Sons of Confederate Veterans Durham, North Carolina. The Forefront. Published in Occupied North Carolina

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "Sons of Confederate Veterans Durham, North Carolina. The Forefront. Published in Occupied North Carolina"

Transcription

1 Sons of Confederate Veterans Durham, North Carolina Published in Occupied North Carolina Winner of the Colonel Leonidas LaFayette Polk Award for the best Camp newsletter in the North Carolina Division in 2007, 2008, 2012 and runner up "First at Bethel, farthest to the front at Gettysburg and Chickamauga, last at Appomattox" Commander: Douglas W. Nash, Jr. Lt. Commander: John T. Flora, Jr. Adjutant/Treasurer: Thomas M. Beach Chaplain: David T. Patterson Communications Officer: John T. Nash H.L. Hunley Award Coordinator: Mark A. Hall Webmaster: W. Greg Parrott Public Affairs/Education Officer: William G. O Quinn Genealogist: John T. Nash Member-at-Large: Gerald Belton Historian: David T. Patterson Newsletter Editor: Douglas W. Nash, Jr. Color Sergeant: W. Greg Parrott Social Media/Advertising Officer: Matthew McGuigan Charge to the Sons of Confederate Veterans: To you, Sons of Confederate Veterans, we will commit the vindication of the cause for which we fought. To your strength will be given the defense of the Confederate soldier s good name, the guardianship of his history, the emulation of his virtues, the perpetuation of those principles which he loved and which you love also, and those ideals which made him glorious and which you also cherish. Lt. Gen. Stephen Dill Lee, Commander General, United Confederate Veterans, New Orleans, Louisiana,

2 Statement of Purpose We, the Sons of Confederate Veterans, having been commissioned by the Confederate Veterans themselves, retain our responsibility and right to adhere to the founding principles of the United States of America remembering the bravery, defending the honor and protecting the memory of our beloved Confederate Veterans, which includes their memorials, images, symbols, monuments and gravesites for ourselves and future generations. Our Next Meeting: Our June 2018 meeting will be held on Tuesday the 5 th at Pomodoro Italian Kitchen, 1811 Hillandale Road, Durham beginning at 6:30 PM. Remember to arrive early so you can place your supper order. Our guest speakers will be Jim and Marty Rogers speaking on the North-South Skirmish Association (NSSA). Commander s Comments: Compatriots, Well, our onion fundraiser was not exactly as profitable as in years past but we still did pretty well bringing in an additional $1, (counting donations) for the Camp. I thank all those who participated. I big thank you to everyone who braved the elements to attend and participate in our Confederate Memorial Day observance in Maplewood Cemetery. I know our Confederate kinfolk were smiling. I would like to thank Lt. Commander John Flora who will be chairing our June meeting. Brother John and I have a sister coming from Connecticut to visit so will be absent. Flag Pledge and Salutes: Pledge to the US Flag I pledge allegiance to the Flag of the United States of America, and to the Republic for which it stands; one nation under God, indivisible, with liberty and justice for all. Salute to the Confederate Flag I salute the Confederate Flag with affection, reverence, and undying devotion to the Cause for which it stands. 2

3 Salute to the North Carolina Flag I salute the Flag of North Carolina and pledge to the Old North State, love loyalty, and faith. Camp Meeting: NC Division Reunion/Convention. The 2018 NC Division Reunion/Convention was held on Saturday, April 28 th hosted by the Black River Tigers/10 th Bn Hvy Arty, Co B Camp 2152 and the Black River Tiger Roses OCR in Coats, North Carolina at Enoch Vineyards Event Center, 3735 Highway 50 South, Benson, North Carolina Guest speaker Darwin Roseman. Confederate Memorial Day, Maplewood Cemetery, Durham. Matthew McGuigan receiving award from the Maryland Division. Recent Events: 3

4 Doing everything possible to stay dry. Speakers (left to right) President, Eliza Bennett Chapter 49, Order of Confederate Rose Brenda Barringer; Past Camp & Capitol Brigade Commander William G. O Quinn; Army of Northern Virginia Commander Ronnie S. Roach; President, North Carolina Division, United Daughters of the Confederacy Peggy Woodlief Johnson. Desecration of flags marking graves in the middle section of Maplewood. It appears this was actually done while we were observing the special day in the older section. Upcoming Events: Heritage Day at the NC Legislature on Tuesday, June 12, Participating Organizations: Sons of Confederate Veterans United Daughters of the Confederacy Honor Guard and Rifle Squad. Desecration of Flags. Military Order of the Stars and Bars Children of the Confederacy Order of Confederate Rose 26 th North Carolina Regiment 4

5 6 th North Carolina State Troops Participants will meet with House of Representative and Senate members from 9 am 4 pm to discuss our organizations and our goals with lawmakers and their staff. Coat and tie preferred, or a tucked-in collared shirt, or period dress. Dinner can be obtained in the cafeteria downstairs. Please make every effort to attend this important event. 1st Annual Legislative reception to follow at the UDC House on Blount street from 6-whenever. We have invited all 170 members and will see how many turn up. Providing heavy hors d'oeuvres and "Artillery Punch" and hopefully a Dixieland band. For complete information on General Assembly, parking, etc., see the excellent legislative website: rd National Reunion. The 123 rd National Reunion will be held July 18-21, 2018 in Franklin, Tennessee. Host Hotel is the Franklin Marriott Cool Springs. Rooms are $ per night (subject to state and local taxes). Ask for the SCV Reunion special rate. North Carolina Division SCV Press Release: FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE April 13, 2018 The North Carolina Division, Sons of Confederate Veterans is proud to announce the unveiling of our second interstate billboard. We wish to share our celebration of Confederate heritage with the general public of North Carolina and enlist their support in our efforts. This new billboard, located on Interstate 95 north in Godwin, encourages support for our Flags Across the Carolinas program and bears an image of our I-95 Mega Flag located nearby at the General Theophilus Hunter Holmes Confederate Memorial Site and Cemetery. The billboard declares JOIN THE FLAGS ACROSS THE CAROLINAS NOW! in reference to the North Carolina Division s work in raising large Confederate flags around North Carolina on major interstates and highways. More billboards are in the works and will be appearing across North Carolina. Additionally, with the public s support, we will raise more flags to honor our ancestors as we are able to procure land. The North Carolina Division, Sons of Confederate Veterans is a non-profit corporation and is gratefully accepting donations of land or monies to further our expand our Flags Across the Carolinas project. More information can be found on our website at A photo of the billboard is attached. R. Kevin Stone Commander 5

