fbpx
Wikipedia

Union (American Civil War)

During the American Civil War, the Union, also known as the North, referred to the United States led by President Abraham Lincoln. It was opposed by the secessionist Confederate States of America (CSA), informally called "the Confederacy" or "the South". The Union is named after its declared goal of preserving the United States as a constitutional union. "Union" is used in the U.S. Constitution to refer to the founding formation of the people, and to the states in union. In the context of the Civil War, it has also often been used as a synonym for "the northern states loyal to the United States government;"[1] in this meaning, the Union consisted of 20 free states and five border states.

United States of America
1861–1865
Flag
(1861–1863)
Map of the division of the states in the American Civil War (1861–1865).
  Northern free states loyal to the United States
  Southern slave states which seceded and formed the Confederacy
  Southern slave states which remained in the Union (border states) and West Virginia
  U.S. territories, with the exception of the Indian Territory (later Oklahoma)
StatusRump state
CapitalWashington D.C.
Common languages
Religion
Majority:
Protestantism
Minority:
Catholicism
Judaism
Native American religions
Demonym(s)American
GovernmentFederal presidential constitutional republic
President 
Abraham Lincoln
• 1865
Andrew Johnson
Speaker of the House 
• 1861–1863
Galusha A. Grow
• 1863–1865
Schuyler Colfax
Chief Justice 
• 1861–1864
Roger B. Taney
• 1864–1865
Salmon P. Chase
LegislatureCongress
• Upper House
Senate
• Lower House
House of Representatives
Historical eraAmerican Civil War
• Southern states declared secession
1860–1861
March 4, 1861
April 12–13, 1861
January 1, 1863
1864
July 13–16, 1863
March 29, 1865
April 14, 1865
April 9–November 6 1865
CurrencyUnited States Dollar
Today part ofUnited States

The Union Army was a new formation comprising mostly state units, together with units from the regular U.S. Army. The border states were essential as a supply base for the Union invasion of the Confederacy, and Lincoln realized he could not win the war without control of them,[2] especially Maryland, which lay north of the national capital of Washington, D.C. The Northeast and upper Midwest provided the industrial resources for a mechanized war producing large quantities of munitions and supplies, as well as financing for the war. The Northeast and Midwest provided soldiers, food, horses, financial support, and training camps. Army hospitals were set up across the Union. Most Northern states had Republican governors who energetically supported the war effort and suppressed anti-war subversion, particularly that that arose in 1863–64.[3] The Democratic Party strongly supported the war at the beginning in 1861, but by 1862, was split between the War Democrats and the anti-war element known as Peace Democrats, led by the extremist "Copperheads".[4] The Democrats made major electoral gains in 1862 in state elections, most notably in New York. They lost ground in 1863, especially in Ohio. In 1864, the Republicans campaigned under the National Union Party banner, which attracted many War Democrats and soldiers[5] and scored a landslide victory for Lincoln and his entire ticket against Democratic candidate George B. McClellan.

The war years were quite prosperous except where serious fighting and guerrilla warfare ravaged the countryside. Prosperity was stimulated by heavy government spending and the creation of an entirely new national banking system. The Union states invested a great deal of money and effort in organizing psychological and social support for soldiers' wives, widows, and orphans, and for the soldiers themselves. Most soldiers were volunteers, although after 1862 many volunteered in order to escape the draft and to take advantage of generous cash bounties on offer from states and localities. Draft resistance was notable in some larger cities, especially in parts of New York City, with its massive anti-draft riots of July 1863 and in some remote districts such as the coal mining areas of Pennsylvania.

Etymology

 
Charleston Mercury Secession Broadside, 1860—"The Union" had been a way to refer to the American Republic.

In the context of the American Civil War, the Union (The United States of America) is sometimes referred to as "the North", both then and now, as opposed to the Confederacy, which was "the South". The Union (United States of America) never recognized the legitimacy of the Confederacy's secession and maintained at all times that it remained entirely a part of the United States of America. In foreign affairs the Union was the only side recognized by all other nations, none of which officially recognized the Confederate government. The term "Union" occurs in the first governing document of the United States, the Articles of Confederation and Perpetual Union. The subsequent Constitution of 1787 was issued and ratified in the name not of the states, but of "We the People of the United States, in order to form a more perfect Union ..." Union, for the United States of America, is then repeated in such clauses as the Admission to the Union clause in Article IV, Section 3.

Even before the war started, the phrase "preserve the Union" was commonplace, and a "union of states" had been used to refer to the entire United States of America. Using the term "Union" to apply to the non-secessionist side carried a connotation of legitimacy as the continuation of the pre-existing political entity.[6]

Confederates generally saw the Union as being opposed to slavery, occasionally referring to them as abolitionists, as in reference to the U.S. Navy as the "Abolition fleet" and the U.S. Army as the "Abolition forces".[7]

In 2015 historian Michael Landis called for an end to the use of the term Union, writing "The employment of 'Union' instead of 'United States,' implicitly supports the Confederate view of secession wherein the nation of the United States collapsed [...] In reality, however, the United States never ceased to exist [...] The dichotomy of 'Union v. Confederacy' lends credibility to the Confederate experiment and undermines the legitimacy of the United States as a political entity."[8] In 2021, the Army University Press noted that it was replacing usages of the word "Union" with "Federal Government" or "U.S. Government". The Army University Press stated this was "more historically accurate" as "the term 'Union' always referred to all the states together."[1]

Size and strength

 
The Union had large advantages in men and resources at the start of the war, and the ratio grew steadily in favor of the Union. In the chart, "cauc men" means white men (Caucasian).

Unlike the Confederacy, the Union had a large industrialized and urbanized area (the Northeast), and more advanced commercial, transportation and financial systems than the rural South.[9] Additionally, the Union states had a manpower advantage of five to two at the start of the war.[10]

Year by year, the Confederacy shrank and lost control of increasing quantities of resources and population. Meanwhile, the Union turned its growing potential advantage into a much stronger military force. However, much of the Union strength had to be used to garrison former-Confederate areas, and to protect railroads and other vital points. The Union's great advantages in population and industry would prove to be vital long-term factors in its victory over the Confederacy, but it took the Union a long while to fully mobilize these resources.

Public opinion

The attack on Fort Sumter rallied the North to the defense of American nationalism. Historian Allan Nevins writes:

The thunderclap of Sumter produced a startling crystallization of Northern sentiment ... Anger swept the land. From every side came news of mass meetings, speeches, resolutions, tenders of business support, the muster of companies and regiments, the determined action of governors and legislatures.[11]

McClintock states:

At the time, Northerners were right to wonder at the near unanimity that so quickly followed long months of bitterness and discord. It would not last throughout the protracted war to come—or even through the year—but in that moment of unity was laid bare the common Northern nationalism usually hidden by the fierce battles more typical of the political arena."[12]

Historian Michael Smith argues that as the war ground on year after year, the spirit of American republicanism grew stronger and generated fears of corruption in high places. Voters became afraid of power being centralized in Washington, extravagant spending, and war profiteering. Democratic candidates emphasized these fears. The candidates added that rapid modernization was putting too much political power in the hands of Eastern financiers and industrialists. They warned that the abolition of slavery would bring a flood of freed blacks into the labor market of the North.

Republicans responded with charges of defeatism. They indicted Copperheads for criminal conspiracies to free Confederate prisoners of war and played on the spirit of nationalism and the growing hatred of the slave owners, as the guilty party in the war.[13]

President Lincoln

Historians have overwhelmingly praised the "political genius" of Abraham Lincoln's performance as president.[14] His first priority was military victory. This required that he master entirely new skills as a strategist and diplomat. He oversaw supplies, finances, manpower, the selection of generals, and the course of overall strategy. Working closely with state and local politicians, he rallied public opinion and (at Gettysburg) articulated a national mission that has defined America ever since. Lincoln's charm and willingness to cooperate with political and personal enemies made Washington work much more smoothly than Richmond, the Confederate capital, and his wit smoothed many rough edges. Lincoln's cabinet proved much stronger and more efficient than Davis's, as Lincoln channeled personal rivalries into a competition for excellence rather than mutual destruction. With William Seward at State, Salmon P. Chase at the Treasury, and (from 1862) Edwin Stanton at the War Department, Lincoln had a powerful cabinet of determined men. Except for monitoring major appointments and decisions, Lincoln gave them free rein to end the Confederate rebellion.[15]

Congress

The Republican Congress passed many major laws that reshaped the nation's economy, financial system, tax system, land system, and higher education system. These included: the Morrill tariff, the Homestead Act, the Pacific Railroad Act, and the National Banking Act.[16] Lincoln paid relatively little attention to this legislation as he focused on war issues but he worked smoothly with powerful Congressional leaders such as Thaddeus Stevens (on taxation and spending), Charles Sumner (on foreign affairs), Lyman Trumbull (on legal issues), Justin Smith Morrill (on land grants and tariffs) and William Pitt Fessenden (on finances).[17]

Military and reconstruction issues were another matter. Lincoln, as the leader of the moderate and conservative factions of the Republican Party, often crossed swords with the Radical Republicans, led by Stevens and Sumner. Author, Bruce Tap, shows that Congress challenged Lincoln's role as commander-in-chief through the Joint Committee on the Conduct of the War. It was a joint committee of both houses that was dominated by the Radical Republicans, who took a hard line against the Confederacy. During the 37th and 38th Congresses, the committee investigated every aspect of Union military operations, with special attention to finding commanders culpable for military defeats. It assumed an inevitable Union victory. Failure was perceived to indicate evil motivations or personal failures. The committee distrusted graduates of the US Military Academy at West Point, since many of the academy's alumni were leaders of the enemy army. Members of the committee much preferred political generals with a satisfactory political record. Some of the committee suggested that West-Pointers who engaged in strategic maneuver were cowardly or even disloyal. It ended up endorsing incompetent but politically correct generals.[18]

Opposition

 
Anti-Lincoln Copperhead pamphlet from 1864

The opposition came from Copperhead Democrats, who were strongest in the Midwest and wanted to allow Confederate secession. In the East, opposition to the war was strongest among Irish Catholics, but also included business interests connected to the South typified by August Belmont. The Democratic Party was deeply split. In 1861 most Democrats supported the war. However, the party increasingly split down the middle between the moderates who supported the war effort, and the peace element, including Copperheads, who did not. It scored major gains in the 1862 elections, and elected the moderate Horatio Seymour as governor of New York. They gained 28 seats in the House of Representatives but Republicans retained control of both the House and the Senate.

