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Total War and the End of the 
Confederacy 
1864-1865
Rate your agreement with the following 
statement: When fighting a war, an army 
should destroy only military, not civilian, 
targets. 
A. Strongly agree 
B. Somewhat agree 
C. Somewhat disagree 
D. Strongly disagree 
A. A 
B. B 
C. C 
D. D 
0% 0% 0% 0% 
A 
B 
C 
D
What events led to the end of the war?
Total War Strikes the South 
• General William 
Tecumseh Sherman 
destroyed Atlanta 
• The city was burned 
and citizens were 
ordered to leave 
• Sherman said: “War is 
cruelty, and you 
cannot refine it” 
• The deliberate 
strategy to bring the 
horrors of war to the 
Southern people is 
called ttoottaall wwaarr 
• Including terror, 
starvation, violence, 
and homelessness
Union Strategy 
• By 1864- The Union 
forces surrounded the 
South 
• Cut off imports and 
exports 
• The Union controlled 
the Mississippi River 
• Western Confederate 
states were cut off 
• General Grant would 
draw up a bold plan of 
attack
Grant 
• Ulysses S. Grant was only 
an average student 
• And a failure as a farmer 
and businessman 
• But as a soldier was 
brilliant 
• Victories at Shiloh, 
Vicksburg, and 
Chattanooga 
• March 1864- Lincoln put 
Grant in charge of all the 
Union armies
Grant in Charge 
• Grant had a plan to deliver 
killing blows from all sides 
• Grant would attack 
Richmond 
• At the same time, Sherman 
would lead his attacks 
across the Deep South 
• Grant’s 115,000 soldiers 
met Lee’s 64,000 soldiers in 
a sseerriieess of 3 battles at 
Richmond 
• Grant promised Lincoln, 
“Whatever happens, there 
will be no turning back” 
• Grant was determined to 
march southward, attacking 
Lee’s forces 
• Until they surrendered
The Wilderness Campaign 
• Between Washington 
D.C. and Richmond is 
an area of dense 
forests called the 
Wilderness 
• May 5, the 6 bloodiest 
weeks of the war begun 
• Grant and Lee 
struggled through trees 
• “It was a blind and 
bloody hunt to the 
death” 
• Both sides had many 
casualties 
• Brushfires went through 
the forest burning alive 
200 wounded men
The Wilderness Campaign Continued 
• Grant then moved south 
toward Richmond 
• The next battles were 
fought at nearby 
Spotsylvania Courthouse 
and at Cold Harbor 
• A Union general observed 
me “writing their names 
and home addresses on 
slips of paper and pinning 
them to the back of their 
coats” 
• To help people identify 
their bodies 
• Grant’s critics called him a 
“butcher” because of the 
huge loss of life among his 
troops 
• 50,000 deaths in 30 days
The Petersburg Siege 
• A railroad center that was 
vital to Confederate 
movement of troops and 
supplies 
• If grant could take 
Petersburg, Richmond 
would be cut off from the 
rest of the Confederacy 
• Trains brought food and 
reinforcements to the 
Union troops 
• The Confederates could 
get neither 
• For 9 months, the 
Confederates held out 
• The Union won
Sherman in Georgia 
• Sherman reached 
Atlanta and met the 
Confederates under 
John Hood 
• Hood’s forced put 
up major rreessiissttaannccee 
• Finally, on Sept. 1, 
Hood abandoned 
the city 
• The mood in the 
South was 
desperate 
• “There is no hope, 
but we will try to 
have no fear”
Farragut at Mobile Bay 
• DDaavviidd FFaarrrraagguutt was the 
highest-ranking officer in the 
Union 
• Farragut joined the navy when 
he was 12 years old 
• Now in 1864 , he was leading a 
fleet of 18 ships through a 
narrow channel into Mobile Bay 
in Alabama 
• The Confederates had two forts 
on either side of the channel, 
and they mined the waters with 
torpedoes 
• Guns fired from both sides, what 
should Farragut do? 
• “Damn the torpedoes, full speed 
ahead!” 