6 Further press inquires may be directed to raised and educated. He graduated from Franklin College in Franklin, Tennessee and studied at the Lebanon Law School. After passing his bar exam, Cox formed a partnership with a prominent Nashville attorney, and his practice flourished. North Carolina Officers in the War Between the States: Brigadier General William Ruffin Cox Cumberland University home of Lebanon Law School. In 1857, Cox ceased his practice, married, moved back to North Carolina, and owned a plantation in Edgecombe County. Two years later, he moved to Raleigh and entered politics, running as a Democrat for the state legislature. He was narrowly defeated, losing a hardfought election by just thirteen votes in his district. William R. Cox was born in Scotland Neck, Halifax County, North Carolina, on March 11, 1831 or 1832 to an aristocratic family that lived in North Carolina since the colonial days. His father died when Cox was only four years old. His mother and his siblings subsequently moved to Nashville, Tennessee, where he was With North Carolina's secession and the outbreak of the War in early 1861, Cox raised and outfitted the "Ellis Artillery Company." He soon afterwards raised an infantry company and was appointed as the major of the 2nd North Carolina by Governor Ellis. He fought in the Battle of Sharpsburg, and was given a promotion 6

7 to lieutenant colonel, as he and the officer previously holding that rank were promoted with the death of the regiment's first colonel, Charles C. Tew, in that battle. Not long afterwards, the new colonel resigned and Cox assumed command of the veteran regiment. He was formally commissioned as the colonel of the 2nd North Carolina in March 1863 and in May of that year, Cox was wounded three times in the fighting at the Battle of Chancellorsville. Despite his painful wounds, he stayed in command until late in the fighting when exhaustion forced him to retire to a field hospital to be treated. Spotsylvania Court House, being personally commended by General Robert E. Lee for bravery in fighting on May 12. Not long afterwards, he was assigned command of a brigade of North Carolina infantry, despite being junior in rank to other colonels in the brigade. He led his troops at the Battle of Cold Harbor and then accompanied the Army of the Valley under Maj. Gen. Jubal Early in the Shenandoah Valley. At the Battle of Monocacy, Cox's brigade played a prominent role in the day-long fighting. Charles C. Tew. Missing the Gettysburg Campaign due to his injuries, Cox did not return to the field until the Fall of While temporarily in command of Ramseur's Brigade because the general was on leave to get married, Cox was wounded in the face and right shoulder early in the battle of Kelly's Ford on November 7, Shipped to the hospital in Richmond, the wound resulted in a 40-day furlough to recuperate. He fought with distinction at the battles of the Wilderness and Brigadier General William Ruffin Cox. Returning to the Army of Northern Virginia, Cox served in the trench defenses during the Siege of Petersburg, including the counterattack of 7

8 Confederate forces on the Union's Fort Stedman. Promoted to brigadier general, Cox led a division during the final year of the war, including the Appomattox Campaign. He surrendered his men to the Federal army at Appomattox Court House in April 1865 and returned home. During the course of the war, he survived a total of eleven wounds. After the war, Cox resumed his legal practice in Raleigh and became President of the Chatham Railroad. He spent six years as the solicitor (prosecuting attorney) for metropolitan Raleigh, and was chairman of the North Carolina Democratic Party from 1874 through In January 1877, he became Circuit Superior Court Judge of the Sixth Judicial District. He endured the death of his wife in He resigned his judgeship when he was elected to the United States Congress, serving for six years as a representative from North Carolina. In the House, he championed civil service reform, a stance which alienated some prominent Democrats, leading to him losing the party nomination for re-election in He remarried and retired to his plantation in Edgecombe County, but was appointed Secretary of the U.S. Senate to replace former Union army general Anson G. McCook in He served until the turn of the century, when he again retired, this time for good, to his plantation. At the time of his death on December 26, 1919, he was one of the last surviving generals of the Confederate army. He is buried in Raleigh's Historic Oakwood Cemetery. 8

9 In World War II the United States liberty ships SS William R. Cox (November 1943), William R. Cox (December 1943), and William Cox were all named in his honor. Did They Eat/Drink/Use That? The year is 1855: Miller Brewing Company was founded by Frederick Miller after his emigration from Hohenzollern, Germany in 1854 with a unique brewer's yeast. Initially, he purchased the small Plank Road Brewery in Milwaukee for $2300. The brewery's location in the Miller Valley in Milwaukee provided easy access to raw materials produced on nearby farms. In 1855, Miller changed its name to Miller Brewing Company, Inc. The enterprise remained in the family until to handle the financial demands, largely collapsed. The main international bankers in Europe were reluctant to finance the Confederacy, so Richmond turned to smaller houses and speculators, who bought $15,000, in Confederate bonds with gold. The gold was used to buy warships and supplies to be brought in by blockade runners. By highlighting Britain's economic links to the Northern states and pointing to the potential dangers of meddling in the conflict, financiers in the City of London provided the U.K. Parliament with a powerful economic justification for the policy of neutrality. At the beginning of the war the Confederacy had some $47 million in bank deposits (compared to $189 million in Northern banks), and $27 million in specie (gold and silver coins) holdings (compared to $45 million worth in the northern states). Economy of the Confederate States of America: Foreign Trade Finance Most of the available capital in the Confederate states was invested in slaves or in cotton land. There was no way to monetize these to support the war effort. The weak banking system, unable 9 Confederate Kinfolk Corner: Private Quintilion Green Strayhorn, Company G, 27 th North Carolina State Troops. Quintilion Green Strayhorn, 2 nd Great Grandfather of William Bill E. Strayhorn, was born September 27, 1827 in Orange County, North Carolina and was by occupation a farmer. Quintilion enlisted at the age of 36 for the War and was mustered into Company G, 2th North Carolina State Troops as a Private.

