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Section 1 - Coggle Diagram
Section 1
Women at war
Dorothea Dix
First superintendent of Women nurse with the job
Louisa May Alcott
Worked in hospital for Dix
Clara Barton
President of the American red cross
Women helped set up the voluntary United States sanitary commission
Treasury department
Women paid less than men
Several times strikes for higher pay
Soldiers learn to dig
Generals would learn that armies could no longer confront each other in solid ranks
Start of trench warfare
Fort by using the spade
Robert E. Lee
The border states
Lincoln
Imposed material law in Maryland
Suppressed newspaper
Arrested civilians
Writ of habeas corpus
Judge the power to free a person who is being held illegally or without just cause
Maryland
Held in the union
Missouri and Kentucky saved for the union
The rifle
Flintlock musket
Slow to reload
Short range
British weapon
Lasted four years
Standard Army weapon
Barrel was riffled
Used caplock
Importance of railroads
Had to carry ammunition, food, bandages
Slow and hard to build
Quick and easy to cut
The war of exhaustion
Had to stop supplies from coming in by water
South had many highways
North made to hard south to export cotton
Conda
Northern blockade
Slowly everything the south needed
Everybody's war
Covered by newspaper correspondents
Civilians could read
Northern reporter smuggled
Soldiers run away from camera
They had never seen before
The sides compared
North
20 million people
Labor saving devices
They use blacks in army
More factories and factory worker
South
9 million people (3.6 million slaves)
Third southerner was black
depended for labor on it’s slaves
They didn’t see slaves as people
Short war
Called it six months’ war
North
Seemed stronger in every way
Question of emancipation
General Fremont freed the slaves of rebels Missouri
Lincoln overruled him
Lincoln
Save the union