The first regime to enter the fort was meant to be a distraction so that the other troops could prepare and move in for an attack. Despite the certain death they were facing, every single soldier marched alongside their higher officer into the fort. They fought as hard and as long as they could. No soldier let the American flag stay down. They followed every order and made prominent progress. Yet, near the end of the battle, their higher officer is shot and killed. This induces a rage in the men and a will to fight harder than they already had. They did not retreat despite being the only way to save their lives. They stood and ran up to the Confederate line. Despite all their efforts, they were killed in battle. The fort was never taken, but they were all buried together.…
The Battle of Vicksburg was tried to be won over many times by General Ulysses S. Grant all the way from October, 1862. One of his attempts included one on January 2, 1863 where his men marched from the Yazoo River to the Mississippi River. Grant decided he would need assistant generals, so he brought with him McClerland, McPherson, and Sherman, who also had planned to invade Vicksburg. Originally, the plan had been to attack from Rodney, Mississippi, but a local changed his mind, so they attacked from Bruinsburg. Smaller battles were on May 17, and May 19. On May 19, Union forces were pretty bruised up, so Grant decided to try a new strategy.…
“Immediately Jackson began to receive urgent requests for reinforcements all along the front. One officer rode up to report the brigade commander had been shot down and the survivors were badly shaken. They needed help. ‘What brigade sir?’ Jackson told asked, not having caught the name. ‘The Stonewall Brigade.’ ‘Go back,’ Jackson told him. ‘Give my compliments to them, and tell the Stonewall Brigade to maintain her reputation’.” (Foote 637). Foote sets up the scene of the south losing numbers in a dramatic fashion and creates a dialog between Jackson and a commanding officer of the Confederate army not to make them seem as tragic heroes, as Jackson’s flaw is the inability to give in or have his “Stonewall” reputation tarnished, or even romanticized, but on the contrary, Foote uses this scene to create the suspense to keep the reader going and to even create the feeling many of the soldiers had in the Stonewall Brigade. Foote here focusses on the decisions made by Jackson and throughout the book decisions made by generals because it is the history, the battles themselves decided the fate of our country and the future we were going to have as a nation, either as a free country or a slaveholding…
The war consisted mostly of young, inexperienced Americans who wanted to fight for their country and their honor. General Ulysses S. Grant pushed the Union army up the Tennessee River and captured Fort Henry, and then Fort Donelson. The Confederates were being defeated until the Battle of Shiloh, where leader Pierre G.T. Beauregard led them to victory. Quickly after, Grant’s men struck again and caused the Confederates to retreat. The next victory for the Union was the Battle of New Orleans. This battle was led by Admiral David G. Farragut, and allowed for the Union to shut down the exportation of goods from the South. In the East, General George B. McClellan went to attack the Confederate capital in Virginia. While he was waiting to strike,…
At the battle of Chancellorsville, Confederate General Thomas Jackson (Stonewall Jackson) had been shot by his own side. The Confederate forces won but the loss of Stonewall Jackson had affected the Confederates very badly. This was good for us.…
The civil war was Great War that came with many disappointments and great victory. With both of those components in mind you have two think about the battle strategy used by both sides. In this paper I will be talking about the Union’s battle tactics. Both of the sides had two different Generals. On the Confederate side you had General Lee and on the Union side you had General Grant. General Grant was innovative on both a strategic and operational level. During the Civil War, tactics changed as new equipment, especially the grooved rifle and the entrenching tool, gained importance. Grant understood that war could not be a seasonal activity. Until 1864, wars were conducted when the seasons best permitted, or when men could be away from their…
1. In this story about pacifism, Douglas P. Lackey explains the ethics of murder. In a quote, Lackeys makes a very argumentative statement. He states, “If the congress decides to set a speed limit of 55 miles per hour on federal highways, more people will die than if Congress sets the speed limit at 45 miles per hour. In my opinion, this is a very true statement. I think if the congress was to lower the speed limit in many areas, they will be prolonging many lives. Vehicles are dangerous because of their ability to reach high speeds. People get injured in crashes via vehicles almost every day, and yet Congress still fails to resolve this issue by lowering the speed limit. Lackey also develops an important question from this topic. If it is known in advance that civilians will be killed, why is this not murder? He explains his opinion of the topic in a very detailed way. His opinion is that if Congress is aware that more people will die from a high speed limit set on federal highways, then yes it can be considered as murder. Lackeys view of murder is an intentional killing of the innocent. He states, “But why are they not murder, if the civilians are innocent, and if it is known in advance that some civilians will be killed? Isn’t this an intentional killing of the innocent, which is the traditional definition of murder?” My opinion is similar to Lackey’s. I think that in this case, it should be considered murder and actions should be taking quickly and effectively to approach this issue.…