• Farragut was suffering dizziness 
and had himself tied to the ship 
• The invasion worked, the Union 
took the last Southern port east 
of the Mississippi
The Election of 1864 • 1864- opposition to the 
war grew in the North 
• Lincoln was in danger of 
losing the election 
• After Atlanta fell and 
Mobile Bay was blocked, 
Northerners felt they could 
win 
• Lincoln won the election 
• Lincoln iinntteerrpprreetteedd his 
reelection as a clear sign 
from the voters to end 
slavery permanently by 
amending the Constitution 
• On January 31, 1865, 
Congress passed the 13th 
Amendment, banning 
slavery in the US
Sherman’s March to the Sea 
• The Union wanted to 
break the will of the South 
• Sherman and his men 
became destroyers 
• They burned cities and 
farmlands across Georgia 
to the Atlantic coast 
• Known as Sherman’s 
March to the Sea 
• Sherman continued his 
path of destruction 
through the Carolinas 
• Took food, tore up 
railroad lines and fields, 
and killed livestock in an 
effort to destroy anything 
useful to the South 
• 1000s of enslaved people 
were freed
Back to Grant 
• Grant continued the 
siege of Petersburg 
• April 2, 1865, 
Confederate lines 
broke and Lee 
withdrew 
• As word got to 
Jefferson Davis, he 
and his cabinet 
gathered documents 
• Also ordered 
bridges and 
weapons useful to 
the enemy be set on 
fire 
• Then Davis and the 
cabinet fled the city
Richmond • The armory was set on 
fire 
• Lincoln and his son Tad 
toured burning Richmond 
and said: 
• “Thank God I have lived 
to see this. It seems to me 
that I have been dreaming 
a horrid nightmare for four 
years, and now the 
nightmare is over” 
• Joyful African Americans 
followed Lincoln 
everywhere, singing, 
laughing, and reaching 
out to touch him 
• At the Confederate 
president’s house, Lincoln 
sat in a chair in Davis’s 
office and “looked far off 
with a dreamy expression”
Surrender at Appomattox • Grant wrote to Lee- “The 
result of last week must 
convince you of the 
hopelessness of further 
resistance” 
• Lee believed he needed to 
fight on 
• But then the Union captured 
a train carrying food to his 
troops and Lee was 
completely surrounded, he 
knew it was over 
• In the little town of 
AAppppoommaattttooxx CCoouurrtt HHoouussee, 
Virginia, Grant met with Lee 
• The troops kept their 
weapons, officers kept their 
horses, and no one would 
disturb the soldiers on their 
way home 
• Grant also gave 25,000 
rations to feed Lee’s troops 
• The War was over
The Toll of War 
• Deadliest war in US 
history 
• More than 600,000 
soldiers died 
• Cost billions of 
dollars 
• City and farmlands 
were destroyed and 
would take years to 
rebuild 
• The Union was saved 
• The federal 
government was 
strengthened and 
now clearly more 
powerful than the 
states
The Toll of the War Continued 
• The war freed millions of 
African Americans 
• The end of slavery did not 
solve the problems that the 
newly freed African 
Americans were to face 
• Many questions remained 
including- How to bring the 
Southern states back into 
the Union 
• And- What the status of 
African Americans would be 
in Southern society 
• Americans tried to answer 
these questions in the years 
following the Civil War- an 
era known as 
Reconstruction

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How Total War Killed the Confederacy 1864-1865

  • 1. Total War and the End of the Confederacy 1864-1865
  • 2. Rate your agreement with the following statement: When fighting a war, an army should destroy only military, not civilian, targets. A. Strongly agree B. Somewhat agree C. Somewhat disagree D. Strongly disagree A. A B. B C. C D. D 0% 0% 0% 0% A B C D
  • 3. What events led to the end of the war?