 
Lincoln met with his Cabinet for the first reading of the Emancipation Proclamation draft on July 22, 1862.

The 1862 election for the Indiana legislature was especially hard-fought. Though the Democrats gained control of the legislature, they were unable to impede the war effort. Republican Governor Oliver P. Morton was able to maintain control of the state's contribution to the war effort despite the Democratic majority.[19] Washington was especially helpful in 1864 in arranging furloughs to allow Hoosier soldiers to return home so they could vote in elections.[20] Across the North in 1864, the great majority of soldiers voted Republican. Men who had been Democrats before the war often abstained or voted Republican.[21]

As the federal draft laws tightened, there was serious unrest among Copperhead strongholds, such as the Irish in the Pennsylvania coal mining districts. The government needed the coal more than the draftees, so it ignored the largely non-violent draft dodging there.[22][23] The violent New York City draft riots of 1863 were suppressed by the U.S. Army firing grape shot down cobblestone city streets.[24][25]

The Democrats nominated George McClellan, a War Democrat for the 1864 presidential election but gave him an anti-war platform. In terms of Congress the opposition against the war was nearly powerless—as was the case in most states. In Indiana and Illinois pro-war governors circumvented anti-war legislatures elected in 1862. For 30 years after the war the Democrats carried the burden of having opposed the martyred Lincoln, who was viewed by many as the salvation of the Union and the destroyer of slavery.[26]

Copperheads

The Copperheads were a large faction of northern Democrats who opposed the war, demanding an immediate peace settlement. They said they wanted to restore "the Union as it was" (that is, with the South and with slavery) but they realized that the Confederacy would never voluntarily rejoin the U.S.[27] The most prominent Copperhead was Ohio's Clement L. Vallandigham, a Congressman and leader of the Democratic Party in Ohio. He was defeated in an intense election for governor in 1863. Republican prosecutors in the Midwest accused some Copperhead activists of treason in a series of trials in 1864.[28]

Copperheadism was a grassroots movement, strongest in the area just north of the Ohio River, as well as some urban ethnic wards. Some historians have argued that it represented a traditionalistic element alarmed at the rapid modernization of society sponsored by the Republican Party. It looked back to Jacksonian Democracy for inspiration—with ideals that promoted an agrarian rather than industrialized concept of society. Weber (2006) argues that the Copperheads damaged the Union war effort by fighting the draft, encouraging desertion and forming conspiracies.[29] However, other historians say the Copperheads were a legitimate opposition force unfairly treated by the government, adding that the draft was in disrepute and that the Republicans greatly exaggerated the conspiracies for partisan reasons.[30] Copperheadism was a major issue in the 1864 presidential election—its strength waxed when Union armies were doing poorly and waned when they won great victories. After the fall of Atlanta in September 1864, military success seemed assured and Copperheadism collapsed.[27]

Soldiers

Recruiting volunteers

 
Union soldiers on the Mason's Island (Theodore Roosevelt Island), 1861

Enthusiastic young men clamored to join the Union army in 1861. They came with family support for reasons of patriotism and excitement. Washington decided to keep the small regular army intact; it had only 16,000 men and was needed to guard the frontier. Its officers could, however, join the temporary new volunteer army that was formed, with expectations that their experience would lead to rapid promotions. The problem with volunteering, however, was its serious lack of planning, leadership, and organization at the highest levels. Washington called on the states for troops, and every northern governor set about raising and equipping regiments, and sent the bills to the War Department. The men could elect the junior officers, while the governor appointed the senior officers, and Lincoln appointed the generals. Typically, politicians used their local organizations to raise troops and were in line (if healthy enough) to become colonel. The problem was that the War Department, under the disorganized leadership of Simon Cameron, also authorized local and private groups to raise regiments. The result was widespread confusion and delay.

Pennsylvania, for example, had acute problems. When Washington called for 10 more regiments, enough men volunteered to form 30. However, they were scattered among 70 different new units, none of them a complete regiment. Not until Washington approved gubernatorial control of all new units was the problem resolved. Allan Nevins is particularly scathing of this in his analysis: "A President more exact, systematic and vigilant than Lincoln, a Secretary more alert and clearheaded than Cameron, would have prevented these difficulties."[31]

 
Union soldiers before Marye's Heights, Fredericksburg, May 1863

By the end of 1861, 700,000 soldiers were drilling in Union camps. The first wave in spring was called up for only 90 days, then the soldiers went home or reenlisted. Later waves enlisted for three years.

The new recruits spent their time drilling in company and regiment formations. The combat in the first year, though strategically important, involved relatively small forces and few casualties. Sickness was a much more serious cause of hospitalization or death.

In the first few months, men wore low quality uniforms made of "shoddy" material, but by fall, sturdy wool uniforms—in blue—were standard. The nation's factories were converted to produce the rifles, cannons, wagons, tents, telegraph sets, and the myriad of other special items the army needed.

While business had been slow or depressed in spring 1861, because of war fears and Southern boycotts, by fall business was hiring again, offering young men jobs that were an alternative way to help win the war. Nonpartisanship was the rule in the first year, but by summer 1862, many Democrats had stopped supporting the war effort, and volunteering fell off sharply in their strongholds.

The calls for more and more soldiers continued, so states and localities responded by offering cash bonuses. By 1863, a draft law was in effect, but few men actually were drafted and served, since the law was designed to get them to volunteer or hire a substitute. Others hid away or left the country. With the Emancipation Proclamation taking effect in January 1863, localities could meet their draft quota by sponsoring regiments of ex-slaves organized in the South.[32]

 
Soldiers of the Fourth United States Colored Infantry at Fort Lincoln, 1865

Michigan was especially eager to send thousands of volunteers.[33] A study of the cities of Grand Rapids and Niles shows an overwhelming surge of nationalism in 1861, whipping up enthusiasm for the war in all segments of society, and all political, religious, ethnic, and occupational groups. However, by 1862 the casualties were mounting, and the war was increasingly focused on freeing the slaves in addition to preserving the Union. Copperhead Democrats called the war a failure, and it became an increasingly partisan Republican effort.[34] Michigan voters remained evenly split between the parties in the presidential election of 1864.[35]

Motivations of soldiers

Perman (2010) says historians are of two minds on why millions of men seemed so eager to fight, suffer, and die over four years:

Some historians emphasize that Civil War soldiers were driven by political ideology, holding firm beliefs about the importance of liberty, Union, or state rights, or about the need to protect or to destroy slavery. Others point to less overtly political reasons to fight, such as the defense of one's home and family, or the honor and brotherhood to be preserved when fighting alongside other men. Most historians agree that, no matter what he thought about when he went into the war, the experience of combat affected him profoundly and sometimes affected his reasons for continuing to fight.[36]

The paperwork war

On the whole, the national, state, and local governments handled the avalanche of paperwork effectively. Skills developed in insurance and financial companies formed the basis of systematic forms, copies, summaries, and filing systems used to make sense of masses of human data. The leader in this effort, John Shaw Billings, later developed a system of mechanically storing, sorting, and counting numerical information using punch cards. Nevertheless, old-fashioned methodology had to be recognized and overcome. An illustrative case study came in New Hampshire, where the critical post of state adjutant general was held in 1861–64 by elderly politician Anthony C. Colby (1792–1873) and his son Daniel E. Colby (1816–1891). They were patriotic, but were overwhelmed with the complexity of their duties. The state lost track of men who enlisted after 1861; it had no personnel records or information on volunteers, substitutes, or draftees, and there was no inventory of weaponry and supplies. Nathaniel Head (1828–1883) took over in 1864, obtained an adequate budget and office staff, and reconstructed the missing paperwork. As result, widows, orphans, and disabled veterans received the postwar payments they had earned.[37]

Medical conditions

 
Field hospital after the Battle of Savage's Station (1862)

More soldiers died of disease than from battle injuries, and even larger numbers were temporarily incapacitated by wounds, disease, and accidents. The Union responded by building army hospitals in every state.

