10 Facts About The Civil War

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Rosary Sisters’ High School

Subject: History
Class: Grade8

10 Facts About the Civil War


 

Characters, Causes, and Context


The Civil War profoundly shaped the United States as we know it today.
Nevertheless, the war remains one of the most misunderstood events in
American history. Here are ten basic facts you need to know about
America's defining struggle.

 Fact#1: The Civil War was fought between the Northern and
the Southern states from 1861-1865.
The American Civil War was fought between the United States of America and the
Confederate States of America, a collection of eleven southern states that left the Union
in 1860 and 1861. The conflict began primarily because of the long-
standing disagreement over the institution of slavery. On February 9, 1861,  Jefferson
Davis, a former U.S. Senator and Secretary of War, was elected President of the
Confederate States of America by the members of the Confederate constitutional
convention.  After four bloody years of conflict, the United States defeated the
Confederate States. In the end, the states that were in rebellion were readmitted to the
United States, and the institution of slavery was abolished nation-wide.

Abraham Lincoln in 1865.


Library of Congress

Fact #2: Abraham Lincoln was the President of the United States
during the Civil War.
Abraham Lincoln grew up in a log cabin in Kentucky.  He worked as a shopkeeper and a
lawyer before entering politics in the 1840s.  Alarmed by his anti-slavery stance,
seven southern states seceded soon after he was elected president in 1860—with four
more states to soon follow.  Lincoln declared that he would do everything necessary to
keep the United States united as one country. He refused to recognize the southern
states as an independent nation and the Civil War erupted in the spring of 1861.  On
January 1, 1863, Lincoln issued the Emancipation Proclamation, which freed the slaves
in the areas of the country that "shall then be in rebellion against the United States." The
Emancipation Proclamation laid the groundwork for the eventual freedom of slaves
across the country.  Lincoln won re-election in 1864 against opponents who wanted to
sign a peace treaty with the southern states.  On April 14, 1865, Lincoln was shot
by assassin John Wilkes Booth, a southern sympathizer. Abraham Lincoln died at 7:22
am the next morning. 

Fact # 3: Before the United States was formed, many different


civilizations existed on the American continent.
Native Americans have lived in North America for more than 12000 years. Around 400
years ago, people from the Netherlands, England, Spain and France arrived in North
America and began to establish small independent colonies. These different civilizations
traded, mixed and fought with each other. In 1789 they unified and formed a common
government based on an agreement known as the Constitution. Many considered the
Constitution to be a non-binding agreement they believed that the different civilizations
now called” states” could leave the union.

Fact #4: The issues of slavery and central power divided


the United States.
Slavery was concentrated mainly in the southern states by the mid-19th century, where
slaves were used as farm laborers, artisans, and house servants. Chattel slavery formed
the backbone of the southern economy.  In the northern states, industry largely drove
the economy. Many people in the north and the south believed that slavery was immoral
and wrong. Southerners felt threatened by the pressure of northern politicians and
“abolitionists” and claimed that the federal government had no power to end slavery,
impose certain taxes, force infrastructure improvements, or influence western
expansion against the wishes of the state governments. Eleven states left the United
States in the following order and formed the Confederate States of America: South
Carolina, Mississippi, Florida, Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana, Texas, Virginia, Arkansas,
North Carolina, and Tennessee.

Fact #5: The Civil War began when Southern troops


bombarded Fort Sumter, South Carolina.
When the southern states seceded from the Union, war was still not a certainty.
Federal forts, barracks, and naval shipyards dotted the southern landscape. Many
Regular Army officers clung tenaciously to their posts, rather than surrender their
facilities to the growing southern military presence. President Lincoln attempted to
resupply these garrisons with food and provisions by sea. The Confederacy learned of
Lincoln’s plans and demanded that the forts surrender under threat of force.  When the
U.S. soldiers refused, South Carolinians bombarded Fort Sumter in the center of
Charleston harbor.  After a 34-hour battle, the soldiers inside the fort surrendered to the
Confederates.  Legions of men from north and south rushed to their respective flags in
the ensuing patriotic fervor. 