10 Private Strayhorn was wounded in the shoulder near Petersburg, Virginia on June 15, 1864 and hospitalized in Richmond, Virginia where he died on July 20, 1864 of wounds. Quintilion Green Strayhorn is buried in Hollywood Cemetery Confederate Section, Richmond, Virginia, section U, Grave 60. In July 2006 a Confederate headstone was installed by William Bill Strayhorn. 10

The Forefront. Published in Occupied North Carolina

The Forefront. Published in Occupied North Carolina Sons of Confederate Veterans Durham, North Carolina October 2015 Published in Occupied North Carolina Winner of the Colonel Leonidas LaFayette Polk Award for the best Camp newsletter in the North Carolina

More information

"First at Bethel, farthest to the front at Gettysburg and Chickamauga, last at Appomattox"

First at Bethel, farthest to the front at Gettysburg and Chickamauga, last at Appomattox Sons of Confederate Veterans Durham, North Carolina October 2016 Published in Occupied North Carolina Winner of the Colonel Leonidas LaFayette Polk Award for the best Camp newsletter in the North Carolina

More information

Bell County Historical Commission Newsletter. Spring 2017 Vol. 26, No. 3 Bell County Courthouse Belton, Texas 76513

Bell County Historical Commission Newsletter. Spring 2017 Vol. 26, No. 3 Bell County Courthouse Belton, Texas 76513 Bell County Historical Commission Newsletter Spring 2017 Vol. 26, No. 3 Bell County Courthouse Belton, Texas 76513 1 2 BCHC Newsletter Spring 2017 BCHC Newsletter Spring 2017 3 4 BCHC Newsletter Spring

More information

The Forefront. Published in Occupied North Carolina

The Forefront. Published in Occupied North Carolina Sons of Confederate Veterans Durham, North Carolina November 2016 Published in Occupied North Carolina Winner of the Colonel Leonidas LaFayette Polk Award for the best Camp newsletter in the North Carolina

More information

Alamo City Guards Camp #1325

Alamo City Guards Camp #1325 January 2018 Alamo City Guards Camp #1325 FROM HEADQUARTERS, David Calandra Compatriots, I would first off like to thank each of you for electing me as your new commander. I hope that I will be as great

More information

The Forefront Published in Occupied North Carolina

The Forefront Published in Occupied North Carolina Sons of Confederate Veterans Durham, North Carolina December 2014 Published in Occupied North Carolina Winner of the Colonel Leonidas LaFayette Polk Award for the best Camp newsletter in the North Carolina

More information

The Forefront. Published in Occupied North Carolina

The Forefront. Published in Occupied North Carolina Sons of Confederate Veterans Durham, North Carolina February 2016 Published in Occupied North Carolina Winner of the Colonel Leonidas LaFayette Polk Award for the best Camp newsletter in the North Carolina

More information

SS8H6b. Key Events of the

SS8H6b. Key Events of the SS8H6b Key Events of the The Civil War began on April 12, 1861, when Confederate forces fired on Fort Sumter. Fort Sumter was a Union fort in the harbor of Charleston, South Carolina. The Union forces

More information

RUCKER RANGERS NEWSLETTER

RUCKER RANGERS NEWSLETTER RUCKER RANGERS NEWSLETTER Published Monthly February 2016 Gen. Edmond Winchester Rucker Chapter 2534 United Daughters of the Confederacy Enterprise, Alabama NEXT MEETING: Thurs., February 11, 2016, 4:30

More information

The Monthly Rebel Banner

The Monthly Rebel Banner The Monthly Rebel Banner The newsletter of Sons of Confederate Veterans Murfreesboro Camp #33 2012 SCV Camp of the Year 2010-2015 Sesquicentennial of The Cause for Southern Independence 1860-1865 Volume

More information

Junior High History Chapter 16

Junior High History Chapter 16 Junior High History Chapter 16 1. Seven southern states seceded as Lincoln took office. 2. Fort Sumter was a Federal outpost in Charleston, South Carolina. 3. Lincoln sent ships with supplies. 4. Confederate

More information

Chapter 16 and 17 HOMEWORK. If the statement is true, write "true" on the line. If it is false, change the underlined word or words to make it true.

Chapter 16 and 17 HOMEWORK. If the statement is true, write true on the line. If it is false, change the underlined word or words to make it true. If the statement is true, write "true" on the line. If it is false, change the underlined word or words to make it true. 1. The first shots of the Civil War were fired when the Confederates seized Fort

More information

Honor has no boundaries...

Honor has no boundaries... Red Diamond Rambler May, 2014 Volume 2, Issue 1 April 19, 2014, Little Rock, AR Confederate Heritage/Flag Day and Memorial Service was held on the grounds of the State Capitol. Rifle Honor Guard memorializes

More information

2 nd Massachusetts Cavalry Company M & Company A

2 nd Massachusetts Cavalry Company M & Company A Lieutenant Wesley C. Howe Company M & Company A Wesley C. Howe W esley Curtis Howe was born March 19, 1833 at Edinburgh, Pennsylvania, a small town in the northern foothills of the Allegheny Mountains

More information

The American Civil War

The American Civil War The American Civil War 1861 1865 Lincoln s First Inauguration March 4, 1861 Confederates Took Fort Sumter April 4, 1861 Confederates Took Fort Sumter April 4, 1861 Lincoln Calls For Volunteers April 14,

More information

"First at Bethel, farthest to the front at Gettysburg and Chickamauga, last at Appomattox"

First at Bethel, farthest to the front at Gettysburg and Chickamauga, last at Appomattox Sons of Confederate Veterans Durham, North Carolina November 2014 Published in Occupied North Carolina Winner of the Colonel Leonidas LaFayette Polk Award for the best Camp newsletter in the North Carolina

