the military stalemate: 1864

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The Military Stalemate: 1864 Mr. Contipodero American Civil War

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The Military Stalemate: 1864. Mr. Contipodero American Civil War. The Direction . “Whatever happens, there will be no turning back.” Ulysses S. Grant to Abraham Lincoln, April 1864. Morale during the Summer of 1864. No more reserves Supplies running low - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: The Military Stalemate: 1864

The Military Stalemate: 1864

Mr. ContipoderoAmerican Civil War

Page 2: The Military Stalemate: 1864

“Whatever happens, there will be no turning back.”

Ulysses S. Grant to Abraham Lincoln, April 1864

The Direction

Page 3: The Military Stalemate: 1864

Morale during the Summer of 1864

Confederacy Union

No more reserves Supplies running low Southern leaders

quarreling over 1863 defeats

Morale remained high on front lines

3-year infantry enlistments expire

New recruits = decline in fighting quality

More than half of vets reenlisted

Page 4: The Military Stalemate: 1864

1862 – Lincoln appointed Halleck general in chief of all armies◦ Wanted a general to

coordinate Grant

◦ Didn’t want to be a desk general

◦ Headquarters with Army of the Potomac

Desk General?

Page 5: The Military Stalemate: 1864

Armies of the past 1861-1863◦ Acted independently◦ Not a team…not pulling together for the cause◦ Allowed Confederates to shift troops to meet

pressing danger

Grant’s Belief

Page 6: The Military Stalemate: 1864

Armies work simultaneously on multiple fronts

Issued orders to five Union armies across 1,000 miles of front◦ Campaigns ready for

the spring of 1864

Grant’s Way

Page 7: The Military Stalemate: 1864

Army of the Potomac◦ Suffered more

casualties than any other period of the war

Grant forced Lee’s troops out of trenches◦ Lee hit the Union in the

Wilderness◦ Numerical and artillery

superiority meant nothing in the Wilderness

The Wilderness

Page 8: The Military Stalemate: 1864

Wilderness

Page 9: The Military Stalemate: 1864

Soldiers seldom saw their enemies

Whole brigades got lost in forest

Underbrush fires: many wounded burned to death

The Wilderness

Page 10: The Military Stalemate: 1864

Confederates pushing Federals back◦ General Longstreet corps surprised attacked

General Hancock exposed flank◦ Longstreet shot accidently by his own men

Confederates still pushing forward on multiple flanks

More Confusion

Page 11: The Military Stalemate: 1864

Grant was no Joe Hooker◦ Grant stabilized the Union right ◦ Both armies exhausted ◦ 2 days = 17,000 casualties Union / 11,000 CSA

When most Union soldiers thought retreat…◦ They marched southward the next day◦ Morale was high!

Similar to Chancellorsville

Page 12: The Military Stalemate: 1864

Grant’s troops lost the race to Spotsylvania Why is this significant?

◦ Spotsylvania provides safe grounds for communications

◦ Union Army would’ve been between Lee and Richmond Force Lee to fight on open ground

Battles of Spotsylvania

Page 13: The Military Stalemate: 1864

24-year old Colonel Achieved temporary break-through of

Confederate center line Organized 12 regiments into 4 compact

lines under cover of woods ◦ Ran across “No Man’s Land”◦ Temporary success

Emory Upton

Page 14: The Military Stalemate: 1864

Grant used Upton’s strategy “Bloody Angle”

◦ Some of the most savage fighting in the war◦ Hours of fighting in the rain◦ Trenches lie men 3 deep◦ 7,000 casualties per side

More in Spotsylvania

Page 15: The Military Stalemate: 1864

How could Grant keep fighting with high casualty rates?◦ Generals Butler and Sigel disrupt Lee’s supply

lines◦ Rebels would have to come out of trenches and

fight or retreat◦ Sheridan and Union cavalry destroy supply depots

Tore up miles of track, kill CSA generals, broke through Richmond defenses

Strategy

Page 16: The Military Stalemate: 1864

Butler and Sigel did not accomplish goals Lee moved troops behind North Anna River Grant moved west to turn Lee’s flank

◦ Ordered an all out attack on Lee but troops were not ready

◦ Postponed for 24 hours – gave CSA time to prepare

From Spotsylvania to Cold Harbor

Page 17: The Military Stalemate: 1864

Cold Harbor

Page 18: The Military Stalemate: 1864

Name tags on soldiers – death looming June 3rd attack

◦ One of the most costly failures of the war “I regret this assault more than any one I

have ever ordered.” – Grant CSA = 1500 casualties / 7,000 Union

Cold Harbor Defeat

Page 19: The Military Stalemate: 1864

http://www.history.com/videos/grant-and-sherman-unlikely-leaders

Grant and Sherman