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Explore the drastic changes brought on by the Civil War on the Union and Confederacy, including political shifts, economic impacts, and societal transformations such as women entering the workforce and the challenges faced by both sides.
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Impact of War on the Union & Confederacy A look at politics, economics, & society.
Politics in the Union • Republican-dominated Congress expands bureaucracy • Broaden federal power • Further war effort • Homestead Act (1862) • 160 acres of Western land free to any settler who would farm the land for five years. • Morrill Land Grant College Act (1862) • Proceeds of land sales in states used to est. agricultural colleges • National Banking Act (1863) • Provided uniform currency = “greenback” • Pacific Railway Act (1862) • Authorized subsidies in land and money for the construction of transcontinental railroads.
Economics in the Union • Funding the War • Instituted an income tax = 10% on incomes $5,000 • Raised tariffs to highest rate yet • Borrowing • War Bonds = $400 million • Loans from banks & lg. financial interests = $2.6 billion • War Sped Economic Development • Wages increase BUT prices increase more • Workers lose purchasing power • Increase in trade union movement • Labor conflicts b/w striking white workers and black strikebreakers
Union Society • Conscription Act (1863) • National draft • Avoid service by hiring by… • Hiring a replacement • Pay government $300 • Draft provokes riots • NYC Draft Riots (July 1863) • Irish destroy draft office • Attack city’s black population • Blamed African Americans for war • War fought for benefit of slaves who would compete for jobs post-war
Women in the Union • Took jobs, often previously reserved for men • 100,000 employed in factories • Became teachers, retail clerks, office workers • Nursing becomes female field • Paid less than men • Many women widowed • New economic opportunities helped broaden view of women’s roles • Women admitted to 8 previously all-male state universities post war
Politics in the Confederacy • West Virginia secede from Virginia and declare loyalty to Union • States’ Right = obstacle • States refuse to comply with national efforts to win war • Particularly regarding funding the war & conscription • Conscription Act (1862) • All white males 18-35 • Draft Exemptions • Could provide a replacement • Was only white male on plantation of 20+ slaves
Economics in the Confederacy • Funding the War • Only specie (gold & silver) was seized from U.S. mints = $1 mill • Small unstable banking system = had little $ to lend to war effort • Income tax = produced on 1% of total gov’t income • Sold war bonds • Printed paper currency = $1.5 billion worth • Naval Blockade = shortages in all supplies • Inflation • Prices rose 9,000% • Black market & hoarding • Food shortages = bread riots • Farm land decimated by advancing Union army • “food draft” • Allowed soldiers to confiscate crops
Confederate Society • Women • Left in charge of family farms • Managed slave force on • Plowed fields & harvested crops • Worked for the Confederate government • Entered into nursing • By end of war = gender imbalance • Slaves • Whites fearful of slave revolts • Severely enforced slave codes • More likely to escape than revolt