More information

HIST 103: CHAPTER 14 THE CIVIL WAR

HIST 103: CHAPTER 14 THE CIVIL WAR HIST 103: CHAPTER 14 THE CIVIL WAR SECESSION Fire-Eaters seized federal property Fort Pickens (FL) Fort Sumter (SC) Formation of the C.S.A. Montgomery, AL Buchanan s Beliefs LAST CHANCE TO AVOID WAR December

More information

The Martz Missive. October 2016 Program The Plight of Confederate POW's at the Point Lookout Federal Military Prison in Saint Mary's County, Maryland

The Martz Missive. October 2016 Program The Plight of Confederate POW's at the Point Lookout Federal Military Prison in Saint Mary's County, Maryland The Martz Missive Sons of Confederate Veterans Col. D. H. Lee Martz Camp 10, Harrisonburg VA Volume 17, Issue 9 October 2016 To you, Sons of Confederate Veterans, we will commit the vindication of the

More information

Charles Bruckner Civil War Years

Charles Bruckner Civil War Years Charles Bruckner Civil War Years On September 6, 1861 Charles Bruckner enlisted in Company K, 5 th Michigan Infantry in Detroit, Michigan, and his services are given in the State Record of the Fifth Michigan

More information

In this issue: SOUTHERN HERITAGE VOLUME 24, ISSUE 3 MARCH Charge to the Sons of Confederate Veterans

In this issue: SOUTHERN HERITAGE VOLUME 24, ISSUE 3 MARCH Charge to the Sons of Confederate Veterans The Third National Flag A broad, red bar gave the Third National Flag an unmistakable visual signature. It was adopted too late in the war to have much use or impact. Very few actually reached the field

More information

April May 2015 SONS OF CONFEDERATE VETERANS-MECHANIZED CAVALRY

April May 2015 SONS OF CONFEDERATE VETERANS-MECHANIZED CAVALRY SONS OF CONFEDERATE VETERANS-MECHANIZED CAVALRY April May 2015 Picture 1. April 11, 2015 the National Confederate Memorial Service at Stone Mountain Park Georgia. Hosted by the Georgia Society Military

More information

Famous Women of the War Women Support the War Civil War Soldiers. Anaconda Plan. Battle of Bull Run. Battle of Antietam. Proclamation Lincoln

Famous Women of the War Women Support the War Civil War Soldiers. Anaconda Plan. Battle of Bull Run. Battle of Antietam. Proclamation Lincoln Anaconda Plan Battle of Bull Run Battle of Antietam Famous Women of the War Women Support the War Soldiers Emancipation Abraham Proclamation Lincoln Battle of Gettysburg Gettysburg Address Rose Greenhow

More information

Confederate Postal History. A Virginia First Day of Independent Use

Confederate Postal History. A Virginia First Day of Independent Use Confederate Postal History Figure 1: A three-cent dull red (U.S. Scott 26) just tied by pen cancel with matching manuscript cancel of Bealeton (Virginia) on April 17 (1861), the day the Virginia legislature

More information

Camp Cresset Finley s Brigade Camp #1614 Havana, Florida

Camp Cresset Finley s Brigade Camp #1614 Havana, Florida Camp Cresset Finley s Brigade Camp #1614 Havana, Florida Recipient 2011 and 2012 Dr. George R. Tabor Most Distinguished Camp Award "To you, Sons of Confederate Veterans, we will commit the vindication

More information

The Civil War has Begun!

The Civil War has Begun! The Civil War has Begun! Quick Review What is a secession? When part of a country leaves or breaks off from the rest Why did the Fugitive Slave Law upset some people in the North? Many Northerners did

More information

Civil War & Reconstruction. Day 16

Civil War & Reconstruction. Day 16 Civil War & Reconstruction 1. Warm Up 2. DBQ The Battle of Gettysburg: Why Was It a Turning Point? Day 16 Civil War & Reconstruction #4 due TONIGHT @ 10:45 Warm - Up Which is correct? A B C ORAL QUESTIONS

More information

Camp Cresset Finley s Brigade Camp #1614 Havana, Florida

Camp Cresset Finley s Brigade Camp #1614 Havana, Florida Camp Cresset Finley s Brigade Camp #1614 Havana, Florida Recipient 2011 and 2012 Dr. George R. Tabor Most Distinguished Camp Award "To you, Sons of Confederate Veterans, we will commit the vindication

More information

The Civil War

The Civil War The Civil War 1861-1865 Essential Questions What underlying factors caused the Civil War? What specific events led to the outbreak of conflict? What were the contrasting visions of Lincoln and Jefferson

More information

Strategies, Advantages, and Disadvantages for the North and South Fill in the Blank as you listen to the vodcast.

Strategies, Advantages, and Disadvantages for the North and South Fill in the Blank as you listen to the vodcast. Strategies, Advantages, and Disadvantages for the North and South Fill in the Blank as you listen to the vodcast. Strategies - Expert Information: To achieve victory in any war both sides must devise a

More information

1st Missouri Regiment of Colored Infantry

1st Missouri Regiment of Colored Infantry st Missouri Regiment of Colored Infantry This Union army regiment was organized in t. Louis in December 3 after the signing of Order No. authorizing the recruitment of all Negroes, free or slaves after

More information

Chapter 14 - The Civil War

Chapter 14 - The Civil War Chapter 14 - The Civil War Name: 1. The Secession Crisis fire-eaters promoting Southern nationalism demand an end to the Union. Secession. a. The Withdrawal of the South i. South Carolina ii. Confederate

More information

Map of Peninsula Camp

Map of Peninsula Camp 34 Map of Peninsula Camp April 1862 -- The Battle of Shiloh. On April 6, Confederate forces attacked Union forces under General Ulysses S. Grant at Shiloh, Tennessee. By the end of the day, the federal

