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BACK IN TIME

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Title: BACK IN TIME


1
BACK IN TIME
  • To the REAL Civil War

By Cassie F
2
ONCE UPON A TIME
  • I was on my current mission for Mrs. Farrells
    Social Studies class, jotting down notes of every
    black hole and star I passed, when I got an
    urgent call from our teacher to high tale it back
    to earth.
  • And as the class as a whole, drove the ship
    through the depths of space to our ultimate
    destination- something must have gone wrong.
    Horribly wrong.
  • You see, when our class descended upon earth the
    world was not how it should be.
  • We landed in Mooresville, NC, with the president
    and everyone standing round, gazing at the class
    of twenty- some with wide eyes. From which point
    I realized scanning the crowd of faces, there was
    not a single colored person to be found.
  • Congratulations on your fast return to earth!
    Shouts the president over the murmuring crowd.
    The president was still the same guy. The crowd
    of citizens looked the same. The world in general
    is the same. But there was something different. I
    shrugged it off and took the stand with the rest
    of the class when I heard someone crying out
    Stop! Please, stop!
  • I looked over the turning heads of the crowd,
    trying to sort out what made the noise. And I saw
    it. A little Negro girls was being whipped to the
    classs dismay. Her head hung with downcast eyes
    of anguish and she couldnt have been more then
    six or seven. She was raw and red where her back
    should have been, and guy was laughing beside
    her, whipping her aboard a wooden stand designed
    to display her pains to the crowd below. The evil
    black whip WOOOOOOOSHEd through the air and
    smacked against her skin again.
  • Ahh, the president commented upon the scene
    displayed before him,I see the whipping is right
    on time for your return ceremony. Let us
    celebrate.

3
SO WHAT I DID
  • CELEBRATE? I screamed at the president, You
    want to CELEBRATE? How could you do this to a
    poor, innocent girl?
  • Cassie! Get down here this instant! You do not
    scream at the president do you here? Mrs.
    Farrell leaned across the stage with a big
    balloon red face full of anger.
  • I reluctantly moved from the middle of the class
    line and all the gazes upon me in the complete
    silence that followed and dragged my feet over to
    the side of the stage, jumping off the side of it
    when I approached the edge.
  • The president will jail anyone who speaks out
    about slavery! You of all people know that. The
    teacher glared down at me.
  • I looked at my teacher and decided I had to do
    the right thing, even if I was jailed for it. I
    looked my teacher right in the eye and said, Im
    not shutting up!
  • I glanced at the president, Slavery was
    abolished years ago! I can prove it too! I ran
    all the way back into this very room in BMS and
    grabbed a copy of my presentation on the floppy I
    had.
  • This presentation on the Civil War, I wagged
    the floppy in front of the presidents face,I
    made before the class was sent into orbit. Mrs.
    Farrell gave me an A on it! Now well see whos
    right and wrong.
  • The president ordered a computer to be brought to
    him, and one of the teachers on a cart wheeled a
    computer over and turned the PowerPoint on for
    him.
  • He watched it intently. So did everyone else. So
    did the little black girl. I watched it too, and
    when it was finally done playing the president
    said, Well, if Mrs. Farrell gave you an A on
    this then it must be true! And he ejected the
    floppy and handed it back to me.
  • And here is what it said

4
JUST WHY DID IT HAPPEN?The scoop on the civil
war
  • The civil war is sometimes called the War Between
    the States. And what this means is that an
    argument that could only be settled by fighting
    was carried out between the Union, or U.S.A and
    the Confederate States of America.
  • How long did this argument over these issues
    last? About five years, from 1861-1865.
  • It began one fine day with Confederate General
    P.G.T. Beauregard opening fire on Fort Sumter,
    Charleston Harbor, and lasted until 600,000 lives
    had been lost, and 5 billion dollars worth of
    damage had been done, 4 million more free black
    lives out there were established, and it lasted
    until the confederates put up the white flag of
    surrender.

5
JUST WHY DID IT HAPPEN?The continuation
  • What was this war all about, Ill tell you what.
    It was about the 11 southern states that had
    previously joined the U.S. of A, but then decided
    to form their own new allegiance, and get their
    independence from the north.
  • They wanted Slavery, something the North was
    against. They wanted slavery to feed their
    families, grow their crops, provide money, and be
    aboard the upper class.
  • The north didnt want slavery, why? Because they
    thought it was morally wrong, and that the United
    States name was being tarnished as we brought
    more enslaved peoples to America.
  • And who would take care to banish slavery when
    elected- Abe Lincoln. And guess who was elected
    that year in 1860- Abe Lincoln.

6
WHAT COULD HAVE STARTED IT ALL?The sinking ships
  • As the south pulled away from the rest of the US,
    they seized most of the forts within reach. Fort
    Sumter was one of the first to go- also one of
    the most important.
  • A ship was sent by the previous president leading
    up to the war- president James Buchanan. He sent
    the ship to send troops and supplies to Robert
    Anderson, but the ship failed to deliver, being
    driven off by minions of the South.
  • When Lincoln was elected he knew that the troops
    guarding our borders from former enemies, were
    now in danger and that if the South did not put a
    stop to this, then it was time to go to war.