The hygiene of the camps was poor, especially at the beginning of the war when men who had seldom been far from home were brought together for training with thousands of strangers. First came epidemics of the childhood diseases of chicken pox, mumps, whooping cough, and especially, measles. Operations in the South meant a dangerous and new disease environment, bringing diarrhea, dysentery, typhoid fever, and malaria. There were no antibiotics, so the surgeons prescribed coffee, whiskey, and quinine. Harsh weather, bad water, inadequate shelter in winter quarters, poor policing of camps, and dirty camp hospitals took their toll.[38] This was a common scenario in wars from time immemorial, and conditions faced by the Confederate army were even worse. What was different in the Union was the emergence of skilled, well-funded medical organizers who took proactive action, especially in the much enlarged United States Army Medical Department,[39] and the United States Sanitary Commission, a new private agency.[40] Numerous other new agencies also targeted the medical and morale needs of soldiers, including the United States Christian Commission, as well as smaller private agencies, such as the Women's Central Association of Relief for Sick and Wounded in the Army (WCAR), founded in 1861 by Henry Whitney Bellows, a Unitarian minister, and the social reformer Dorothea Dix. Systematic funding appeals raised public consciousness as well as millions of dollars. Many thousands of volunteers worked in the hospitals and rest homes, most famously poet Walt Whitman. Frederick Law Olmsted, a famous landscape architect, was the highly efficient executive director of the Sanitary Commission.[41]

States could use their own tax money to support their troops, as Ohio did. Under the energetic leadership of Governor David Tod, a War Democrat who won office on a coalition "Union Party" ticket with Republicans, Ohio acted vigorously. Following the unexpected carnage at the battle of Shiloh in April 1862, Ohio sent three steamboats to the scene as floating hospitals equipped with doctors, nurses, and medical supplies. The state fleet expanded to 11 hospital ships, and the state set up 12 local offices in main transportation nodes, to help Ohio soldiers moving back and forth.[42]

The Christian Commission comprised 6,000 volunteers who aided chaplains in many ways.[43] For example, its agents distributed Bibles, delivered sermons, helped with sending letters home, taught men to read and write, and set up camp libraries.[44]

The Army learned many lessons and modernized its procedures,[45] and medical science—especially surgery—made many advances.[46] In the long run, the wartime experiences of the numerous Union commissions modernized public welfare, and set the stage for large—scale community philanthropy in America based on fund raising campaigns and private donations.[47]

Additionally, women gained new public roles. For example, Mary Livermore (1820–1905), the manager of the Chicago branch of the US Sanitary Commission, used her newfound organizational skills to mobilize support for women's suffrage after the war. She argued that women needed more education and job opportunities to help them fulfill their role of serving others.[48]

The Sanitary Commission collected enormous amounts of statistical data, and opened up the problems of storing information for fast access and mechanically searching for data patterns.[49] The pioneer was John Shaw Billings (1838–1913). A senior surgeon in the war, Billings built two of the world's most important libraries, Library of the Surgeon General's Office (now the National Library of Medicine) and the New York Public Library; he also figured out how to mechanically analyze data by turning it into numbers and punching onto the computer punch card, later developed by his student Herman Hollerith. Hollerith's company became International Business Machines (IBM) in 1911.[50]

Prisoners of war

Both sides operated prison camps; they handled about 400,000 captives, but many other prisoners were quickly released and never sent to camps. The Record and Pension Office in 1901 counted 211,000 Northerners who were captured. In 1861–63 most were immediately paroled; after the parole exchange system broke down in 1863, about 195,000 went to Confederate prison camps. Some tried to escape but few succeeded. By contrast 464,000 Confederates were captured (many in the final days) and 215,000 imprisoned. Over 30,000 Union and nearly 26,000 Confederate prisoners died in captivity. Just over 12% of the captives in Northern prisons died, compared to 15.5% for Southern prisons.[51][52]

Draft riots

 
New York City draft riots

Discontent with the 1863 draft law led to riots in several cities and in rural areas as well. By far the most important were the New York City draft riots of July 13 to July 16, 1863.[53] Irish Catholic and other workers fought police, militia and regular army units until the Army used artillery to sweep the streets. Initially focused on the draft, the protests quickly expanded into violent attacks on blacks in New York City, with many killed on the streets.[54]

Small-scale riots broke out in ethnic German and Irish districts, and in areas along the Ohio River with many Copperheads. Holmes County, Ohio was an isolated parochial area dominated by Pennsylvania Dutch and some recent German immigrants. It was a Democratic stronghold and few men dared speak out in favor of conscription. Local politicians denounced Lincoln and Congress as despotic, seeing the draft law as a violation of their local autonomy. In June 1863, small-scale disturbances broke out; they ended when the Army sent in armed units.[55][56][57]

Economy

The Union economy grew and prospered during the war while fielding a very large army and navy.[58] The Republicans in Washington had a Whiggish vision of an industrial nation, with great cities, efficient factories, productive farms, all national banks, all knit together by a modern railroad system, to be mobilized by the United States Military Railroad. The South had resisted policies such as tariffs to promote industry and homestead laws to promote farming because slavery would not benefit. With the South gone and Northern Democrats weak, the Republicans enacted their legislation. At the same time they passed new taxes to pay for part of the war and issued large amounts of bonds to pay for most of the rest. Economic historians attribute the remainder of the cost of the war to inflation. Congress wrote an elaborate program of economic modernization that had the dual purpose of winning the war and permanently transforming the economy.[59] For a list of the major industrialists see .

Financing the war

In 1860 the Treasury was a small operation that funded the small-scale operations of the government through land sales and customs based on a low tariff.[60] Peacetime revenues were trivial in comparison with the cost of a full-scale war but the Treasury Department under Secretary Salmon P. Chase showed unusual ingenuity in financing the war without crippling the economy.[61] Many new taxes were imposed and always with a patriotic theme comparing the financial sacrifice to the sacrifices of life and limb. The government paid for supplies in real money, which encouraged people to sell to the government regardless of their politics. By contrast the Confederacy gave paper promissory notes when it seized property, so that even loyal Confederates would hide their horses and mules rather than sell them for dubious paper. Overall the Northern financial system was highly successful in raising money and turning patriotism into profit, while the Confederate system impoverished its patriots.[62]

The United States needed $3.1 billion to pay for the immense armies and fleets raised to fight the Civil War—over $400 million just in 1862 alone.[63] Apart from tariffs, the largest revenue by far came from new excise taxes—a sort of value added tax—that was imposed on every sort of manufactured item. Second came much higher tariffs, through several Morrill tariff laws. Third came the nation's first income tax; only the wealthy paid and it was repealed at war's end.

 
1862 Greenbacks

Apart from taxes, the second major source of income was government bonds. For the first time bonds in small denominations were sold directly to the people, with publicity and patriotism as key factors, as designed by banker Jay Cooke. State banks lost their power to issue banknotes. Only national banks could do that and Chase made it easy to become a national bank; it involved buying and holding federal bonds and financiers rushed to open these banks. Chase numbered them, so that the first one in each city was the "First National Bank".[64] Third, the government printed paper money called "greenbacks". They led to endless controversy because they caused inflation.[65]

The North's most important war measure was perhaps the creation of a system of national banks that provided a sound currency for the industrial expansion. Even more important, the hundreds of new banks that were allowed to open were required to purchase government bonds. Thereby the nation monetized the potential wealth represented by farms, urban buildings, factories, and businesses, and immediately turned that money over to the Treasury for war needs.[66]

Tariffs

Secretary Chase, though a long-time free-trader, worked with Morrill to pass a second tariff bill in summer 1861, raising rates another 10 points in order to generate more revenues.[67] These subsequent bills were primarily revenue driven to meet the war's needs, though they enjoyed the support of protectionists such as Carey, who again assisted Morrill in the bill's drafting. The Morrill Tariff of 1861 was designed to raise revenue. The tariff act of 1862 served not only to raise revenue but also to encourage the establishment of factories free from British competition by taxing British imports. Furthermore, it protected American factory workers from low paid European workers, and as a major bonus attracted tens of thousands of those Europeans to immigrate to America for high wage factory and craftsman jobs.[68]

Customs revenue from tariffs totaled $345 million from 1861 through 1865 or 43% of all federal tax revenue.

Land grants

The U.S. government owned vast amounts of good land (mostly from the Louisiana Purchase of 1803 and the Oregon Treaty with Britain in 1846). The challenge was to make the land useful to people and to provide the economic basis for the wealth that would pay off the war debt. Land grants went to railroad construction companies to open up the western plains and link up to California. Together with the free lands provided farmers by the Homestead Law the low-cost farm lands provided by the land grants sped up the expansion of commercial agriculture in the West.

The 1862 Homestead Act opened up the public domain lands for free. Land grants to the railroads meant they could sell tracts for family farms (80 to 200 acres) at low prices with extended credit. In addition the government sponsored fresh information, scientific methods and the latest techniques through the newly established Department of Agriculture and the Morrill Land Grant College Act.[69][70]

Agriculture

Agriculture was the largest single industry and it prospered during the war.[71][72] Prices were high, pulled up by a strong demand from the army and from Britain (which depended on American wheat for a fourth of its food imports). The war acted as a catalyst that encouraged the rapid adoption of horse-drawn machinery and other implements. The rapid spread of recent inventions such as the reaper and mower made the work force efficient, even as hundreds of thousands of farmers were in the army. Many wives took their place and often consulted by mail on what to do; increasingly they relied on community and extended kin for advice and help.[73]

The Union used hundreds of thousands of animals. The Army had plenty of cash to purchase them from farmers and breeders but especially in the early months the quality was mixed.[74] Horses were needed for cavalry and artillery.[75] Mules pulled the wagons. The supply held up, despite an unprecedented epidemic of glanders, a fatal disease that baffled veterinarians.[76] In the South, the Union army shot all the horses it did not need to keep them out of Confederate hands.

