Causes of the Civil War
Battles of the Civil War
People of the Civil War
Politics of the Civil War
Advantages and Disadvantages
Miscellaneous
100

This 1820 agreement kept a balance between free and slave states and created the 36°30’ line.

The Missouri Compromise

100

The first shots of the Civil War were fired here in 1861.

Fort Sumter

100

He was President of the United States during the Civil War.

Abraham Lincoln

100

The southern states formed this new country after secession.

The Confederacy

100

This side had more factories, railroads, and a strong navy.

The North (Union)

100

This was the final event of the Civil War, when Lee surrendered to Grant.

Surrender at Appomattox Courthouse

200

This law required all citizens to help return escaped enslaved people.

Fugitive Slave Act

200

This was the first major battle of the Civil War and showed that the war would not be short.

The Battle of Bull Run

200

He commanded the Confederate Army of Northern Virginia.

Robert E Lee

200

Lincoln issued this document in 1863, changing the focus of the war to ending slavery.

The Emancipation Proclamation

200

This side fought a defensive war and had strong military leaders like Lee and Jackson.

The Confederacy (South)

200

This many American casualties occurred during the Civil War.

More than 620,000

300

This idea allowed people in new territories to vote on whether to allow slavery.

Popular Sovereignty

300

This 1862 battle between the Monitor and Merrimack changed naval warfare forever.

The Battle of the Ironclads

300

He was the Union general who accepted Lee’s surrender at Appomattox Court House.

Ulysses S Grant

300

This type of warfare involves destroying anything that helps the enemy fight.

Total War

300

The North’s large population helped because they had more of these two groups: __ and __.

Workers and Soldiers

300

The Union navy performed this action to cut off Southern ports and supplies.

Blockade

400

This 1857 Supreme Court decision declared that enslaved people were property, not citizens.

Dred Scott Decision

400

The bloodiest single day in U.S. history, this battle allowed Lincoln to issue the Emancipation Proclamation.

Battle of Antietam

400

This abolitionist led the raid at Harpers Ferry in hopes of starting a slave revolt.

John Brown

400

The Union strategy to blockade the South and control the Mississippi River was known as this.

Anaconda Plan

400

The South struggled because it had fewer of this important transportation system.

Railroads

400

This Union strategy through Georgia destroyed supplies and civilian property.

Sherman's March to the Sea

500

Violent clashes in the mid-1850s resulted from the Kansas-Nebraska Act and this concept.

Bleeding Kansas

500

This turning point battle in 1863 stopped Lee’s invasion of the North.

Battle of Gettysburg

500

She helped enslaved people escape using the Underground Railroad.

Harriet Tubman

500

This belief held that states could ignore federal laws they disagreed with.

State's Rights

500

The South had this major agricultural weakness: they relied mostly on these instead of food crops.

Cash Crops (Cotton)

500

This term describes loyalty to one’s region rather than the entire country.

Sectionalism

600

Lincoln’s victory in this presidential election caused the first Southern states to secede.

1860

600

This 1863 Union victory gave the North control of the Mississippi River and split the Confederacy.

Battle of Vicksburg

600

This Union general led the destructive “March to the Sea,” using total war.

William Tecumseh Sherman

600

This speech by Lincoln honored fallen soldiers and redefined the war as a struggle for equality and unity.

Gettysburg Address

600

The South's big advantage with men such as Robert E Lee and Stonewall Jackson.

Military Leadership

600

This person's failed effort to seize a federal arsenal made Southerners fear Northern abolitionists.

John Brown