  • 4. Total War Strikes the South • General William Tecumseh Sherman destroyed Atlanta • The city was burned and citizens were ordered to leave • Sherman said: “War is cruelty, and you cannot refine it” • The deliberate strategy to bring the horrors of war to the Southern people is called ttoottaall wwaarr • Including terror, starvation, violence, and homelessness
  • 5. Union Strategy • By 1864- The Union forces surrounded the South • Cut off imports and exports • The Union controlled the Mississippi River • Western Confederate states were cut off • General Grant would draw up a bold plan of attack
  • 6. Grant • Ulysses S. Grant was only an average student • And a failure as a farmer and businessman • But as a soldier was brilliant • Victories at Shiloh, Vicksburg, and Chattanooga • March 1864- Lincoln put Grant in charge of all the Union armies
  • 7. Grant in Charge • Grant had a plan to deliver killing blows from all sides • Grant would attack Richmond • At the same time, Sherman would lead his attacks across the Deep South • Grant’s 115,000 soldiers met Lee’s 64,000 soldiers in a sseerriieess of 3 battles at Richmond • Grant promised Lincoln, “Whatever happens, there will be no turning back” • Grant was determined to march southward, attacking Lee’s forces • Until they surrendered
  • 8. The Wilderness Campaign • Between Washington D.C. and Richmond is an area of dense forests called the Wilderness • May 5, the 6 bloodiest weeks of the war begun • Grant and Lee struggled through trees • “It was a blind and bloody hunt to the death” • Both sides had many casualties • Brushfires went through the forest burning alive 200 wounded men
  • 9. The Wilderness Campaign Continued • Grant then moved south toward Richmond • The next battles were fought at nearby Spotsylvania Courthouse and at Cold Harbor • A Union general observed me “writing their names and home addresses on slips of paper and pinning them to the back of their coats” • To help people identify their bodies • Grant’s critics called him a “butcher” because of the huge loss of life among his troops • 50,000 deaths in 30 days
  • 10. The Petersburg Siege • A railroad center that was vital to Confederate movement of troops and supplies • If grant could take Petersburg, Richmond would be cut off from the rest of the Confederacy • Trains brought food and reinforcements to the Union troops • The Confederates could get neither • For 9 months, the Confederates held out • The Union won
  • 11. Sherman in Georgia • Sherman reached Atlanta and met the Confederates under John Hood • Hood’s forced put up major rreessiissttaannccee • Finally, on Sept. 1, Hood abandoned the city • The mood in the South was desperate • “There is no hope, but we will try to have no fear”
  • 12. Farragut at Mobile Bay • DDaavviidd FFaarrrraagguutt was the highest-ranking officer in the Union • Farragut joined the navy when he was 12 years old • Now in 1864 , he was leading a fleet of 18 ships through a narrow channel into Mobile Bay in Alabama • The Confederates had two forts on either side of the channel, and they mined the waters with torpedoes • Guns fired from both sides, what should Farragut do? • “Damn the torpedoes, full speed ahead!” • Farragut was suffering dizziness and had himself tied to the ship • The invasion worked, the Union took the last Southern port east of the Mississippi
  • 13. The Election of 1864 • 1864- opposition to the war grew in the North • Lincoln was in danger of losing the election • After Atlanta fell and Mobile Bay was blocked, Northerners felt they could win • Lincoln won the election • Lincoln iinntteerrpprreetteedd his reelection as a clear sign from the voters to end slavery permanently by amending the Constitution • On January 31, 1865, Congress passed the 13th Amendment, banning slavery in the US
  • 14. Sherman’s March to the Sea • The Union wanted to break the will of the South • Sherman and his men became destroyers • They burned cities and farmlands across Georgia to the Atlantic coast • Known as Sherman’s March to the Sea • Sherman continued his path of destruction through the Carolinas • Took food, tore up railroad lines and fields, and killed livestock in an effort to destroy anything useful to the South • 1000s of enslaved people were freed
  • 15. Back to Grant • Grant continued the siege of Petersburg • April 2, 1865, Confederate lines broke and Lee withdrew • As word got to Jefferson Davis, he and his cabinet gathered documents • Also ordered bridges and weapons useful to the enemy be set on fire • Then Davis and the cabinet fled the city
  • 16. Richmond • The armory was set on fire • Lincoln and his son Tad toured burning Richmond and said: • “Thank God I have lived to see this. It seems to me that I have been dreaming a horrid nightmare for four years, and now the nightmare is over” • Joyful African Americans followed Lincoln everywhere, singing, laughing, and reaching out to touch him • At the Confederate president’s house, Lincoln sat in a chair in Davis’s office and “looked far off with a dreamy expression”
  • 17. Surrender at Appomattox • Grant wrote to Lee- “The result of last week must convince you of the hopelessness of further resistance” • Lee believed he needed to fight on • But then the Union captured a train carrying food to his troops and Lee was completely surrounded, he knew it was over • In the little town of AAppppoommaattttooxx CCoouurrtt HHoouussee, Virginia, Grant met with Lee • The troops kept their weapons, officers kept their horses, and no one would disturb the soldiers on their way home • Grant also gave 25,000 rations to feed Lee’s troops • The War was over
  • 18. The Toll of War • Deadliest war in US history • More than 600,000 soldiers died • Cost billions of dollars • City and farmlands were destroyed and would take years to rebuild • The Union was saved • The federal government was strengthened and now clearly more powerful than the states
  • 19. The Toll of the War Continued • The war freed millions of African Americans • The end of slavery did not solve the problems that the newly freed African Americans were to face • Many questions remained including- How to bring the Southern states back into the Union • And- What the status of African Americans would be in Southern society • Americans tried to answer these questions in the years following the Civil War- an era known as Reconstruction