Cotton trade

The Treasury started buying cotton during the war, for shipment to Europe and northern mills. The sellers were Southern planters who needed the cash, regardless of their patriotism. The Northern buyers could make heavy profits, which annoyed soldiers like Ulysses Grant. He blamed Jewish traders and expelled them from his lines in 1862 but Lincoln quickly overruled this show of anti-semitism. Critics said the cotton trade helped the South, prolonged the war and fostered corruption. Lincoln decided to continue the trade for fear that Britain might intervene if its textile manufacturers were denied raw material. Another goal was to foster latent Unionism in Southern border states. Northern textile manufacturers needed cotton to remain in business and to make uniforms, while cotton exports to Europe provided an important source of gold to finance the war.[77]

Industrial and business leaders and military inventors

Society

Religion

The Protestant religion was quite strong in the North in the 1860s. The United States Christian Commission sent agents into the Army camps to provide psychological support as well as books, newspapers, food and clothing. Through prayer, sermons and welfare operations, the agents ministered to soldiers' spiritual as well as temporal needs as they sought to bring the men to a Christian way of life.[43] Most churches made an effort to support their soldiers in the field and especially their families back home. Much of the political rhetoric of the era had a distinct religious tone.[78]

The Protestant clergy in America took a variety of positions. In general, the pietistic denominations such as the Methodists, Northern Baptists and Congregationalists strongly supported the war effort. Catholics, Episcopalians, Lutherans and conservative Presbyterians generally avoided any discussion of the war, so it would not bitterly divide their membership. The Quakers, while giving strong support to the abolitionist movement on a personal level, refused to take a denominational position. Some clergymen who supported the Confederacy were denounced as Copperheads, especially in the border regions.[79][80]

Methodists

Many Northerners had only recently become religious (following the Second Great Awakening) and religion was a powerful force in their lives. No denomination was more active in supporting the Union than the Methodist Episcopal Church. Carwardine[81] argues that for many Methodists, the victory of Lincoln in 1860 heralded the arrival of the kingdom of God in America. They were moved into action by a vision of freedom for slaves, freedom from the persecutions of godly abolitionists, release from the Slave Power's evil grip on the American government and the promise of a new direction for the Union.[81] Methodists formed a major element of the popular support for the Radical Republicans with their hard line toward the white South. Dissident Methodists left the church.[82] During Reconstruction the Methodists took the lead in helping form Methodist churches for Freedmen and moving into Southern cities even to the point of taking control, with Army help, of buildings that had belonged to the southern branch of the church.[83][84]

The Methodist family magazine Ladies' Repository promoted Christian family activism. Its articles provided moral uplift to women and children. It portrayed the War as a great moral crusade against a decadent Southern civilization corrupted by slavery. It recommended activities that family members could perform in order to aid the Union cause.[85]

Family

Historian Stephen M. Frank reports that what it meant to be a father varied with status and age. He says most men demonstrated dual commitments as providers and nurturers and believed that husband and wife had mutual obligations toward their children. The war privileged masculinity, dramatizing and exaggerating, father-son bonds. Especially at five critical stages in the soldier's career (enlistment, blooding, mustering out, wounding and death) letters from absent fathers articulated a distinctive set of 19th-century ideals of manliness.[86]

Children

There were numerous children's magazines, such as Merry's Museum, The Student and Schoolmate, Our Young Folks, The Little Pilgrim, Forrester's Playmate and The Little Corporal. They showed a Protestant religious tone and "promoted the principles of hard work, obedience, generosity, humility, and piety; trumpeted the benefits of family cohesion; and furnished mild adventure stories, innocent entertainment, and instruction".[87] Their pages featured factual information and anecdotes about the war along with related quizzes, games, poems, songs, short oratorical pieces for "declamation", short stories and very short plays that children could stage. They promoted patriotism and the Union war aims, fostered kindly attitudes toward freed slaves, blackened the Confederates cause, encouraged readers to raise money for war-related humanitarian funds, and dealt with the death of family members.[88] By 1866, the Milton Bradley Company was selling "The Myriopticon: A Historical Panorama of the Rebellion" that allowed children to stage a neighborhood show that would explain the war. It comprised colorful drawings that were turned on wheels and included pre-printed tickets, poster advertisements, and narration that could be read aloud at the show.[89]

Caring for war orphans was an important function for local organizations as well as state and local government.[90] A typical state was Iowa, where the private "Iowa Soldiers Orphans Home Association" operated with funding from the legislature and public donations. It set up orphanages in Davenport, Glenwood and Cedar Falls. The state government funded pensions for the widows and children of soldiers.[91] Orphan schools like the Pennsylvania Soldiers' Orphan School, also spoke of the broader public welfare experiment that began as part of the aftermath of the Civil War. These orphan schools were created to provide housing, care, and education for orphans of Civil War soldiers. They became a matter of state pride, with orphans were paraded around at rallies to display the power of a patriotic schooling.[92]

All the northern states had free public school systems before the war but not the border states. West Virginia set up its system in 1863. Over bitter opposition it established an almost-equal education for black children, most of whom were ex-slaves.[93] Thousands of black refugees poured into St. Louis, where the Freedmen's Relief Society, the Ladies Union Aid Society, the Western Sanitary Commission, and the American Missionary Association (AMA) set up schools for their children.[94]

Unionists in Southern and Border states

 
Confederate soldiers hanging pro-Union bridge-burning conspirators

People loyal to the U.S. federal government and opposed to secession living in the border states (where slavery was legal) and states under Confederate control, were termed Unionists. Confederates sometimes styled them "Homemade Yankees". However, Southern Unionists were not necessarily northern sympathizers and many of them, although opposing secession, supported the Confederacy once it was formed. East Tennessee never supported the Confederacy fully, and Unionists there became powerful state leaders, including governors Andrew Johnson and William G. Brownlow. Likewise, large pockets of eastern Kentucky were Unionist and helped keep the state from seceding.[95] Western Virginia, with few slaves and slave owners, along with a growing industrial base at the time, was so strongly Unionist that it broke away and formed the new state of West Virginia in 1863.[96]

Nearly 100,000 Unionists from the South served in the Union Army during the Civil War and Unionist regiments were raised from every Confederate state except for South Carolina. Among such units was the 1st Alabama Cavalry Regiment, which served as William Sherman's personal escort on his march to the sea. Southern Unionists were extensively used as anti-guerrilla paramilitary forces.[97] During the Reconstruction era (1865–1877), many Southern Unionists became "Scalawags", a derogatory term for white Southern supporters of the Republican Party.[98]

Guerrilla warfare

Besides organized military conflict, the border states were beset by guerrilla warfare. In states bitterly divided, neighbors frequently used the excuse of war to settle personal grudges and took up arms against neighbors.

Missouri

 
Quantrill's 1863 raid burned the town of Lawrence and killed 164 defenders.

Missouri was the scene of over 1,000 engagements between Union and Confederate forces, and uncounted numbers of guerrilla attacks and raids by informal pro-Confederate bands.[99] Western Missouri was the scene of brutal guerrilla warfare during the Civil War. Roving insurgent bands such as Quantrill's Raiders and the men of Bloody Bill Anderson terrorized the countryside, striking both military installations and civilian settlements. Because of the widespread attacks and the protection offered by Confederate sympathizers, Federal leaders issued General Order No. 11 in 1863, and evacuated areas of Jackson, Cass, and Bates counties. They forced the residents out to reduce support for the guerrillas. Union cavalry could sweep through and track down Confederate guerrillas, who no longer had places to hide and people and infrastructure to support them. On short notice, the army forced almost 20,000 people, mostly women, children and the elderly, to leave their homes. Many never returned and the affected counties were economically devastated for years after the end of the war.[100] Families passed along stories of their bitter experiences down through several generations—future U.S. President Harry Truman's grandparents were caught up in the raids, and he would tell of how they were kept in concentration camps.[101]

Some marauding units became organized criminal gangs after the war. In 1882, the bank robber and ex-Confederate guerrilla Jesse James was killed in Saint Joseph, Missouri. Vigilante groups appeared in remote areas where law enforcement was weak, to deal with the lawlessness left over from the guerrilla warfare phase. For example, the Bald Knobbers were the term for several law-and-order vigilante groups in the Ozarks. In some cases, they too turned to illegal gang activity.[102]

Kentucky

In response to the growing problem of locally organized guerrilla campaigns throughout 1863 and 1864, in June 1864, Maj. Gen. Stephen G. Burbridge was given command over the state of Kentucky. This began an extended period of military control that would last through early 1865, beginning with martial law authorized by President Abraham Lincoln. To pacify Kentucky, Burbridge rigorously suppressed disloyalty and used economic pressure as coercion. His guerrilla policy, which included public execution of four guerrillas for the death of each unarmed Union citizen, caused the most controversy. After a falling out with Governor Thomas E. Bramlette, Burbridge was dismissed in February 1865. Confederates remembered him as the "Butcher of Kentucky".[103]

Union states

List of Wikipedia articles on Union states and major cities:

* Border states with slavery in 1861

†Had two state governments, one Unionist one Confederate, both claiming to be the legitimate government of their state. Kentucky's and Missouri's Confederate governments never had significant control.

West Virginia separated from Virginia and became part of the Union during the war, on June 20, 1863. Nevada also joined the Union during the war, becoming a state on October 31, 1864.

Union territories

The Union-controlled territories in April 1861 were:[104]