People say that war never changes. Well, it actually does. Sure, there will always be people dying, and people who give up everything that they have just so they can fight for their country. But, the tactics, technology, and weaponry will always change. Weapons before the civil war were very primitive. They were usually single shot, and had many flaws, such as sudden explosion, and other problems. But once the civil war rolled around, weaponry became extremely advanced.…
Although the three million Confederate and Union soldiers who participated in the war may have been standing for conflicting causes, at their core, both groups were driven by some of the same basic principles. It seems almost impossible that men were able to endure the carnage of the war, and kept fighting even in the face of insurmountable danger. Soldiers were motivated by a combination of many complex contributing factors, including religion, brotherly bonds, and patriotism.…
Did you know that the Siege of Charleston was one of the most embarrassing losses in the American Revolutionary War? It led to the possibility of capturing all of North Carolina by the British. The Siege of Charleston had a lot of interesting causes, leaders, events, and effects.…
5 days later, 68 federal troops stationed in Charleston, South Carolina, withdrew to castle SUMTER, an island in CHARLESTON HARBOR. The North considered the citadel to be the assets of the united states government. The humans of South Carolina believed it belonged to the new Confederacy. 4 months later, the primary engagement of the Civil struggle passed off on this disputed soil. The commander at citadel Sumter, primary ROBERT ANDERSON, was a former slave proprietor who was though genuinely unswerving to the Union. With 6,000 South Carolina, armed forces ringing the harbor, Anderson and his squaddies had been reducing off from reinforcements and resupplies. In January 1861, as one the closing acts of his management, President James Buchanan dispatched two hundred infantrymen and components on an unarmed merchant vessel, celebrity OF THE WEST, to reinforce Anderson. It speedy departed when South Carolina artillery started out firing on it.The Civil struggle started out at four:30 a.m. on April 12, 1861, when accomplice artillery, under the command of fashionable PIERRE GUSTAVE T. BEAUREGARD, opened fire on citadel Sumter. confederate batteries showered the fort with over three,000 shells in a three-and-a-half of day length. Anderson surrendered. mockingly, Beauregard had advanced his army capabilities under Anderson's education at West point. This became the primary of infinite relationships and families devastated…
The Lost Cause influenced the honor and commencement offered to the Confederate heroes, and deemphasized the importance of slavery in their fight; without regard to the limitations due to the poor economic situation they were left in when the war ended. The purpose of Lost Cause of the Confederacy was to spread the idea that the American Civil War was not centralized around slavery, but was a struggle to preserve the Southern way of life, and their rights as states. While on the surface the actions taken by the Lost Cause advocates seemed not to focus on politics, it was perhaps underneath it all a political matter.…
To start, the Confederate Defenders of Charleston monument was established during 1932 by the people of Charleston to provide a memory for those whose relatives fought for the Confederacy during the American Civil War. The monument itself displays a message of the Confederate veterans who defended Charleston and Fort Sumter from the Union.…
The civil war was a war that redefined America and reaffirmed that freedom was not limited solely by a person’s race. The results of the war echoed long past the final battle and forever changed what being an American means today. Many of the stories and accounts from this period helped establish the meaning of freedom and the struggles to understand how freedom applied to all people such as The Gettysburg address (Abraham Lincoln) and The narrative of Fredrick douglass. Both pieces discuss American views on freedom before and during the civil war. Fundamentally the Civil War was a conflict over the right to freedom-- which challenged a number of beliefs surrounding slavery, our Constitution and the rights guaranteed therein and to whom,…
The American Civil War played a very important role in the U.S. The American Civil War played a very important role in U.S. history. It was probably very hard to fight for our country, and for us. If the American Civil War didn't end, we wouldn't have peace, or a beautiful Earth like we do now. I think the American Civil War is a defining moment in the history of the U.S.…