definition
war battles
People
100

Missouri Compromise

  • Passed in 1820.

  • Missouri entered as a slave state and Maine as a free state.

  • Drew a line across U.S. territory to limit the spread of slavery.

100

Antietetam

  • Battle fought in Maryland in 1862.

  • Bloodiest single day in American history.

  • Union victory gave Lincoln the chance to issue the Emancipation Proclamation.

100

Uncle Tom's Cabin

  • Novel written by Harriet Beecher Stowe.

  • Showed the cruelty of slavery.

  • Increased anti-slavery feelings in the North.

200

Fugitive Slave Law

  • Part of the Compromise of 1850.

  • Required escaped enslaved people to be returned to their owners.

  • Angered many Northerners.

200

First Battle of Bull Run

  • First major battle of the Civil War in 1861.

  • Confederate victory.

  • Showed both sides that the war would be long and difficult.

200

Dred Scott

  • Enslaved man who sued for his freedom.

  • Supreme Court ruled against him in 1857.

  • Court said African Americans were not citizens and Congress could not ban slavery in territories.

300

Kansas-Nebraska Act

  • Passed in 1854.

  • Allowed settlers in Kansas and Nebraska to decide about slavery by popular sovereignty.

  • Led to violence in Kansas.

300

Fort Sumter

  • Confederate forces attacked the fort in South Carolina on April 12, 1861.

  • Marked the beginning of the Civil War.

300

Election of Lincoln

  • Abraham Lincoln was elected president in 1860.

  • He opposed the spread of slavery into new territories.

  • His election led several Southern states to secede.

400

Bleeding Kansas

  • Violent conflict between pro-slavery and anti-slavery settlers in Kansas.

  • Caused by the Kansas-Nebraska Act.

400

Gettysburg and Importance

  • Major battle fought in Pennsylvania from July 1–3, 1863.

  • Union victory stopped Lee's invasion of the North.

  • Considered the turning point of the Civil War.

400

John Brown's Raid

  • 1859 attack on the federal arsenal at Harpers Ferry.

  • John Brown hoped to start a slave rebellion.

  • Increased tensions between North and South

500

Reactions to the Emancipation Proclamation

  • Enslaved people celebrated and hoped for freedom.

  • Many Northerners supported it.

  • Southerners opposed it and continued fighting

500

Vicksburg and Importance

  • Union victory on July 4, 1863.

  • Gave the Union control of the Mississippi River.

  • Split the Confederacy in two and was a major turning point in the war.

500

Sherman's March

  • General William Tecumseh Sherman led Union troops through Georgia in 1864.

  • They destroyed railroads, farms, and supplies to weaken the South.

  • This strategy was called "Total War."

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