Causes of the Civil War
Civil War events
Reconstruction
Important figures
Sectionalism and politics
Civil War
100

Author of Uncle Tom's Cabin which increased Northern opposition to slavery by portraying its brutality.

Harriet Beecher Stowe

100

Abraham Lincoln issued this declaration after the Battle of Antietam on January 1, 1863, changing the Union war aim.

Emancipation Proclamation

100

These constitutional amendments are known collectively as the “Reconstruction or Civil War Amendments.” 

13th, 14th, and 15th Amendments

100

President of the Confederacy 

Jefferson Davis 

100

The Conscience Whigs and Free Soilers merged and this political party formed in the 1850s on an anti-slavery-expansion platform.

Republican 

100

Name of the Union Strategy 

Anaconda Plan 

200

This doctrine argued that residents of a territory should decide the question of slavery themselves.

Popular Sovereignty 

200

This was the first major battle of the Civil War, surprising both sides with its high casualties.

Battle of Bull Run 

200

This government agency assisted formerly enslaved people with education, food, and employment contracts.

Freedmen's Bureau 

200

Radical Abolitionist who led the raid on Harper's Ferry 

John Brown 

200

This legislative proposal during the Mexican-American War aimed to ban slavery in all newly acquired territory, though it never passed.

Wilmot Proviso

200

Union general who developed the strategy for the Civil War 

Winfield Scott 

300

This 1857 Supreme Court decision declared that enslaved people were not citizens and Congress could not ban slavery in the territories.

Dred Scott v Sanford or Dred Scott Case 

300

Turning the tide of the war, these 1863 battles halted Confederate expansion into the North and gave the union control of the Mississippi

Vicksburg and Gettysburg 

300

This president’s lenient Reconstruction plan led to conflict with Congress and eventually impeachment.

Andrew Johnson 

300
Union General who was relieved from command after the Battle of Antietam and who ran against Lincoln in 1864

George McClellan 

300

Legislation passed by Lincoln granted 160 acres of land in Western territories 

Homestead Act 

300

Mortally wounded by friendly fire at Chancellorsville, this general’s death dealt a major blow to Confederate strategy.

Stonewall Jackson 

400

This congressional compromise admitted California as a free state and included a stricter Fugitive Slave Law.

Compromise of 1850

400

This Union general’s “March to the Sea” sought to break Southern morale through total war.

William Tecumseh Sherman 

400

This group of lawmakers pushed for harsher punishment of the South and more protections for freedpeople.

Radical Republicans

400

Leading Confederate general who surrendered at the Appotomox Courthouse

Robert E Lee 

400

This act pushed by the Radical Republicans divided the South into 5 military districts to ensure state compliance with the 13th, 14th and 15th amendments

Reconstruction Act of 1867

400

This Union general earned the nickname “Unconditional Surrender” after victories in the western theater early in the war. Following the battle of Antietam he replaced McClellan and was named Lt. General, the first person to have that title since Washington!

Ulysses S Grant 

500

This 1854 law effectively repealed the Missouri Compromise and led to violent conflict in Kansas.

Kansas Nebraska Act 

500

This speech delivered by Lincoln reframed the purpose of the Civil War as preserving a “new birth of freedom.”

Gettysburg Address 

500

Radical republican plan for reconstruction that was punitive to the South, requiring 50% of a former confederate states voters to pledge allegiance to the union 

Wade Davis Bill 

500

2 Radical Republicans we talked about in class

Charles Sumner & Thaddeus Stevens 

500

The Proposal to save the Union by amending the Constitution to legalize slavery

Crittenden Compromise 

500

This Civil War battle (Hampton Roads) featured the first clash of ironclad ships in world history. Name the two vessels involved.

Merrimack and Monitor 
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