More information

THE CIVIL WAR Part 2

THE CIVIL WAR Part 2 THE CIVIL WAR Part 2 REVIEW (you don t need to write this) The main issue which caused the Civil War was states rights. The issue of slavery was part of that. Union s plan to win the war was the Anaconda

More information

The Civil War Begins

The Civil War Begins The Civil War Begins Differences between northern and southern states: industrial economy agricultural economy free states slave states More North/South differences North Wanted to abolish slavery Strong

More information

Directions: 1. Write vocabulary words on page Read and Summarize the major events by answering the guided questions

Directions: 1. Write vocabulary words on page Read and Summarize the major events by answering the guided questions Today, you will be able to: Explain the significant events (battles) of the Civil War and explain the roles played by significant individuals during the Civil War Directions: 1. Write vocabulary words

More information

Chapter II SECESSION AND WAR

Chapter II SECESSION AND WAR Chapter II SECESSION AND WAR 1860-1861 A. Starting the Secession: South Carolina - December 20, 1860 South Carolina votes to secede - Major Robert Anderson US Army Commander at Charleston, South Carolina

More information

The Civil War Webquest. Type in the following web address, feel free to look at the images and read the information

The Civil War Webquest. Type in the following web address, feel free to look at the images and read the information Name: Use complete sentences if needed Hour: The Civil War 1861-1865 Webquest Type in the following web address, feel free to look at the images and read the information http://amhistory.si.edu/militaryhistory/exhibition/flash.html

More information

SWBAT: Identify the lasting legacy of Abraham Lincoln and the Civil War? Do Now: a) Advantages and Disadvantages of the Civil War Worksheet

SWBAT: Identify the lasting legacy of Abraham Lincoln and the Civil War? Do Now: a) Advantages and Disadvantages of the Civil War Worksheet SWBAT: Identify the lasting legacy of Abraham Lincoln and the Civil War? Do Now: a) Advantages and Disadvantages of the Civil War Worksheet Advantages and Disadvantages 2. Most banks, factories, and ships

More information

GUIDED READING ACTIVITY Which four states joined the Confederacy when President Lincoln issued a call to save the Union?

GUIDED READING ACTIVITY Which four states joined the Confederacy when President Lincoln issued a call to save the Union? GUIDED READING ACTIVITY 13-1 The Two Sides Directions: Answering Questions Reading the section and answering the questions below will help you learn more about the Union and the Confederacy and their preparation

More information

PART ONE: PRESERVE THE UNION

PART ONE: PRESERVE THE UNION I ve seen cities and homes in ashes. I ve seen thousands of men lying on the ground, their dead faces looking up to the skies. I tell you, war is hell! Presidential election of 1860 catastrophic to the

More information

Picket Lines. Next Muster. September Guest Speaker. James City Cavalry. PTSD and the War for Southern Independence

Picket Lines. Next Muster. September Guest Speaker. James City Cavalry. PTSD and the War for Southern Independence James City Cavalry Picket Lines September 2017 Dispatch Williamsburg, Virginia http://www.jamescitycavalry.org Camp #2095 1 st Brigade Virginia Division Army of Northern Virginia A patriotic honor society

More information

Civil War Soldiers Buried in Portland s St. Mary s Cemetery

Civil War Soldiers Buried in Portland s St. Mary s Cemetery Samuel Charles White Samuel Charles White died from Diabetes on 29 July 1882 at Portland s St. Vincent s Hospital and was buried from St. Mary s Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception in Portland, Oregon.

More information

Guest Speaker: Steve Bockmiller

Guest Speaker: Steve Bockmiller Army of Northern Virginia Maryland Division Camp #1398 Colonel William Norris Sons of Confederate Veterans November 2015 Guest Speaker: Steve Bockmiller The next regular meeting is scheduled for Tuesday,

More information

Thomas Binford Winston

Thomas Binford Winston Captain Thomas Binford Winston 1 Dec 1846 to 2 Aug 1848 Mexican American War 21 Jan 1862 to May 1865 American Civil War Thomas Binford (T.B.) Winston is a Grandfather of Robert Earl Cape On-Line: http://www.ourpast.org/genealogy2/getperson.php?

More information

The American Civil War Begins. Take Cornell Notes!

The American Civil War Begins. Take Cornell Notes! The American Civil War Begins Take Cornell Notes! Presidential election of 1860 In 1860, Stephan Douglas and Abraham Lincoln ran against each other again, this time for president. Lincoln had become well

More information

Hey there, my name is (NAME) and today we re going to talk about Ulysses S. Grant and Robert E. Lee.

Hey there, my name is (NAME) and today we re going to talk about Ulysses S. Grant and Robert E. Lee. Grant and Lee in Northern Virginia HS261 Activity Introduction Hey there, my name is (NAME) and today we re going to talk about Ulysses S. Grant and Robert E. Lee. The Union had gained the upper hand and

More information

SSUSH9 The student will identify key events, issues, and individuals relating to the causes, course, and consequences of the Civil War. b.

SSUSH9 The student will identify key events, issues, and individuals relating to the causes, course, and consequences of the Civil War. b. 1861-1865 SSUSH9 The student will identify key events, issues, and individuals relating to the causes, course, and consequences of the Civil War. b. Describe President Lincoln s efforts to preserve the

More information

The. Oakwood Service set for May 6th

The. Oakwood Service set for May 6th The Shenandoah Semper Fortis - Always Courageous Captain James Iredell Waddell Chapter No. 32 Military Order of the Stars & Bars Raleigh, North Carolina Winner of the Colonel Walter Hopkins Distinguished

More information

A Nation Torn Apart: The Civil War, Chapter 13

A Nation Torn Apart: The Civil War, Chapter 13 A Nation Torn Apart: The Civil War, 1861-1865 Chapter 13 Toward Union Victory Chapter 13.4 The Tide of the War Turns In June 1863, Lee and Davis planned another invasion of the North On July 1, the Union

More information

Key People. North vs. South Advantages. End of War & Grab Bag. Battles. Reconstruction

Key People. North vs. South Advantages. End of War & Grab Bag. Battles. Reconstruction Key People North vs. South Advantages Battles End of War & Reconstruction Grab Bag 200 200 200 200 200 400 400 400 400 400 600 600 600 600 600 800 800 800 800 800 1000 1000 1000 1000 1000 Key People -

More information

SSUSH9 C, D, & E The Civil War

SSUSH9 C, D, & E The Civil War SSUSH9 C, D, & E The Civil War John Brown s Raid John Brown s Raid on Harper s Ferry was a turning point for the South. Southerners were angered that a Northerner would promote an armed slave rebellion.

