11.3c Long-standing disputes over States rights and slavery and the secession of Southern states from the Union, sparked by the election of Abraham Lincoln, led to the Civil War. After the issuance of the Emancipation Proclamation, freeing the slaves became a major Union goal. The Civil War resulted in tremendous human loss and physical destruction.
Students will compare the relative strengths of the Union and the Confederacy in terms of industrial capacity, transportation facilities, and military leadership, and evaluate the reasons why the North prevailed over the South and the impacts of the war.
Students will examine the expansion of executive and federal power as they relate to the suspension of habeas corpus within the Union and the issuance of the Emancipation Proclamation.
Students will analyze the ideas expressed in the Gettysburg Address, considering its long-term effects.
Students will compare the relative strengths of the Union and the Confederacy in terms of industrial capacity, transportation facilities, and military leadership, and evaluate the reasons why the North prevailed over the South and the impacts of the war.
Students will examine the expansion of executive and federal power as they relate to the suspension of habeas corpus within the Union and the issuance of the Emancipation Proclamation.
Students will analyze the ideas expressed in the Gettysburg Address, considering its long-term effects.
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Antebellum South Review Civil War Notes Intro Civil War Aftermath of the Civil War Technology and the Civil War civil_war_causes_and_effects.docDownload File gettysburg.docxDownload File uncle_toms_cabin.xpsDownload File lincoln_and_war_powers_reading.docxDownload File the_lincoln_douglaswebquest.docxDownload File the_civil_war-images.pptDownload File |