel

Wilmot Proviso

Offered 2 Million dollars for S. CA

Quiet rider banned slavery in any territory acquired from Texas

House passes, Senate kills it

War Hawks: "54-40 or Fight"

British agreed to 49th Parallel, excluding Vancouver Island

Flood of white settlers into CA after gold discovered

Saturday, December 1, 2007

The Crusade Against Slavery

Early Opposition to Slavery

American Colonization Society (ACS)

Organized by a group of prominent, white, Virginians

wanted to slowly free black slaves and move freed slaves back to Africa

masters of these slaves received compensation through funds from private charity or state legislature

Established Liberia in 1830, became independent in 1846

Failure of the ACS

colonized” as many freed African Americans in a year as slaves were born in a month

too many black men and women in America to be transported

many slaves were 3 or more generations removed from those transported to America, and had no wish to go to Africa

cotton boom in the South led planters to be more loyal to their “peculiar” labor system. (that of slavery)

Abolitionism

William Lloyd Garrison

assistant of a Quaker, Benjamin London, in New Jersey who published the leading antislavery newspaper of the time: Genius of Universal Emancipation

became impatient with Lundy’s moderate tone and proposals

returned to Boston and founded his own paper; the Liberator

said opponents of slavery should look at it from the slaves perspective and not the owners

not talk about how it is a bad influence on white society

talk about the damage the system did to blacks

very harsh tone

did not like the colonization plan, saying it strengthened slavery by ridding the country of free blacks, and rejected gradualism (slow freeing of slaves)

established the New England Antislavery Society in 1832

established the American Antislavery Society a year later

The American Antislavery Society

more than 250, 000 members by 1838

successful in part because it was similar to other reform movements of the time

called for unleashing the individual human spirit

tried to eliminate “artificial social barriers to fulfillment”

said enslaved men and women were most in need of assistance to help them realize their full individual potential

Black Abolitionists

Northern Free Blacks

mostly concentrated in cities

often in worse conditions than those that were enslaved

ran into a lot of prejudice, more than was common in the south (where white and blacks had to be closer in order for the relationship to work)

victims of violence, few could vote, and few got education of any sort

still proud of their freedom and huge supporters of abolitionism

aware that their position was precarious as long as slavery existed

made up the majority of the Liberator’s readers and subscribers

David Walker

published the pamphlet Walker’s Appeal…to the Colored Citizens

said the land was more theirs than the whites

said they should “kill (white masters) or be killed”

most not this violent

Frederick Douglass

Born a slave in Maryland

escaped to Massachusetts

became a leader in the antislavery movement

spent two years lecturing in England

returned to the US in 1847 and purchased his freedom

founded the antislavery newspaper North Star in Rochester, New York

wrote his autobiography Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass

demanded not only freedom for blacks but full social and economic equality

Black Abolitionists became a more influential force with Douglass as their leader

Anti-Abolitionism

Abolitionism still a minority

both southern and northern whites looked at the movement with fear and contempt

seen as a threat to the existing social system, and all stability and order

caused fear that it might produce a destructive war between the sections

also caused fear of an a great influx of free blacks into the North

Violence towards Abolitionists

when Prudence Crandall tried to admit several black girls to her private school locals had her arrested, destroyed her well, and forced her to shut down the school

In Philadelphia a mob burned abolitionist headquarters, the “Temple of Liberty”, to the ground and began a bloody race riot

A mob in Boston seized Garrison and threatened to hang him, authorities saved him only by locking him in jail

an editor of an abolitionist newspaper, Elijah Lovejoy, had his presses smashed by angry whites three times, on the fourth time he tried to defend them, he was killed and the building burned

Abolitionists

stayed put, most could not be dissuaded

Abolitionism Divided

Moderates

became more moderate, often because of the violence of anti-abolitionists, abolitionists 

argued that abolition could only be accomplished with a long, peaceful struggle

tried to appeal to the conscience of slaveholders

eventually turned to political action, convincing northern states and federal government to help whenever possible

joined Garrison in helping runaway slaves through the “underground railroad” to the Northern states or to Canada

also helped fund the legal battle over the Spanish slave vessel, Amistad

African slaves on a ship to Cuba took over the vessel and turned it back to Africa

US navy seized the ship and held them as pirates

Africans freed as the international slave trade had been illegal in the US since 1808

with extremists got “personal liberty laws” passed in several northern states, so officials would not be permitted to help catch runaway slaves, or in return them to their owners

did not believe Congress could constitutionally interfere with the institution of slavery within the states themselves

Extremists

included Garrison

a few advocated violence

one group gave money to John Brown to support his bloody uprisings in Kansas and Virginia

some attempted to cause anger through propaganda

they claimed there works were factual, although in truth they were very distorted

e.g. Theodore Dwight Weld and Angelina Grimke’s American Slavery as It Is: Testimony of a Thousand Witnesses (1839)

Uncle Tom’s Cabin by Harriet Beecher Stowe

work of fiction

first published as a serial in an antislavery weekly in 1851-1852

then published as a book

sold more than 300,000 copies in a year

later issued again and again

it combined the antislavery message with the popular sentimental novel format

brought the abolition message to a whole new audience

portrayed good blacks victimized by evil whites

Abolition Endured

even divided, the abolitionist movements remained powerful, as the same basic wish for freedom for all remained throughout

before Civil War very few thought slavery could be abolished in a single stroke


Sunday, November 25, 2007

Chapter 11: White Society In the South

In 1850, 350,000 whites in the South out of 6 million owned slaves.