The Indian Territory saw its own civil war, as the major tribes held slaves and endorsed the Confederacy.[105]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b "Books and Manuscript Submission Guide". Army University Press. Retrieved April 28, 2021.
  2. ^ Lincoln, Abraham. The Papers And Writings Of Abraham Lincoln, Volume 2: 1860–1865. Jazzybee Verlag. p. 94. ISBN 9783849679682.
  3. ^ Smith, Michael T.; Engle, Stephen D. (2018). "Review of GATHERING TO SAVE A NATION: Lincoln and the Union's War Governors, EngleStephen D". Louisiana History: The Journal of the Louisiana Historical Association. 59 (3): 361–363. ISSN 0024-6816. JSTOR 26564816.
  4. ^ Thomas, Benjamin P. (September 26, 2008). Abraham Lincoln: A Biography. SIU Press. p. 377. ISBN 9780809328871.
  5. ^ Thomas, Benjamin P. (September 26, 2008). Abraham Lincoln: A Biography. SIU Press. p. 428. ISBN 9780809328871.
  6. ^ Stampp, Kenneth M. (1980). "The Concept of a Perpetual Union". The Imperiled Union: Essays on the Background of the Civil War. p. 30.
  7. ^ The war of the rebellion: a compilation of the official records of the Union and Confederate armies. 1. Vol. 14. pp. 185–1, 015. Retrieved March 19, 2016.
  8. ^ Landis, Michael (September 9, 2015). "A Proposal to Change the Words We Use When Talking About the Civil War". Smithsonian Magazine. Retrieved January 30, 2022.
  9. ^ Donald, David Herbert & Randall, J. G. (1961). The Civil War and Reconstruction (2nd ed.). pp. 3–13.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: uses authors parameter (link)
  10. ^ Gary W. Gallagher (2001). The American Civil War: The War in the East 1861 – May 1863. Osprey Publishing. p. 22. ISBN 9781841762395.
  11. ^ Nevins, Allan (1959). The War for the Union: The Improvised War 1861–1862. pp. 74–75.
  12. ^ McClintock, Russell (2008). Lincoln and the Decision for War: The Northern Response to Secession. p. 255. Pages 254–74 provide details of support across the North.
  13. ^ Smith, Michael Thomas (2011). The Enemy Within: Fears of Corruption in the Civil War North.
  14. ^ Goodwin, Doris Kearns (2005). Team of Rivals: The Political Genius of Abraham Lincoln. ISBN 9780684824901.
  15. ^ Paludsn, Phillip Shaw (1994). The Presidency of Abraham Lincoln. pp. 21–48.
  16. ^ Leonard P. Curry, Blueprint for Modern America: Nonmilitary Legislation of the First Civil War Congress (1968)
  17. ^ Robert Cook, "Stiffening Abe: William Pitt Fessenden and the Role of the Broker Politician in the Civil War Congress," American Nineteenth Century History, June 2007, Vol. 8 Issue 2, pp 145–167
  18. ^ Bruce Tap, "Inevitability, masculinity, and the American military tradition: the committee on the conduct of the war investigates the American Civil War," American Nineteenth Century History, (2004) 5#2 pp 19–46
  19. ^ Kenneth M. Stampp, Indiana Politics during the Civil War (1949) online edition
  20. ^ Steven E. Woodworth (2011). This Great Struggle: America's Civil War. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 311. ISBN 9781442210875.
  21. ^ Jonathan W. White (2014). Emancipation, the Union Army, and the Reelection of Abraham Lincoln. LSU Press. p. 116. ISBN 9780807154588.
  22. ^ Arnold Shankman, "Draft Resistance in Civil War Pennsylvania." Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography (1977) pp:190–204. online
  23. ^ Robert M. Sandow, Deserter Country:Civil War Opposition in the Pennsylvania Appalachians (2009)
  24. ^ Adrian Cook (1974). The Armies of the Streets: The New York City Draft Riots of 1863. University Press of Kentucky. ISBN 9780813112985.
  25. ^ Dupree, A. Hunter; Fishel, Leslie H. (1960). "An Eyewitness Account of the New York Draft Riots, July, 1863". The Mississippi Valley Historical Review. 47 (3): 472–479. doi:10.2307/1888878. JSTOR 1888878.
  26. ^ Joel Silbey, A respectable minority: the Democratic Party in the Civil War era, 1860–1868 (1977) online edition
  27. ^ a b Cowden, Joanna D. (1983). "The Politics of Dissent: Civil War Democrats in Connecticut". The New England Quarterly. 56 (4): 538–554. doi:10.2307/365104. JSTOR 365104.
  28. ^ Lewis J. Wertheim, "The Indianapolis Treason Trials, the Elections of 1864 and the Power of the Partisan Press." Indiana Magazine of History 1989 85(3): 236–250.
  29. ^ Jennifer L. Weber, Copperheads: The Rise and Fall of Lincoln's Opponents in the North (2006)
  30. ^ Frank L. Klement, Lincoln's Critics: The Copperheads of the North (1999)
  31. ^ Nevins, Allan (1959). War for the Union: Vol 5. The Improvised War, 1861–1862. p. 235.
  32. ^ Gallman, J. Matthew (1994). The North Fights the Civil War. pp. 56–73.
  33. ^ Robert E., Mitchell, "Civil War Recruiting and Recruits from Ever-Changing Labor Pools: Midland County, Michigan, as a Case Study," Michigan Historical Review, 35 (Spring 2009), 29–60.
  34. ^ Martin J. Hershock, "Copperheads and Radicals: Michigan Partisan Politics during the Civil War Era, 1860–1865," Michigan Historical Review (1992) 18#1 pp 28–69
  35. ^ Peter Bratt, "A Great Revolution in Feeling: The American Civil War in Niles and Grand Rapids, Michigan," Michigan Historical Review (2005) 31#2 pp 43–66.
  36. ^ Michael Perman and Amy Murrell Taylor, ed. (2010). Major Problems in the Civil War and Reconstruction. Cengage. p. 178. ISBN 978-0618875207.
  37. ^ Richard F. Miller, ed., States at war: a reference guide for Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, and Vermont in the Civil War (2013) 1: 366–67
  38. ^ Kenneth Link, "Potomac Fever: The Hazards of Camp Life," Vermont History, April 1983, Vol. 51 Issue 2, pp 69–88
  39. ^ Mary C. Gillett, The Army Medical Department, 1818–1865 (1987)
  40. ^ William Quentin Maxwell, Lincoln's Fifth Wheel: The Political History of the U.S. Sanitary Commission (1956)
  41. ^ Justin Martin, Genius of Place: The Life of Frederick Law Olmsted (2011) pp 178–230
  42. ^ Eugene E. Roseboom, The Civil War Era, 1850–1873 (1944) p 396
  43. ^ a b Cannon, M. Hamlin (1951). "The United States Christian Commission". The Mississippi Valley Historical Review. 38 (1): 61–80. doi:10.2307/1898252. JSTOR 1898252.
  44. ^ Hovde, David M. (1989). "The U.S. Christian Commission's Library and Literacy Programs for the Union Military Forces in the Civil War". Libraries & Culture. 24 (3): 295–316. JSTOR 25542169.
  45. ^ Frank R. Freemon, "Lincoln finds a surgeon general: William A. Hammond and the transformation of the Union Army Medical Bureau." Civil War History (1987) 33#1 pp: 5–21.
  46. ^ Shauna Devine, Learning from the Wounded: The Civil War and the Rise of American Medical Science (2014).
  47. ^ Robert H. Bremner, "The Impact of the Civil War on Philanthropy and Social Welfare," Civil War History, December 1966, Vol. 12 Issue 4, pp 293–303
  48. ^ Wendy Hamand Venet, "The Emergence of a Suffragist: Mary Livermore, Civil War activism, and the Moral Power of Women," Civil War History, June 2002, Vol. 48 Issue 2, pp 143–64 in Project MUSE
  49. ^ James H. Cassedy, "Numbering the North's Medical Events: Humanitarianism and Science in Civil War Statistics," Bulletin of the History of Medicine, Summer 1992, Vol. 66 Issue 2, pp 210–233
  50. ^ Carleton B. Chapman, Order out of chaos: John Shaw Billings and America's coming of age (1994)
  51. ^ James Ford Rhodes (1904). History of the United States from the Compromise of 1850: 1864–1866. Harper & Brothers. pp. 507–8.
  52. ^ Michael B. Chesson, "Prison Camps and Prisoners of War," in Steven E. Woodworth, ed. The American Civil War (1996), pp 466–78 online
  53. ^ Barnet Schecter, The Devil's Own Work: The Civil War Draft Riots and the Fight to Reconstruct America (2005)
  54. ^ The New York City Draft Riots In the Shadow of Slavery: African Americans in New York City, 1626–1863, by Leslie M. Harris
  55. ^ Kenneth H. Wheeler, "Local Autonomy and Civil War Draft Resistance: Holmes County, Ohio," Civil War History, (1999) 45@2 pp 147–58
  56. ^ Shannon Smith Bennett, "Draft Resistance and Rioting." in by Maggi M. Morehouse and Zoe Trodd, eds., Civil War America: A Social and Cultural History with Primary Sources (2013) ch. 1
  57. ^ Shannon M. Smith, "Teaching Civil War Union Politics: Draft Riots in the Midwest." OAH Magazine of History (2013) 27#2 pp: 33–36. online
  58. ^ Emerson David Fite, Social and industrial conditions in the North during the Civil War (1910) online edition
  59. ^ Heather Cox Richardson, The Greatest Nation of the Earth: Republican Economic Policies during the Civil War (1997)
  60. ^ Jane Flaherty, "'The Exhausted Condition of the Treasury' on the Eve of the Civil War," Civil War History, (2009) 55#2 pp. 244–277 in Project MUSE
  61. ^ John Niven, Salmon P. Chase: a biography (1995) p. 331
  62. ^ Jane Flaherty, The revenue imperative (2009)
  63. ^ Jerry W. Markham, A financial history of the United States (2001) vol 3 p 220
  64. ^ Bray Hammond, Sovereignty and the Empty Purse: Banks and Politics in the Civil War (1970).
  65. ^ Wesley C. Mitchell, A history of the greenbacks: with special reference to the economic consequences of their issue: 1862–65 (1903) online edition
  66. ^ Hammond, Sovereignty and the Empty Purse: Banks and Politics in the Civil War (1970).
  67. ^ Richardson, 100, 113
  68. ^ Huston, James L. (1983). "A Political Response to Industrialism: The Republican Embrace of Protectionist Labor Doctrines". The Journal of American History. 70 (1): 35–57. doi:10.2307/1890520. JSTOR 1890520.
  69. ^ Harold M. Hyman, American Singularity: The 1787 Northwest Ordinance, the 1862 Homestead and Morrill Acts, and the 1944 GI Bill (U of Georgia Press, 2008)
  70. ^ Sarah T. Phillips et al. "Reflections on One Hundred and Fifty Years of the United States Department of Agriculture," Agricultural History (2013) 87#3 pp 314–367.
  71. ^ Fite, Social and industrial conditions in the North during the Civil War, (1910) pp 1–23; Paludan, A People's Contest" pp 159–69
  72. ^ Paul W. Gates, Agriculture and the Civil War (1965) covers 1850–1870
  73. ^ J.L. Anderson, "The Vacant Chair on the Farm: Soldier Husbands, Farm Wives, and the Iowa Home Front, 1861–1865," Annals of Iowa, Summer/Fall 2007, Vol. 66 Issue 3/4, pp 241–265
  74. ^ Gervase Phillips, "Warhorses of the U.S. Civil War," History Today, (December 2005) 55#12
  75. ^ Spencer Jones, "The Influence of Horse Supply Upon Field Artillery in the American Civil War," Journal of Military History, (April 2010), 74#2 pp 357–377,
  76. ^ Sharrer, G. Terry (1995). "The Great Glanders Epizootic, 1861–1866: A Civil War Legacy". Agricultural History. 69 (1): 79–97. JSTOR 3744026. PMID 11639801.
  77. ^ David S. Surdam, "Traders or traitors: Northern cotton trading during the Civil War," Business & Economic History, Winter 1999, Vol. 28 Issue 2, pp 299–310 online
  78. ^ Randall M. Miller, Harry S. Stout and Charles Reagan Wilson, eds. Religion and the American Civil War (Oxford University Press, 1998) p 4
  79. ^ Timothy L. Wesley. The Politics of Faith during the Civil War (Louisiana State University Press, 2013)
  80. ^ George C. Rable, God's Almost Chosen Peoples: A Religious History of the American Civil War (University of North Carolina Press, 2010).
  81. ^ a b Carwardine, Richard (2000). "Methodists, Politics, and the Coming of the American Civil War". Church History. 69 (3): 578–609. doi:10.2307/3169398. JSTOR 3169398. S2CID 154489893.
  82. ^ Morrow, Ralph E. (1956). "Methodists and "Butternuts" in the Old Northwest". Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society. 49 (1): 34–47. JSTOR 40189481.
  83. ^ Sweet, William W. (1915). "Methodist Church Influence in Southern Politics". The Mississippi Valley Historical Review. 1 (4): 546–560. doi:10.2307/1886955. JSTOR 1886955.
  84. ^ Morrow, Ralph E. (1954). "Northern Methodism in the South during Reconstruction". The Mississippi Valley Historical Review. 41 (2): 197–218. doi:10.2307/1895802. JSTOR 1895802.
  85. ^ Kathleen L. Endres, "A Voice for the Christian Family: The Methodist Episcopal 'Ladies' Repository' in the Civil War," Methodist History, January 1995, Vol. 33 Issue 2, pp. 84–97,
  86. ^ Frank, Stephen M. (1992). ""Rendering Aid and Comfort": Images of Fatherhood in the Letters of Civil War Soldiers from Massachusetts and Michigan". Journal of Social History. 26 (1): 5–31. doi:10.1353/jsh/26.1.5. JSTOR 3788810.
  87. ^ James Marten, Children for the Union: The War Spirit of the Northern Home Front (2004) p. 17
  88. ^ James Marten, "For the good, the true, and the beautiful: Northern children's magazines and the Civil War," Civil War History, March 1995, Vol. 41 Issue 1, pp 57–75
  89. ^ James Marten, "History in a Box: Milton Bradley's Myriopticon," Journal of the History of Childhood & Youth, Winter 2009, Vol. 2 Issue 1, pp 5–7
  90. ^ Marten, Children for the Union pp 107, 166
  91. ^ George Gallarno, "How Iowa Cared for Orphans of Her Soldiers of the Civil War," Annals of Iowa, January 1926, Vol. 15 Issue 3, pp 163–193
  92. ^ James Marten, "Children and Youth during the Civil War Era," (New York University Press) Winter 2012, pp 188–195
  93. ^ F. Talbott, "Some Legislative and Legal Aspects of the Negro Question in West Virginia during the Civil War and Reconstruction," West Virginia History, January 1963, Vol. 24 Issue 2, pp 110–133
  94. ^ Lawrence O. Christensen, "Black Education in Civil War St. Louis," Missouri Historical Review, April 2001, Vol. 95 Issue 3, pp 302–316
  95. ^ Kent Dollar et al. eds. Sister States, Enemy States: The Civil War in Kentucky and Tennessee (2009)
  96. ^ William A. Link, "'This Bastard New Virginia': Slavery, West Virginia Exceptionalism, and the Secession Crisis," West Virginia History, Spring 2009, Vol. 3 Issue 1, pp 37–56
  97. ^ Richard N. Current, Lincoln's Loyalists: Union Soldiers from the Confederacy (1994)
  98. ^ James Alex Baggett, The Scalawags: Southern Dissenters in the Civil War and Reconstruction (2003)
  99. ^ Michael Fellman, Inside War: The Guerrilla Conflict in Missouri during the Civil War (1989)
  100. ^ Sarah Bohl, "A War on Civilians: Order Number 11 and the Evacuation of Western Missouri," Prologue, April 2004, Vol. 36 Issue 1, pp 44–51
  101. ^ Michael R. Gardner, et al. Harry Truman and Civil Rights: Moral Courage and Political Risks (2003) p. 4
  102. ^ Elmo Ingenthron and Hartman, Bald Knobbers: Vigilantes on the Ozarks Frontier (1988)
  103. ^ Louis De Falaise, "General Stephen Gano Burbridge's Command in Kentucky," Register of the Kentucky Historical Society, April 1971, Vol. 69 Issue 2, pp 101–127
  104. ^ Ray C. Colton, The Civil War in the Western Territories: Arizona, Colorado, New Mexico and Utah (1984)
  105. ^ John Spencer and Adam Hook, The American Civil War in Indian Territory (2006)