More information

Evaluate the advantages the North enjoyed in the Civil War.

Evaluate the advantages the North enjoyed in the Civil War. Objectives Evaluate the advantages the North enjoyed in the Civil War. Analyze the impact of the Civil War on the North and South, especially the impact of the Emancipation Proclamation. Explore the outcome

More information

Alan Brinkley, AMERICAN HISTORY 13/e. Chapter Fourteen: The Civil War

Alan Brinkley, AMERICAN HISTORY 13/e. Chapter Fourteen: The Civil War Alan Brinkley, AMERICAN HISTORY 13/e The Civil War The Secession Crisis Southern Nationalism Secession Of South Carolina-1860 Pickett s Charge at Gettysburg (The Palma Collection / Getty Images ) 2 The

More information

THE GILMOR BLADE. Randy s presentation today is on Exploring the Battle of Gettysburg.

THE GILMOR BLADE. Randy s presentation today is on Exploring the Battle of Gettysburg. THE GILMOR BLADE Those who allow the surrender of their history, also surrender their future! Official Newsletter of THE COL. H.W.GILMOR CAMP, No. 1388, SONS OF CONFEDERATE VETERANS June 8 Camp meeting:

More information

Choose the letter of the best answer.

Choose the letter of the best answer. Name: Date: Choose the letter of the best answer. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. The person who assassinated President Lincoln was A. Booker T. Washington. B. Walt Whitman. C. Robert E. Lee. D. John Wilkes Booth.

More information

Created by Andrea M. Bentley. Major Battles

Created by Andrea M. Bentley. Major Battles Created by Andrea M. Bentley Major Battles April 12, 1861 Occurred at Fort Sumter which was close to the entrance of Charleston, South Carolina Union led by Major Robert Anderson Confederates led by General

More information

of The Order of the Founders and Patriots of America October 3, 2017

of The Order of the Founders and Patriots of America October 3, 2017 THE VIRGINIA SOCIETY of The Order of the Founders and Patriots of America October 3, 2017 On Sunday October 1, 2017, the Virginia Society of The Order of the Founders and Patriots of America participated

More information

F o rt S u m t e r, S C

F o rt S u m t e r, S C F o rt S u m t e r, S C April 12, 1861 Started the Civil War No one was killed The Confederacy attacked the fort before Lincoln s supply ships arrived The Union had to surrender the fort after 34 hours

More information

Name the four slave states, called Border States that stayed in the Union _? Delaware, Kentucky, Missouri, Maryland

Name the four slave states, called Border States that stayed in the Union _? Delaware, Kentucky, Missouri, Maryland Social Studies -- Chapter 17, Sections 1-5 CHAPTER 17 SECTION 1 1 17-1 448 Name the four slave states, called Border States that stayed in the Union _? Delaware, Kentucky, Missouri, Maryland 2 17-1 448

More information

Emancipation Proclamation

Emancipation Proclamation Ironclads The first Ironclad was the Merrimack it was a Union ship that had been abandoned in a Virginia Navy yard. The Confederates covered it in iron and renamed it the CSS Virginia. It was very successful

More information

The Civil War ( ) 1865) Through Maps, Charts, Graphs & Pictures

The Civil War ( ) 1865) Through Maps, Charts, Graphs & Pictures The Civil War (1861-1865) 1865) Through Maps, Charts, Graphs & Pictures Need to know What was the result of the Trent Affair? The Beginning Southerners afraid north will send Brown loving republicans to

More information

Chapter 16, Section 1 The War Begins

Chapter 16, Section 1 The War Begins Chapter 16, Section 1 The War Begins Pages 510 515 The divisions within the United States reached a breaking point with the election of Abraham Lincoln in 1860. Several southern states angrily left the

More information

Annual Lee/Jackson Birthday Ceremony Saturday, Jan 18, 2014, 11 a.m. Baltimore, Md.

Annual Lee/Jackson Birthday Ceremony Saturday, Jan 18, 2014, 11 a.m. Baltimore, Md. Army of Northern Virginia Maryland Division Camp #1398 Colonel William Norris January 2014 The next regular meeting is scheduled for Tuesday, Jan. 7, at 7 p.m. See Inside Adjutant Report 2 Camp Activities

More information

Memorial Day The. Suggested Speech

Memorial Day The. Suggested Speech The American Legion Suggested Speech PUBLIC RELATIONS OFFICE P.O. BOX 1055 INDIANAPOLIS, IN 46206-1055 (317) 630-1253 Fax (317) 630-1368 For God and country Memorial Day 2011 The American Legion National

More information

THE TELEGRAPH KEY

THE TELEGRAPH KEY THE TELEGRAPH KEY -.... -..-... --..-..-.--.... -.-. -. - THE OFFICIAL DISPATCH FOR THE MAJOR THOMAS J. KEY CAMP #1920 KANSAS DIVISION, SCV JOHNSON COUNTY, KANSAS VOL. 11, No. 11 NOVEMBER 2010 DECEMBER

More information

ISSUES DIVIDE THE COUNTRY

ISSUES DIVIDE THE COUNTRY THE CIVIL WAR ISSUES DIVIDE THE COUNTRY 1861- Texas joined 10 other states to form the Confederate States of America Disagreed on: tariffs, distribution of public lands, and states rights States rights

More information

THE CIVIL WAR LESSON TWO THE CONFEDERATE ARMY

THE CIVIL WAR LESSON TWO THE CONFEDERATE ARMY THE CIVIL WAR LESSON TWO THE CONFEDERATE ARMY As soon as the first shots of the Civil War were fired, war fever seemed to sweep the country. Neither the Union nor the Confederacy was completely prepared

