objective: to examine the role of the navy and the battles of bull run and antietam

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Objective: To examine the role of the navy and the battles of Bull Run and Antietam.

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Page 1: Objective: To examine the role of the navy and the battles of Bull Run and Antietam

Objective: To examine the role of the navy and the battles of Bull Run and Antietam.

Page 2: Objective: To examine the role of the navy and the battles of Bull Run and Antietam

* It also showed that the war would be long and bloody.

· The Confederates, led by Gen. Thomas “Stonewall” Jackson, won the battle.

* Battle showed each side that they needed training.

Battle of Bull Run Animation· 1st Union attack on the Confederacy.

Page 3: Objective: To examine the role of the navy and the battles of Bull Run and Antietam

July 21, 1861 - Ruins of the Stone Bridge over which Northern forces retreated until it was blown up by a Rebel shell adding to the panic of the retreat, with the Federals returning to Washington as "a rain-soaked mob."

Page 4: Objective: To examine the role of the navy and the battles of Bull Run and Antietam

Battle of Bull Run (1st Manassas), July, 1861

Battle of Bull Run (1st Manassas), July, 1861

Lincoln sent 30,000 Lincoln sent 30,000 inexperienced inexperienced

soldiers to fight at soldiers to fight at Bull RunBull Run..

Lincoln sent 30,000 Lincoln sent 30,000 inexperienced inexperienced

soldiers to fight at soldiers to fight at Bull RunBull Run..Northern troops were

pushed back to D.C.

South won this battle but “lost the war”.

WHY? Failed to capture Washington, D.C.

Would never be so close to Washington, D.C. again

Northern troops were pushed back to D.C.

South won this battle but “lost the war”.

WHY? Failed to capture Washington, D.C.

Would never be so close to Washington, D.C. again

Page 5: Objective: To examine the role of the navy and the battles of Bull Run and Antietam

· Therefore, the South created an ironclad ship called the Merrimack to attack the Union navy.

Naval Action· The Union blockade on Southern ports hurt the South.

Page 6: Objective: To examine the role of the navy and the battles of Bull Run and Antietam

• In response, the North created an ironclad ship called the Monitor.

* Ironclad ships changed naval warfare forever!

The U.S.S. Monitor was the first Union iron-clad ship. This picture shows the deck and the turret of the U.S.S. Monitor.

Page 7: Objective: To examine the role of the navy and the battles of Bull Run and Antietam

USS Monitor in action with CSS Virginia, 9 March 1862

Page 8: Objective: To examine the role of the navy and the battles of Bull Run and Antietam

The Hunley – The world’s first submarine (Confederacy)

Illustration of the H.L. Hunley submarine with its bow-mounted spar torpedo.

Page 9: Objective: To examine the role of the navy and the battles of Bull Run and Antietam

H. L. Hunley, suspended from a crane during its recovery from Charleston Harbor, August 8, 2000.

Page 10: Objective: To examine the role of the navy and the battles of Bull Run and Antietam

· The Confederate General Robert E. Lee decided to attack the Union in Maryland, on Union soil, in September of 1862.

Antietam

· Over 23,000 Union and Confederate troops were killed or wounded.

Page 11: Objective: To examine the role of the navy and the battles of Bull Run and Antietam

Dead Confederate soldiers after the Battle of Antietam

Lincoln with McClellan and staff after the Battle of Antietam. Notable figures (from left) are McClellan; Lincoln; George Armstrong Custer.

Page 12: Objective: To examine the role of the navy and the battles of Bull Run and Antietam

President Lincoln and Gen. George B. McClellan in the general's tent near the Antietam battlefield, October 3, 1862.

Page 13: Objective: To examine the role of the navy and the battles of Bull Run and Antietam
Page 14: Objective: To examine the role of the navy and the battles of Bull Run and Antietam

Theater/Battles 1862

Page 15: Objective: To examine the role of the navy and the battles of Bull Run and Antietam
Page 16: Objective: To examine the role of the navy and the battles of Bull Run and Antietam

On July 4, 1863On July 4, 1863 30,000 Confederate troops defending Vicksburg

surrendered their arms.Grant captured 260 cannons, 60,000 stand-of-arms,

and more than 2 million rounds of ammunition. Former slaves celebrated Independence Day for the

first time.4 days later, the Mississippi River was in the hands

of the Union armyEffectively cutting the Confederacy in two.

Page 17: Objective: To examine the role of the navy and the battles of Bull Run and Antietam

Vicksburg/Gettysburg

•Grant captures

Vicksburg, splits the CSA

in half.

•USA controls the Mississippi

River.

•Grant captures

Vicksburg, splits the CSA

in half.

•USA controls the Mississippi

River.