Bibliography

Surveys

  • Cashin, Joan E. ed. The War Was You and Me: Civilians in the American Civil War (2001),
  • Fellman, Michael et al. This Terrible War: The Civil War and its Aftermath (2nd ed. 2007), 544 page university textbook
  • Flaherty, Jane (June 2009). ""The Exhausted Condition of the Treasury" on the Eve of the Civil War". Civil War History. 55 (2): 244–277. doi:10.1353/cwh.0.0058. ISSN 1533-6271 – via Project MUSE.
  • Ford, Lacy K., ed. A Companion to the Civil War and Reconstruction. (2005). 518 pp. 23 essays by scholars excerpt and text search
  • Gallman, J. Matthew. The North Fights the Civil War: The Home Front (1994), survey
  • Gallman, J. Matthew. Northerners at War: Reflections on the Civil War Home Front (2010), essays on specialized issues
  • Heidler, David and Jeanne Heidler, eds, Encyclopedia of the American Civil War: A Political, Social, and Military History (2002) 2740pp
  • McPherson, James M. Battle Cry of Freedom: The Civil War Era (1988), 900 page survey; Pulitzer prize
  • Nevins, Allan. War for the Union, an 8-volume set (1947–1971). the most detailed political, economic and military narrative; by Pulitzer Prize winner; vol 1–4 cover 1848–61; vol 5. The Improvised War, 1861–1862; 6. War Becomes Revolution, 1862–1863; 7. The Organized War, 1863–1864; 8. The Organized War to Victory, 1864–1865
  • Resch, John P. et al., Americans at War: Society, Culture and the Homefront vol 2: 1816–1900 (2005)

Politics

  • Bogue, Allan G. The Congressman's Civil War (1989)
  • Carman, Harry J. and Reinhard H. Luthin. Lincoln and the Patronage (1943), details on each state
  • Donald, David Herbert. Lincoln (1999) the best biography; excerpt and text search
  • Engle, Stephen D. Gathering to Save a Nation: Lincoln and the Union's War Governors (u of North Carolina Press, 2016). 725 pp.
  • Fish, Carl Russell (1902). "Lincoln and the Patronage". The American Historical Review. 8 (1): 53–69. doi:10.2307/1832574. ISSN 0002-8762. JSTOR 1832574 – via JStor.
  • Gallagher, Gary W. The Union War (2011), emphasizes that the North fought primarily for nationalism and preservation of the Union
  • Goodwin, Doris Kearns. Team of Rivals: The Political Genius of Abraham Lincoln (2005) excerpts and text search, on Lincoln's cabinet
  • Green, Michael S. Freedom, Union, and Power: Lincoln and His Party during the Civil War. (2004). 400 pp.
  • Harris, William C. Lincoln and the Union Governors (Southern Illinois University Press, 2013) 162 pp.
  • Hesseltine, William B. Lincoln and the War Governors (1948)
  • Kleppner, Paul. The Third Electoral System, 1853–1892: Parties, Voters, and Political Culture (1979), statistical study of voting patterns.
  • Lawson, Melinda. Patriot Fires: Forging a New American Nationalism in the Civil War North (University Press of Kansas, 2002).
  • Luthin, Reinhard H. The first Lincoln campaign (1944) on election of 1860
  • Neely, Mark. The Divided Union: Party Conflict in the Civil War North (2002)
  • Paludan, Philip S. The Presidency of Abraham Lincoln (1994), thorough treatment of Lincoln's administration
  • Rawley, James A. The Politics of Union: Northern Politics during the Civil War (1974).
  • Richardson, Heather Cox. The Greatest Nation of the Earth: Republican Economic Policies during the Civil War (1997) online edition
  • Silbey, Joel. A Respectable Minority: The Democratic Party in the Civil War Era (1977).
  • Smith, Adam I. P. No Party Now: Politics in the Civil War North (Oxford University Press, 2006)
  • Smith, Michael Thomas. The Enemy Within: Fears of Corruption in the Civil War North (2011) online review
  • Weber, Jennifer L. Copperheads: The Rise and Fall of Lincoln's Opponents in the North (2006) excerpt and text search

Constitutional and legal

  • Hyman, Harold. A More Perfect Union: The Impact of the Civil War and Reconstruction on the Constitution (Alfred A. Knopf, 1973)
  • Neely, Jr., Mark E. The Fate of Liberty: Abraham Lincoln and Civil Liberties (Oxford University Press, 1991); won the 1992 Pulitzer Prize for History.
  • Neely, Jr., Mark E. Lincoln and the Triumph of the Nation: Constitutional Conflict in the American Civil War (University of North Carolina Press, 2011); covers the U.S. and the Confederate constitutions and their role in the conflict.
  • Paludan, Phillip S. (October 1972). "The American Civil War Considered as a Crisis in Law and Order". The American Historical Review. 77 (4): 1013–1034. doi:10.2307/1859506. ISSN 0002-8762. JSTOR 1859506 – via JStor.