More information

Chapter 16, Section 5 The Tide of War Turns

Chapter 16, Section 5 The Tide of War Turns Chapter 16, Section 5 The Tide of War Turns Pages 536 543 Many people, especially in the North, had expected a quick victory, but the war dragged on for years. The balance of victories seemed to seesaw

More information

Election of Campaign a four-way split. Republicans defeat the splintered Democrat party, and the Do Nothing party who wanted to compromise

Election of Campaign a four-way split. Republicans defeat the splintered Democrat party, and the Do Nothing party who wanted to compromise Election of 1860 Campaign a four-way split Republicans defeat the splintered Democrat party, and the Do Nothing party who wanted to compromise Fort Sumter Causes: Sumter still belongs to USA, South looks

More information

Civil War Part 2. Chapter 17

Civil War Part 2. Chapter 17 Civil War Part 2 Chapter 17 Changes with Slavery As Union soldiers moved into the South, thousands of slaves escaped their plantations Abolitionists saw the war as an opportunity to end slavery forever

More information

Joseph Grimm. Musician. Researched by Wickman Historical Consultants. 100 th Ohio Volunteer Infantry, Company B.

Joseph Grimm. Musician. Researched by Wickman Historical Consultants. 100 th Ohio Volunteer Infantry, Company B. Joseph Grimm Musician 100 th Ohio Volunteer Infantry, Company B Researched by Wickman Historical Consultants www.wickmanhistorical.com Background and Rank Born in October 1842, Joseph Grimm enlisted as

More information

Slavery, the Civil War & Reconstruction The Massachusetts 54 th Infantry

Slavery, the Civil War & Reconstruction The Massachusetts 54 th Infantry Non- fiction: The Civil War - The Massachusetts 54 th Infantry Slavery, the Civil War & Reconstruction The Massachusetts 54 th Infantry In the Revolutionary War and the War of 1812, black men fought for

More information

State of Michigan Civil War Sesquicentennial Tribute Ceremony Antietam National Battlefield August 26, 2012

State of Michigan Civil War Sesquicentennial Tribute Ceremony Antietam National Battlefield August 26, 2012 State of Michigan Civil War Sesquicentennial Tribute Ceremony Antietam National Battlefield August 26, 2012 One hundred fifty years after the Civil War battle of Antietam, the Michigan Historical Commission

More information

2014 Events May 9 Petersburg Before the Siege May 10 From Slavery to Freedom May 15 Lecture: Soldier s Life Demonstration

2014 Events May 9 Petersburg Before the Siege May 10 From Slavery to Freedom May 15 Lecture: Soldier s Life Demonstration Please mark your calendars and plan to visit The Best PART of Virginia during 2014 for major Civil War Sesquicentennial events listed below. Continue to check PART s website for updates: www.petersburgarea.org.

More information

1863: Shifting Tides

1863: Shifting Tides 1863: Shifting Tides Shifting Tides Date Battle Name Winner Sept 17, 1862 Antietam a.k.a. Sharpsburg, MD April 12-13, 1861 Attack on Fort Sumter, SC April 30-May 6, 1863 Chancellorsville, VA Feb 6-16,1862

More information

The first engagement of the Civil War took place at Fort Sumter on April 12 and 13, After 34 hours of fighting, the Union surrendered the fort

The first engagement of the Civil War took place at Fort Sumter on April 12 and 13, After 34 hours of fighting, the Union surrendered the fort The first engagement of the Civil War took place at Fort Sumter on April 12 and 13, 1861. After 34 hours of fighting, the Union surrendered the fort to the Confederates. From 1863 to 1865, the Confederates

More information

The Call to Arms. Hardships of Both Sides

The Call to Arms. Hardships of Both Sides The Call to Arms The North 1. How did two border states bolster northern confidence? Kentucky and Delaware supported the Union. 2. What Virginia event helped the North? 3. What four things did the North

More information

Advantages for both sides. List advantages both sides had going into the War.

Advantages for both sides. List advantages both sides had going into the War. Name Date Period (AH1) Unit 6: The Civil War The Civil War Begins (pages 338-345) Fort Sumter How did Lincoln react to the threats against Fort Sumter? Who officially declared war? Which side would Virginia

More information

Label Fort Sumter on your map

Label Fort Sumter on your map FORT SUMTER The Election of Lincoln as president in 1860 was a turning point in relations between the North and the South. The South felt they no longer had a voice in national events or policies; they

More information

-Charleston Harbor, SC -Anderson Union -Beauregard Confederate. Confederate victory when Union surrenders. -Beginning of Civil War.

-Charleston Harbor, SC -Anderson Union -Beauregard Confederate. Confederate victory when Union surrenders. -Beginning of Civil War. DATE BATTLE DETAILS- GENERALS/OBJECTIVES/ CASUALTIES April 12, 1861 Fort Sumter -Charleston Harbor, SC -Anderson Union -Beauregard Confederate RESULT-WHO WON? Confederate victory when Union surrenders

More information

3/26/14. Chapter 16 The Civil War. The War Begins. Section Notes. Video The Civil War

3/26/14. Chapter 16 The Civil War. The War Begins. Section Notes. Video The Civil War Chapter 16 The Civil War The War Begins Section Notes The War Begins The War in the East The War in the West Daily Life during the War The Tide of War Turns History Close-up Fort Sumter Quick Facts North

More information

See Inside. July Guest Speaker: Dr. B. Franklin Cooling. Sons of Confederate Veterans Army of Northern Virginia Maryland Division Camp #1398

See Inside. July Guest Speaker: Dr. B. Franklin Cooling. Sons of Confederate Veterans Army of Northern Virginia Maryland Division Camp #1398 Sons of Confederate Veterans Army of Northern Virginia Maryland Division Camp #1398 Colonel William Norris Sons of Confederate Veterans July 2014 July Guest Speaker: Dr. B. Franklin Cooling The next regular

More information

THE US CIVIL WAR. Give each battle a clever and creative nickname that will help you remember the even.

