1 / 19

The Military Stalemate: 1864

The Military Stalemate: 1864. Mr. Contipodero American Civil War. The Direction . “Whatever happens, there will be no turning back.” Ulysses S. Grant to Abraham Lincoln, April 1864. Morale during the Summer of 1864. No more reserves Supplies running low

avedis
Download Presentation

The Military Stalemate: 1864

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Military Stalemate: 1864 Mr. Contipodero American Civil War

  2. The Direction • “Whatever happens, there will be no turning back.” • Ulysses S. Grant to Abraham Lincoln, April 1864

  3. Morale during the Summer of 1864 • No more reserves • Supplies running low • Southern leaders quarreling over 1863 defeats • Morale remained high on front lines • 3-year infantry enlistments expire • New recruits = decline in fighting quality • More than half of vets reenlisted Confederacy Union

  4. Desk General? • 1862 – Lincoln appointed Halleck general in chief of all armies • Wanted a general to coordinate • Grant • Didn’t want to be a desk general • Headquarters with Army of the Potomac

  5. Grant’s Belief • Armies of the past 1861-1863 • Acted independently • Not a team…not pulling together for the cause • Allowed Confederates to shift troops to meet pressing danger

  6. Grant’s Way • Armies work simultaneously on multiple fronts • Issued orders to five Union armies across 1,000 miles of front • Campaigns ready for the spring of 1864

  7. The Wilderness • Army of the Potomac • Suffered more casualties than any other period of the war • Grant forced Lee’s troops out of trenches • Lee hit the Union in the Wilderness • Numerical and artillery superiority meant nothing in the Wilderness

  8. Wilderness

  9. The Wilderness • Soldiers seldom saw their enemies • Whole brigades got lost in forest • Underbrush fires: many wounded burned to death

  10. More Confusion • Confederates pushing Federals back • General Longstreet corps surprised attacked General Hancock exposed flank • Longstreet shot accidently by his own men • Confederates still pushing forward on multiple flanks

  11. Similar to Chancellorsville • Grant was no Joe Hooker • Grant stabilized the Union right • Both armies exhausted • 2 days = 17,000 casualties Union / 11,000 CSA • When most Union soldiers thought retreat… • They marched southward the next day • Morale was high!

  12. Battles of Spotsylvania • Grant’s troops lost the race to Spotsylvania • Why is this significant? • Spotsylvania provides safe grounds for communications • Union Army would’ve been between Lee and Richmond • Force Lee to fight on open ground

  13. Emory Upton • 24-year old Colonel • Achieved temporary break-through of Confederate center line • Organized 12 regiments into 4 compact lines under cover of woods • Ran across “No Man’s Land” • Temporary success

  14. More in Spotsylvania • Grant used Upton’s strategy • “Bloody Angle” • Some of the most savage fighting in the war • Hours of fighting in the rain • Trenches lie men 3 deep • 7,000 casualties per side

  15. Strategy • How could Grant keep fighting with high casualty rates? • Generals Butler and Sigel disrupt Lee’s supply lines • Rebels would have to come out of trenches and fight or retreat • Sheridan and Union cavalry destroy supply depots • Tore up miles of track, kill CSA generals, broke through Richmond defenses

  16. From Spotsylvania to Cold Harbor • Butler and Sigel did not accomplish goals • Lee moved troops behind North Anna River • Grant moved west to turn Lee’s flank • Ordered an all out attack on Lee but troops were not ready • Postponed for 24 hours – gave CSA time to prepare

  17. Cold Harbor

  18. Cold Harbor Defeat • Name tags on soldiers – death looming • June 3rd attack • One of the most costly failures of the war • “I regret this assault more than any one I have ever ordered.” – Grant • CSA = 1500 casualties / 7,000 Union

  19. Grant and Sherman • http://www.history.com/videos/grant-and-sherman-unlikely-leaders

More Related