Economic

  • Brandes, Stuart. Warhogs: A History of War Profits in America (1997), pp. 67–88; a scholarly history of the munitions industry; concludes profits were not excessive
  • Clark, Jr., John E. Railroads in the Civil War: The Impact of Management on Victory and Defeat (2004)
  • Cotterill, R. S. "The Louisville and Nashville Railroad 1861–1865," American Historical Review (1924) 29#4 pp. 700–715 in JSTOR
  • Fite, Emerson David. Social and industrial conditions in the North during the Civil War (1910) online edition, old but still quite useful
  • Hammond, Bray. "The North's Empty Purse, 1861–1862," American Historical Review, October 1961, Vol. 67 Issue 1, pp. 1–18 in JSTOR
  • Hill, Joseph A. "The Civil War Income Tax," Quarterly Journal of Economics Vol. 8, No. 4 (July 1894), pp. 416–452 in JSTOR; appendix in JSTOR
  • Lowenstein , Roger. Ways and Means: Lincoln and His Cabinet and the Financing of the Civil War (2022); major scholarly survey; online review
  • Merk, Frederick. Economic history of Wisconsin during the Civil War decade (1916) online edition
  • Smith, Michael Thomas. The Enemy Within: Fears of Corruption in the Civil War North (2011) details on Treasury Department, government contracting, and the cotton trade
  • Weber, Thomas. The northern railroads in the Civil War, 1861–1865 (1999)
  • Wilson, Mark R. The Business of Civil War: Military Mobilization and the State, 1861–1865. (2006). 306 pp. excerpt and text search
  • Ziparo, Jessica. This grand experiment: When women entered the federal workforce in Civil War–Era Washington, DC (UNC Press Books, 2017).
  • Zonderman, David A. "White Workers and the American Civil War." Oxford Research Encyclopedia of American History (2021).

Intellectual and cultural

  • Aaron, Daniel. The Unwritten War: American Writers and the Civil War (2nd ed. 1987)
  • Brownlee, Peter John et al., eds. Home Front: Daily Life in the Civil War North (2013) online review
  • Foote, Lorien and Kanisorn Wongsrichanalai. So Conceived and So Dedicated: Intellectual Life in the Civil War Era North (2015)
  • Gallman, J. Matthew. Defining Duty in the Civil War: Personal Choice, Popular Culture, and the Union Home Front (2015) how civilians defined their roles. online review
  • Fredrickson, George M. The Inner Civil War: Northern Intellectuals and the Crisis of the Union (1993)
  • Stevenson, Louise A. The Victorian Homefront: American Thought and Culture, 1860–1880 (1991)
  • Wilson, Edmund. Patriotic Gore: Studies in the Literature of the American Civil War (1962)

Medical

  • Adams, George Worthington. Doctors in Blue: The Medical History of the Union Army in the Civil War (1996), 253pp; excerpt and text search
  • Clarke, Frances M. War Stories: Suffering and Sacrifice in the Civil War North (University of Chicago Press, 2012)
  • Grant, S.-M. "'Mortal in this season': Union Surgeons and the Narrative of Medical Modernisation in the American Civil War." Social History of Medicine (2014)
  • Maxwell, William Quentin. Lincoln's Fifth Wheel: The Political History of the U.S. Sanitary Commission (1956) online edition
  • Schroeder-Lein, Glenna R. The Encyclopedia of Civil War Medicine (2012) excerpt and text search

Race

  • McPherson, James M. Marching Toward Freedom: The Negro's Civil War (1982); first edition was The Negro's Civil War: How American Negroes Felt and Acted During the War for the Union (1965),
  • Quarles, Benjamin. The Negro in the Civil War (1953), standard history excerpt and text search
  • Voegeli, V. Jacque. Free But Not Equal: The Midwest and the Negro during the Civil War (1967).

Religion and ethnicity

  • Brodrecht, Grant R. "Our Country: Northern Evangelicals and the Union during the Civil War Era." (2018). 288pp.
  • Burton, William L. Melting Pot Soldiers: The Union Ethnic Regiments (1998)
  • Kamphoefner, Walter D. "German-Americans and Civil War Politics: A Reconsideration of the Ethnocultural Thesis." Civil War History 37 (1991): 232–246.
  • Kleppner, Paul. The Third Electoral System, 1853–1892: Parties, Voters, and Political Culture (1979).
  • Miller, Randall M., Harry S. Stout and Charles Reagan Wilson, eds. Religion and the American Civil War (1998) online edition
  • Miller, Robert J. Both Prayed to the Same God: Religion and Faith in the American Civil War. (2007). 260pp
  • Moorhead, James. American Apocalypse: Yankee Protestants and the Civil War, 1860–1869 (1978).
  • Noll, Mark A. The Civil War as a Theological Crisis. (2006). 199 pp.
  • Stout, Harry S. Upon the Altar of the Nation: A Moral History of the Civil War. (2006). 544 pp.

Social and demographic history

  • Brownlee, Peter John, et al. Home Front: Daily Life in the Civil War North (University of Chicago Press, 2013) 193 pp. heavily illustrated.
  • Morehouse, Maggi M. and Zoe Trodd, eds. Civil War America: A Social and Cultural History with Primary Sources (2013), 29 short essays by scholars excerpt
  • Raus, Edmund J. Banners South: Northern Community at War (2011), about Cortland, New York
  • Vinovskis, Maris A., ed. Toward a Social History of the American Civil War: Exploratory Essays (1991), new social history; quantitative studies
  • Vinovskis, Maris A., ed. "Have Social Historians Lost the Civil War? Some Preliminary Demographic Speculations," Journal of American History Vol. 76, No. 1 (June 1989), pp. 34–58 in JSTOR
  • Veit, Helen Zoe, ed. Food in the Civil War Era: The North (Michigan State University Press, 2014)

Soldiers

  • Geary James W. We Need Men: The Union Draft in the Civil War (1991).
  • Geary James W. "Civil War Conscription in the North: A Historiographical Review." Civil War History 32 (September 1986): 208–228.
  • Hams, Emily J. "Sons and Soldiers: Deerfield, Massachusetts, and the Civil War," Civil War History 30 (June 1984): 157–71
  • Hess, Earl J. "The 12th Missouri Infantry: A Socio-Military Profile of a Union Regiment," Missouri Historical Review 76 (October 1981): 53–77.
  • Cimbala, Paul A. and Randall M. Miller, eds. Union Soldiers and the Northern Home Front: Wartime Experiences, Postwar Adjustments. (2002)
  • Costa, Dora L., and Matthew E. Kahn. "Cowards and heroes: Group loyalty in the American Civil War." Quarterly Journal of Economics 118.2 (2003): 519–548. Statistical study based on sample of 32,000 Union soldiers. online
  • Current, Richard N. (1992). Lincoln's Loyalists: Union Soldiers from the Confederacy. Oxford, England: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0195084659.
  • McPherson, James. For Cause and Comrades: Why Men Fought in the Civil War (1998), based on letters and diaries
  • Miller, William J. Training of an Army: Camp Curtin and the North's Civil War (1990)
  • Mitchell; Reid. The Vacant Chair. The Northern Soldier Leaves Home (1993).
  • Rorabaugh, William J. "Who Fought for the North in the Civil War? Concord, Massachusetts, Enlistments," Journal of American History 73 (December 1986): 695–701 in JSTOR
  • Roseboom, Eugene H. The Civil War Era, 1850–1873 (1944), Ohio
  • Scott, Sean A. "'Earth Has No Sorrow That Heaven Cannot Cure': Northern Civilian Perspectives on Death and Eternity during the Civil War," Journal of Social History (2008) 41:843–866
  • Wiley, Bell I. The Life of Billy Yank: The Common Soldier of the Union (1952)

State and local

  • Appleton's Annual Cyclopedia...1863 (1864), detailed coverage of events in all countries; online; for online copies see Annual Cyclopaedia. Each year 1861 to 1902 includes several pages on each U.S. state.
  • Tucker, Spencer, ed. American Civil War: A State-by-State Encyclopedia (2 vol 2015) 1019pp excerpt
  • Aley, Ginette et al. eds. Union Heartland: The Midwestern Home Front during the Civil War (2013)
  • Bak, Richard. A Distant Thunder: Michigan in the Civil War. (2004). 239 pp.
  • Baker, Jean H. The Politics of Continuity: Maryland Political Parties from 1858 to 1870 (1973)
  • Baum, Dale. The Civil War Party System: The Case of Massachusetts, 1848–1876 (1984)
  • Bradley, Erwin S. The Triumph of Militant Republicanism: A Study of Pennsylvania and Presidential Politics, 1860–1872 (1964)
  • Castel, Albert. A Frontier State at War: Kansas, 1861–1865 (1958)
  • Cole, Arthur Charles. The Era of the Civil War 1848–1870 (1919) on Illinois
  • Coulter, E. Merton. The Civil War and Readjustment in Kentucky (1926),
  • Current, Richard N. The History of Wisconsin: The Civil War Era, 1848–1873 (1976).
  • Dee, Christine, ed. Ohio's war: the Civil War in documents (2006), primary sources excerpt and text search
  • Dilla, Harriette M. Politics of Michigan, 1865–1878 (Columbia University Press, 1912) online at Google books
  • Gallman, Matthew J. Mastering Wartime: A Social History of Philadelphia During the Civil War. (1990)
  • Hall, Susan G. Appalachian Ohio and the Civil War, 1862–1863 (2008)
  • Holzer, Harold. State of the Union: New York and the Civil War (2002) Essays by scholars
  • Hubbard, Mark. Illinois's War: The Civil War in Documents (2012) excerpt and text search
  • Karamanski, Theodore J. Rally 'Round the Flag: Chicago and the Civil War (1993).
  • Leech, Margaret. Reveille in Washington, 1860–1865 (1941), Pulitzer Prize
  • Miller, Richard F. ed. States at War, Volume 1: A Reference Guide for Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, and Vermont in the Civil War (2013) excerpt
    • Miller, Richard F. ed. States at War, Volume 2: A Reference Guide for New York in the Civil War (2014) excerpt
  • Nation, Richard F. and Stephen E. Towne. Indiana's War: The Civil War in Documents (2009), primary sources excerpt and text search
  • Niven, John. Connecticut for the Union: The Role of the State in the Civil War (Yale University Press, 1965)
  • O'Connor, Thomas H. Civil War Boston (1999)
  • Parrish, William E. A History of Missouri, Volume III: 1860 to 1875 (1973) (ISBN 0826201482)
  • Pierce, Bessie. A History of Chicago, Volume II: From Town to City 1848–1871 (1940)
  • Schouler, William (1868). A History of Massachusetts in the Civil War. Boston: E.P. Dutton & Co. ISBN 9781582180014. OCLC 2662693.
  • Ponce, Pearl T. Kansas's War: The Civil War in Documents (2011) excerpt and text search
  • Raus, Edmund J. Banners South: Northern Community at War (2011) about Cortland, New York
  • Roseboom, Eugene. The Civil War Era, 1850–1873, History of Ohio, vol. 4 (1944) online, Detailed scholarly history
  • Siddali, Silvana R. Missouri's War: The Civil War in Documents (2009), primary sources excerpt and text search
  • Stampp, Kenneth M. Indiana Politics during the Civil War (1949)
  • Taylor, Paul. "Old Slow Town": Detroit during the Civil War (Detroit: Wayne State University Press, 2013). x, 248 pp.
  • Thornbrough, Emma Lou. Indiana in the Civil War Era, 1850–1880 (1965)
  • Ware, Edith E. Political Opinion in Massachusetts during the Civil War and Reconstruction, (1916). full text online