THE US CIVIL WAR. Give each battle a clever and creative nickname that will help you remember the even. THE US CIVIL WAR Upwards of 10,000 battles, skirmishes or clashes, spread across the entire span of the United States - Vermont, Florida, Missouri, Arizona the battles of the Civil War were numerous and

More information

Guided Reading Activity 16-1

Guided Reading Activity 16-1 Guided Reading Activity 16-1 DIRECTIONS: Filling in the Blanks Use your textbook to fill in the blanks using the words in the box. Some words may be used more than once. Use another sheet of paper if necessary.

More information

The Civil War { Union Forces vs. Confederate States of America (CSA) North vs. South Blue vs. Grey

The Civil War { Union Forces vs. Confederate States of America (CSA) North vs. South Blue vs. Grey The Civil War {1861-1865 Union Forces vs. Confederate States of America (CSA) North vs. South Blue vs. Grey 1861 Eleven states seceded from Union Border States (Slave states that didn t leave) Kentucky

More information

The Tide of War Turns,

The Tide of War Turns, The Tide of War Turns, 1863 1865 The Civil War is won by the Union and strongly affects the nation. Union soldiers sitting in front of a tent. Section 1 The Emancipation Proclamation In 1863, President

More information

The Civil War Chapter 15.1

The Civil War Chapter 15.1 The Civil War Chapter 15.1 I. The War Begins Civil war broke out between the North and the South in 1861. A. Following the outbreak of war at Fort Sumter, Americans chose sides. Seven southern states had

More information

The 11 th Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry

The 11 th Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry The 11 th Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry The Boston Volunteers The 11th Massachusetts was among the first three-year regiments formed in the Bay State. The core companies were originally known as the

More information

SSUSH9 C Comparing Civil War Leaders

SSUSH9 C Comparing Civil War Leaders SSUSH9 C Comparing Civil War Leaders Comparing Civil War Leaders POB: Virginia POB: Ohio West Point (1825 1829) West Point (1839 1843) 2 nd of 46 (Engineers) 21 st of 39 (Infantry) Robert E. Lee (1807

More information

The American Civil War

The American Civil War The American Civil War 1861-1865 Karen H. Reeves Wilbur McLean: The war started in his front yard and ended in his parlor. Shortcut to 01 Drums of War.lnk Essential Question: How did the two sides differ

More information

57TH INDIANA INFANTRY REGIMENT RECORDS,

57TH INDIANA INFANTRY REGIMENT RECORDS, Collection # M 0037 57TH INDIANA INFANTRY REGIMENT RECORDS, 1862 1865 Collection Information Historical Sketch Scope and Content Note Box and Folder Listing Processed By: Paul Brockman 14 February 1997

More information

Visit Education Place www.eduplace.com/kids South Carolina Databank............................. ii South Carolina Atlas................................ iv About Your Textbook..............................

More information

United States Colored Troops (U.S.C.T.) Lesson Plan

United States Colored Troops (U.S.C.T.) Lesson Plan United States Colored Troops (U.S.C.T.) Lesson Plan BLACK SOLDIERS IN THE AMERICAN CIVIL WAR BY THE CIVIL WAR PRESERVATION TRUST Grades: 6-8 Length of Time: 3-4 class days Goals: 1. To learn about the

More information

SONS OF CONFEDERATE VETERANS TEXAS DIVISION April 2015 Newsletter

SONS OF CONFEDERATE VETERANS TEXAS DIVISION April 2015 Newsletter SONS OF CONFEDERATE VETERANS TEXAS DIVISION April 2015 Newsletter First Quarter Commander s Report December - February Compatriots of the Texas : I hope all are well and looking forward to spring weather.

More information

Civil War Battles & Major Events

Civil War Battles & Major Events Civil War Battles & Major Events Civil War Sides Key Union States Border States Confederate States Army Organization Fort Sumter Date Where Commanding Officers April 12-14, 1861 Fort Sumter, South Carolina

More information

1863: Shifting Tides. Cut out the following cards and hand one card to each of the pairs.

1863: Shifting Tides. Cut out the following cards and hand one card to each of the pairs. Cut out the following cards and hand one card to each of the pairs. Attack on Fort Sumter April 12 13, 1861 Summary: On April 12, 1861, after warning the U.S. Army to leave Fort Sumter, which guarded the

More information

Lee's Dispatch Captain Bob Lee SCV Camp 2198

Lee's Dispatch Captain Bob Lee SCV Camp 2198 Lee's Dispatch Captain Bob Lee SCV Camp 2198 Volume 3, Issue 4 www.captboblee.org February 15, 2015 Commander s Report By Doug Garnett As our weather improves the camps throughout Texas will be moving

More information

Camp Cresset Finley s Brigade Camp #1614 Havana, Florida

Camp Cresset Finley s Brigade Camp #1614 Havana, Florida Camp Cresset Finley s Brigade Camp #1614 Havana, Florida Recipient 2011 and 2012 Dr. George R. Tabor Most Distinguished Camp Award "To you, Sons of Confederate Veterans, we will commit the vindication

More information

Slavery, the Civil War & Reconstruction The Massachusetts 54 th Infantry

Slavery, the Civil War & Reconstruction The Massachusetts 54 th Infantry Non-fiction: The Civil War - The Massachusetts 54 th Infantry Slavery, the Civil War & Reconstruction The Massachusetts 54 th Infantry In the Revolutionary War and the War of 1812, black men fought for

More information

James City Cavalry. Picket Lines. April 2017 Dispatch Williamsburg, Virginia

James City Cavalry. Picket Lines. April 2017 Dispatch Williamsburg, Virginia James City Cavalry Picket Lines April 2017 Dispatch Williamsburg, Virginia http://www.jamescitycavalry.org Camp #2095 1 st Brigade Virginia Division Army of Northern Virginia A patriotic honor society

More information