Fact #6: The North had


more men and war
materials than the South.
At the beginning of the Civil War, 22
million people lived in the North and 9
million people (nearly 4 million of whom were slaves) lived in the South.  The North also
had more money, more factories, more horses, more railroads, and more farmland. On
paper, these advantages made the United States much more powerful than the
Confederate States.  However, the Confederates were fighting defensively on territory
that they knew well. They also had the advantage of the sheer size of the Southern
Confederacy. Which meant that the northern armies would have to capture and hold
vast quantities of land across the south. Still, too, the Confederacy maintained some of
the best ports in North America—including New Orleans, Charleston, Mobile, Norfolk,
and Wilmington. Thus, the Confederacy was able to mount a stubborn resistance.

Fact #6: The bloodiest battle of the Civil War was the
Battle of Gettysburg, Pennsylvania.
The Civil War devastated the Confederate states.  The presence of vast armies
throughout the countryside meant that livestock, crops, and other staples were
consumed very quickly.  In an effort to gather fresh supplies and relieve the pressure on
the Confederate garrison at Vicksburg, Mississippi, Confederate General Robert E.
Lee launched a daring invasion of the North in the summer of 1863.  He was defeated by
Union General George G. Meade in a three-day battle near Gettysburg, Pennsylvania
that left nearly 51,000 men killed, wounded, or missing in action. While Lee's men were
able to gather the vital supplies, they did little to draw Union forces away from
Vicksburg, which fell to Federal troops on July 4, 1863. Many historians mark the twin
Union victories at Gettysburg and Vicksburg, Mississippi, as the “turning point” in the
Civil War. In November of 1863, President Lincoln traveled to the small Pennsylvania
town and delivered the Gettysburg Address, which expressed firm commitment to
preserving the Union and became one of the most iconic speeches in American history. 

Fact #8: The North won the Civil War.


After four years of conflict, the major Confederate armies surrendered to the United
States in April of 1865 at Appomattox Court House and Bennett Place.  The war
bankrupted much of the South, left its roads, farms, and factories in ruins, and all but
wiped out an entire generation of men who wore the blue and the gray.  More than
620,000 men died in the Civil War, more than any other war in American history.  The
southern states were occupied by Union soldiers, rebuilt, and gradually re-admitted to
the United States over the course of twenty difficult years known as the Reconstruction
Era. 

Fact #9: After the


war was over, the
Constitution was
amended to free
the slaves, to
assure “equal
protection under the law” for American citizens, and to
grant black men the right to vote. 
During the war, Abraham Lincoln freed some slaves and allowed freedmen to join the
Union Army as the United States Colored Troops (U.S.C.T.).  It was clear to many that it
was only a matter of time before slavery would be fully abolished.  As the war drew to a
close, but before the southern states were re-admitted to the United States, the northern
states added the 13th, 14th, and 15th amendments to the Constitution. The amendments
are also known as the "Civil War Amendments."  The 13th Amendment abolished
slavery in the United States, the 14th Amendment guaranteed that citizens would
receive “equal protection under the law,” and the 15th Amendment granted black men
the right to vote.  The 14th Amendment has played an ongoing role in American society
as different groups of citizens continue to lobby for equal treatment by the government. 

Fact #10: Many Civil War battlefields are threatened by


development.
The United States government has identified 384 battles that had a significant impact
on the larger war.  Many of these battlefields have been developed—turned into
shopping malls, pizza parlors, housing developments, etc.—and many more are
threatened by development.  Since the end of the Civil War, veterans and other citizens
have struggled to preserve the fields on which Americans fought and died.  The
American Battlefield Trust and its partners have preserved tens of thousands of acres of
battlefield land. 

https://www.battlefields.org/learn/articles/10-facts-what-everyone-should-know-
about-civil-war

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