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After the Civil War

After the Civil War. The states that seceded. During the war 11 southern states had seceded from the Union. They had formed the Confederate States. The confederate army was defeated. President Lincoln said that he never considered the southern states as having left the union.

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After the Civil War

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  1. After the Civil War

  2. The states that seceded • During the war 11 southern states had seceded from the Union. • They had formed the Confederate States. • The confederate army was defeated. • President Lincoln said that he never considered the southern states as having left the union.

  3. Post-civil war literature • More men died during the American civil war than in all previous American wars combined. • But, twice as many of them died from infections caught in the hospitals than died from gunshot wounds.

  4. In the hospitals • We have a clear idea of what life was like in the civil war hospitals because of accounts written by those who visited them. • Louisa May Alcott and Walt Whitman both worked in war hospitals.

  5. Louisa May Alcott • Alcott had a typical liberal Northern upbringing. • Her parents were transcendentalists. • She was an abolitionist and a feminist.

  6. Louisa May Alcott • Louisa May Alcott lived in Massachusetts. • Massachusetts had abolished slavery in their constitution in 1780.

  7. Hospital Sketches • Alcott worked briefly as a nurse in an army hospital in Washington. • She wrote Hospital Sketches in 1863. • This is quite a funny account of working in an army hospital.

  8. Little Women • Louisa May Alcott’s most famous novel is Little Women. • It is a partly autobiographical book about four sisters growing up in Massachusetts during the civil war.

  9. Little Women • Little Women is still an incredibly popular book. It explores the private lives of young women in the mid-19th century. • Even though it is set during the civil war, it doesn’t mention the war, or slavery, very much!! • This reflects the relatively mild effects of the war in the North.

  10. Walt Whitman • (As we already know) the poet Walt Whitman worked as a volunteer nurse during the civil war. • He felt he had a duty to help the wounded soldiers.

  11. Drum Taps • Walt Whitman wrote a collection of poems called Drum Taps about working in the civil war hospital. • He was a psychological nurse to the soldiers, so he spent a lot of time talking to them about their experiences.

  12. Drum Taps Aroused and angry, I thought to beat the alarum, and urge relentless war; But soon my fingers fail’d me, my face droop’d, and I resign’d myself, To sit by the wounded and soothe them, or silently watch the dead.

  13. When Lilacs Last in the Door-yard Bloom’d • Walt Whitman was a great admirer of Lincoln. • He wrote When Lilacs Last in the Door-Yard Bloom’d for Lincoln after he died.

  14. Abraham Lincoln • Lincoln delivered the Emancipation Proclamation in 1863. • This was the proclamation that emancipated (freed) the slaves.

  15. The End of Slavery • What did the end of slavery mean for the former slaves?….. • They obviously had no savings, property or possessions. • Generally their only experience of work was on the plantations and they could not read or write.

  16. Black Codes • The “Black Codes” were laws introduced in the southern states that discriminated against black people. • Many former slaves had to become share-croppers. • This was essentially a new form of slavery. http://www.hippocampus.org/hippocampus.php/course_locator.php?course=AP%20US%20History%20I&lesson=39&topic=2&width=800&height=550&topicTitle=The%20Black%20Codes&skinPath=http://www.hippocampus.org/hippocampus.skins/default

  17. Harriet Jacobs • As a free women Harriet Jacobs could safely return to the town that she had worked so hard to escape from. • She spent the rest of her life working to help freed slaves.

  18. Frederick Douglas • Frederick Douglas was appointed to several important political positions. • He continued to lecture and give speeches throughout his life. • After Lincoln died Frederick Douglas gave a speech at the unveiling of his memorial

  19. The assassination of Abraham Lincoln • President Lincoln was assassinated in 1865. • He was the first American president to be assassinated • He was shot in a theatre as he was watching a play.

  20. John Wilkes Booth • John Wilkes Booth assassinated Lincoln. • He and his co-conspirators had planned to overthrow the government, but the plot failed.

  21. Lincoln Memorials • People today visit the Lincoln Memorial to ask for help. • At the unveiling of the Emancipation memorial Frederick Douglas was asked to speak.

  22. Mark Twain (1835 - 1910) • Mark Twain’s real name was Samuel Langhorne Clemens. • He was called the “father of American Literature.”

  23. Missouri • Missouri was a border state during the civil war. • It did not officially secede, but a large number of people were on the side of the confederates.

  24. Twain and Abolition • “Lincoln's Proclamation ... not only set the black slaves free, but set the white man free also.” • Twain was an abolitionist and strongly anti-slavery.

  25. The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn • This book is often just called Huck Finn. • It is the story of a poor boy named Huckleberry Finn and a slave named Jim.

  26. Huck Finn • Huck Finn has faked his own death and Jim has run away from his owner. • They travel together up the Mississippi river on a raft.

  27. Mississippi River • The Mississippi river is the second longest river is the United States. • In Huck Finn it represents freedom.

  28. The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn • Both Huckleberry Finn, as a young, poor boy, and Jim as a slave, have very little power. • White adults make all the decisions that affect their lives.

  29. Controversial Book • Since it was written (and still today) Huck Finn has been surprisingly controversial. • When it was first written it was thought to be vulgar. • Today, people are offended by the frequent use of the word “nigger” in the story.

  30. Freedom • But the story is an exploration of what it means to be FREE. • This was an important theme for America at this time.

  31. Post civil-war • Twain wrote the book in the time after the civil war when tensions between white and black people were spilling out into violence. • Consider why Twain chose to set the story in the pre-war years…..

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