Abraham Lincoln vs. James Buchanan
And thats just what happened.
7
THE ARMY OF ONE MARCHESget out of the way!!
  • The US went to war with its self. Anderson had
    joined sides with the south and when he failed to
    comply to Lincolns orders, Lincoln had the ships
    open fire on the fort.
  • On April 15th, Lincoln issued a proclamation that
    called upon 75,000 militia from the states.
  • The next proclamation announced that ports would
    be blockaded, a third that 42,000 were needed in
    the army as volunteers and that 18,000 were
    needed to serve 1-3 years in the Navy.

President Davis was elected to head the southern
confederacy. Even states not in the confederacy
joined in Daviss army of one. Davis sent his
troops to be concentrated up in Tennessee and
northern Virginia- here, Lincoln worried the
capitol was in jeopardy.
8
STRETEGIC STRATIGIZINGSUCCEEDSyou better watch
out!!!
  • Strategies were made by both sides to overtake
    the other.
  • Both sides had different war aims however. The
    confederacy sought independence and only had to
    defend itself.
  • The north had a much tougher job- they had to
    invade the capitol, wage war, and force the
    southerners to give up their will to fight.
  • The confederacy would win by prolonging the war
    until the North would financially be unable to
    fight.
  • Yet despite all the North had to do, they won
    (with the help of the French of course).

Just a picture of Winfeild Scott staring at
you. Kind of scary lookin dont you think??
  • Most of the war was at benefit of Scott. Winfeild
    Scott. He was said to have a brilliant mind, and
    to have conceived the long-range strategizing
    plans. It was named the Anaconda Plan, after a
    snake that squeezed its victims to death, just
    as the North was attempting to do to the south.
  • They would invade from all sides, with the navy
    and the army, sweeping down the Mississippi
    river, thus dividing the confederacys eastern
    and western sides. The north would stop all
    trades with the confederacy and Britain, and even
    if the south would still be willing to fight, an
    estimated 300,000 men would carry out the second
    part of the plan.

9
CRAZY CONFED.
  • Yes this strategy won, even due to the fact that
    Scott had underestimated the length of time, and
    men. This strategy won the war, forcing the
    confederates to surrender in 1865.
  • President Lincoln, although assassinated by John
    Wilkes Booth ( crazed confederacy member), lived
    long enough learn of Lees surrenders and to know
    the war was almost over.
  • Peace overtures were made and although more
    generous terms to the agreement were made on the
    confederates side, Staton in charge of the peace
    overture was suspicious and the south had to give
    up its 37000 men and give into the same
    conditions that had been drawn up before the
    wars end.
  • And out of the two sizable confederate armies
    that still remained, one in Louisiana and one in
    Texas, they both surrendered with flying colors
    as Jefferson Davis was captured in Georgia.

Booth- the crazy confed!
Davis- the captive in Georgia!
10
THE STAKES WERE HIGH, THE COSTS WERE HUGE
  • The cost of the war exceeded far more then anyone
    could have guessed. Of the 2.2 million men in
    uniform (among them 180,000 blacks), 640,000
    perished.
  • The confederacy lost about 450,000 out of
    750-850,000.
  • More Americans were killed in the Civil War
    than in all other American wars combined from the
    colonial period through the war in Afghanistan in
    2001. Says Encarta online.
  • Thousands of families had financial difficulties
    after the war due to the death of husbands and
    fathers.
  • The US government made pensions available for
    disabled veterans and widows of soldiers. Same
    with the south.
  • But even so, these funds could not sufficiently
    supply for all the needs of a family.
  • In 1860, the spending average was about 63
    million before the war, but four years later the
    expenditures totaled 1.3 billion for the North.
    This did not include the Souths.
  • The south did suffer economic destruction to much
    more of an extent then the north did. 2/3 of the
    wealth were lost.
  • Railroads and industries in the South were in
    shambles, more than one-half of all farm
    machinery was destroyed, and 40 percent of all
    livestock had been killed Northern wealth
    increased by 50 percent during that same decade,
    Southern wealth decreased by 60 percent. Says
    Encarta online.

11
WE THE BLACK PEOPLE
  • After the war, thousands of people joined the
    veterans organizations, revisited sites of the
    battles, raised monuments, and wrote
    reminiscences about their experiences in the long
    ago war.
  • Blacks everywhere who fought for the union,
    fought for citizenship and argued over voting,
    because after they risked their lives along with
    the whites standing in the battlefield, they
    thought it was only fair to live like normal
    Americans.
  • Women took up larger responsibilities, some had
    even dressed up as men to fight the war at the
    nations side.
  • No group was more directly affected by the
    outcome of the war than the almost 4 million
    black people who were slaves in 1861.
  • They emerged from the conflict with their
    freedom, which was confirmed by the 13th
    Amendment to the Constitution in December 1865.
  • However, blacks did not have equal rights until
    long after the war. Says Encarta Online.

12
WE ARE ALL EQUAL- OR NOT.
  • In conclusion, it must be remarked that the
    Civil War did not raise blacks to a position of
    equality with whites. Nor did the war bring about
    that emotional reunion that Lincoln hoped for
    when he spoke in his first inaugural address of
    the bonds of affection that had formerly held
    the two sections together. -Encarta Says.
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