In 1860, it was 380,000 out of 8 million.

Misleading since family's were large, still only one quarter of families owned slaves

Only a small number of those owned lots of slaves.

The Planter Class

The large plantation owners were very powerful.

Determined social and political life for their region.

Some were rich enough to have many homes and would spend months living in the cities.

Others traveled to Europe.

Hosted opulent parties and lived very social lives

Many southerners like to compare these planters to aristocracy.

However, most planters were new to wealth and power.

As late as 1850, most great landowners were first generation settlers

Large parts of the "Old South" had been cultivated for less than two decades at the time of the Civil War

Planter's lives were not as leisurely as myth suggests

Planters supervised operations carefully

Planting was a very competitive industry

Many of the planter class lived modestly

Invested so heavily in land that little money was left for personal comfort

Many Planters moved frequently to new land

Perhaps newness of the planter way of life is what made planters struggle to seems aristocratic

Non-planter whites avoided "coarse" jobs, like trade and commerce

Gravitated to military.

Military suited "chevalier" image

"Honor"

 White males abided by an elaborate cod of chivalry

They were obligated to defend their "honor"

Dueling survived much longer in the North than in the South

Anything that challenged a man's honor or manhood would be occasion for a duel (or occasionaly a public rebuke)

Senator Charles Sumner made a speech which insulted Senator Preston Brooks

Brooks marched into Sumner's office and beat him with a cane

Brooks  acted to defend Southern honor

North saw him as a savage

Defending the honor of women was the most important obligation of a southern gentlemen.

The "Southern Lady"

Upper-class women in the South centered their lives around matters of the home

Served as wives and hostesses

Similar to the lives of middle-class women in the North

Few genteel Southern women worked

Southern women did live different lives than Northern women

Society founded around men defending women's honor

In practice, this made women much less powerful

George Fitzhugh wrote: "Women, like children, have but one right, and that is the right to protection. The right to protection involves the obligation to obey."

Most women lived on farms, relatively isolated, and thus had few opportunities to advance beyond the role of wife and mother. 

Southern families were extremely patriarchal.

Women did have say in economic life of their farm

Wove and spun and generally helped with production.

However, on some of the larger plantations, even these roles were considered unsuitable and they served as the "plantation mistress".

Plantation mistresses were mostly ornaments for their husbands

There was less education for Southern women

Before the Civil War, a quarter of all Southern women were illiterate.

In the South, the birth rate was 20 percent higher, and the infant mortality rate was also high

Almost half of the children born in the South in 1860 died before they reached the age of five.

Slave labor kept women from needing to do many hard tasks, but it also threatened their relationships with their husbands.

Many white men would have affairs with female slaves

Their children became slaves.

Several women rebelled against the South's roles for women

Some became abolitionists and moved to the North

The Plain Folk

Typical white southerners were not planters, but modest farmers

Known as plain folk

Some owned a few slaves, but they lived and worked much more closely with their slaves than plantation owners.

Some plain folk were subsistence farmers, while others unsuccessfully grew cotton.

It was rare for poor farmers to get rich.

Southern education system made advancement difficult

Universities only for the upper class

Elementary and secondary schools were fewer and worse than those in the North.

Only a small number of plain folk opposed the planter class.

Mostly only the "hill people", who lived in the Ozark and Appalachian mountains.

These were the most isolated Southerners.

Completely secluded.

They disliked slavery because it threatened their independence.

The hill people were the only Southerners to resist the trend of secession in the Civil War and some even fought on the side of the confederacy.

Many plain folk depended on planter class

Access to cotton gins, loans, etc.

Many plain folk were related to members of the planter class.

These mutual ties prevented class tensions

South was a more democratic society than the North

Many people voted and attended campaign meetings

Most officeholders were upperclass

Plain folk families were even more paternalistic than planter families

Every family member needed to do there job for a family succeed

Many were convinced that destroying slavery would also destroy patriarchy

Even southerners who didn't share in the plantation economy valued Southern virtues

"Crackers", extremely low class whites, otherwise known as "poor white trash"

Lived in swamps and red hills in small cabins

Owned no land and lived off foraging or hunting

Some worked as laborers, but slave system made this work hard to find

There plight was even worse than that of the slaves

Crackers had no objection to slavery or the plantation system however.

Racism united the South

Chapter 10 Notes 11/12/07

Majority of transportation of goods done by boat

Canal Age

Erie Canal is the most famous

Many canals failed miserably

Very costly

Few canals in South

Less money

Fewer rivers

Railroads

Early trunk lines

Tracks had different gauge width

Steel and ties

Competition between railroads and canals

Railroads win out

Faster, can go over mountains

Easier to build

Railroad consolidation

Connect trunk lines

Standardize gauge

Canals are advantageous for NE with many rivers

Telegraph lines along railroad tracks

Revolutionizes journalism

Associated Press

Decreases crime

Advent of Limited Liability Corporations

Inadequate Credit

Industry Changes

Shoe Industry especially

Shoes mass produced

Industrial Northeast

Mass produce interchangeable parts

Changes guns

Decline of Merchant Capitalism

Transformation of Agriculture

Moves West

Lowell System

Paternalistic system

Good system for women, treated well

System failed eventually

Boom and bust

Immigrant labor

Steps to women's liberation

Economic advantages of Immigrant labor

Much cheaper

Could be treated worse

Brings in unions

Deskilling of labor