Women and family

  • "Bonnet Brigades at Fifty: Reflections on Mary Elizabeth Massey and Gender in Civil War History," Civil War History (2015) 61#4 pp. 400–444.
  • Anderson, J. L. "The Vacant Chair on the Farm: Soldier Husbands, Farm Wives, and the Iowa Home Front, 1861–1865," Annals of Iowa (2007) 66: 241–265
  • Attie, Jeanie. Patriotic Toil: Northern Women and the American Civil War (1998). 294 pp.
  • Bahde, Thomas. "'I never wood git tired of wrighting to you.'" Journal of Illinois History (2009). 12:129–155
  • Cashin, Joan E. "American Women and the American Civil War" Journal of Military History (2017) 81#1 pp. 199–204.
  • Giesberg, Judith. Army at Home: Women and the Civil War on the Northern Home Front (2009) excerpt and text search
  • Giesberg, Judith Ann. "From Harvest Field to Battlefield: Rural Pennsylvania Women and the U.S. Civil War," Pennsylvania History (2005). 72: 159–191
  • Harper, Judith E. Women during the Civil War: An Encyclopedia. (2004). 472 pp.
  • McDevitt, Theresa. Women and the American Civil War: an annotated bibliography (Praeger, 2003).
  • Marten, James. Children for the Union: The War Spirit on the Northern Home Front. Ivan R. Dee, 2004. 209 pp.
  • Massey, Mary. Bonnet Brigades: American Women and the Civil War (1966), excellent overview North and South; reissued as Women in the Civil War (1994)
    • "Bonnet Brigades at Fifty: Reflections on Mary Elizabeth Massey and Gender in Civil War History," Civil War History (2015) 61#4 pp. 400–444.
    • Giesberg, Judith. "Mary Elizabeth Massey and the Civil War Centennial." Civil War History 61.4 (2015): 400–406. online
  • Rodgers, Thomas E. "Hoosier Women and the Civil War Home Front," Indiana Magazine of History 97#2 (2001), pp. 105–128 in JSTOR
  • Silber, Nina. Daughters of the Union: Northern Women Fight the Civil War. (Harvard UP, 2005). 332 pp.
  • Venet, Wendy Hamand. A Strong-Minded Woman: The Life of Mary Livermore. (U. of Massachusetts Press, 2005). 322 pp.

Primary sources

  • American Annual Cyclopaedia for 1861 (N.Y.: Appleton's, 1864), an extensive collection of reports on each state, Congress, military activities and many other topics; annual issues from 1861 to 1901
  • Appletons' annual cyclopedia and register of important events: Embracing political, military, and ecclesiastical affairs; public documents; biography, statistics, commerce, finance, literature, science, agriculture, and mechanical industry, Volume 3 1863 (1864), thorough coverage of the events of 1863
  • Angle, Paul M. and Earl Schenck Miers, eds. Tragic Years, 1860–1865: A Documentary History of the American Civil War—Vol. 1 1960 online edition
  • Carter, Susan B., ed. The Historical Statistics of the United States: Millennial Edition (5 vols), 2006; online at many universities
  • Commager, Henry Steele, ed. The Blue and the Gray. The Story of the Civil War as Told by Participants. (1950), excerpts from primary sources
  • Dee, Christine, ed. Ohio's War: The Civil War in Documents. (2007). 244 pp.
  • Freidel Frank, ed. Union Pamphlets of the Civil War, 1861–1865 (2 vol. 1967)
  • Hesseltine, William B., ed. The Tragic Conflict: The Civil War and Reconstruction (1962), excerpts from primary sources online edition
  • Marten, James, ed. Civil War America: Voices from the Home Front. (2003). 346 pp.
  • Risley, Ford, ed. The Civil War: Primary Documents on Events from 1860 to 1865. (2004). 320 pp.
  • Siddali, Silvana R. Missouri's War: The Civil War in Documents (2009), 256pp excerpt and text search
  • Sizer, Lyde Cullen and Jim Cullen, ed. The Civil War Era: An Anthology of Sources. (2005). 434 pp.
  • Smith, Charles Winston and Charles Judah, eds. Life in the North during the Civil War: A Source History (1966)
  • Voss-Hubbard, Mark, ed. Illinois's War: The Civil War in Documents (2013) online review
  • diaries, journals. reminiscences
  • "The Peoples Contest: A Civil War era digital archiving project", access to primary sources from Pennsylvania, especially newspapers and other resources

External links

  • Lincoln Administration links August 1, 2015, at the Wayback Machine
  • Civil War Soldiers
  • Abraham Lincoln online May 14, 2011, at the Wayback Machine, texts
  • "Home Front: Daily Life in the Civil War North" visual exhibit at the
  • "Financial Measures," by Nicolay and Hay (1889)
  • "Lincoln Reelected," by Nicolay and Hay (1889)
  • "First Plans for Emancipation," by Nicolay and Hay (1889)
  • "Emancipation Announced," by Nicolay and Hay (1889)

union, american, civil, during, american, civil, union, also, known, north, referred, united, states, president, abraham, lincoln, opposed, secessionist, confederate, states, america, informally, called, confederacy, south, union, named, after, declared, goal,. During the American Civil War the Union also known as the North referred to the United States led by President Abraham Lincoln It was opposed by the secessionist Confederate States of America CSA informally called the Confederacy or the South The Union is named after its declared goal of preserving the United States as a constitutional union Union is used in the U S Constitution to refer to the founding formation of the people and to the states in union In the context of the Civil War it has also often been used as a synonym for the northern states loyal to the United States government 1 in this meaning the Union consisted of 20 free states and five border states United States of America1861 1865Flag 1861 1863 SealMap of the division of the states in the American Civil War 1861 1865 Northern free states loyal to the United States Southern slave states which seceded and formed the Confederacy Southern slave states which remained in the Union border states and West Virginia U S territories with the exception of the Indian Territory later Oklahoma StatusRump stateCapitalWashington D C Common languagesEnglish Dutch German Indigenous American languages Various other minor languagesReligionMajority ProtestantismMinority CatholicismJudaismNative American religionsDemonym s AmericanGovernmentFederal presidential constitutional republicPresident 1861 1865Abraham Lincoln 1865Andrew JohnsonSpeaker of the House 1861 1863Galusha A Grow 1863 1865Schuyler ColfaxChief Justice 1861 1864Roger B Taney 1864 1865Salmon P ChaseLegislatureCongress Upper HouseSenate Lower HouseHouse of RepresentativesHistorical eraAmerican Civil War Southern states declared secession1860 1861 Abraham Lincoln inaugurationMarch 4 1861 Battle of Fort SumterApril 12 13 1861 Emancipation ProclamationJanuary 1 1863 Savannah campaign1864 New York City draft riotsJuly 13 16 1863 Appomattox campaignMarch 29 1865 Assassination of Abraham LincolnApril 14 1865 Ceasefire Agreement of the ConfederacyApril 9 November 6 1865CurrencyUnited States DollarToday part ofUnited StatesThe Union Army was a new formation comprising mostly state units together with units from the regular U S Army The border states were essential as a supply base for the Union invasion of the Confederacy and Lincoln realized he could not win the war without control of them 2 especially Maryland which lay north of the national capital of Washington D C The Northeast and upper Midwest provided the industrial resources for a mechanized war producing large quantities of munitions and supplies as well as financing for the war The Northeast and Midwest provided soldiers food horses financial support and training camps Army hospitals were set up across the Union Most Northern states had Republican governors who energetically supported the war effort and suppressed anti war subversion particularly that that arose in 1863 64 3 The Democratic Party strongly supported the war at the beginning in 1861 but by 1862 was split between the War Democrats and the anti war element known as Peace Democrats led by the extremist Copperheads 4 The Democrats made major electoral gains in 1862 in state elections most notably in New York They lost ground in 1863 especially in Ohio In 1864 the Republicans campaigned under the National Union Party banner which attracted many War Democrats and soldiers 5 and scored a landslide victory for Lincoln and his entire ticket against Democratic candidate George B McClellan The war years were quite prosperous except where serious fighting and guerrilla warfare ravaged the countryside Prosperity was stimulated by heavy government spending and the creation of an entirely new national banking system The Union states invested a great deal of money and effort in organizing psychological and social support for soldiers wives widows and orphans and for the soldiers themselves Most soldiers were volunteers although after 1862 many volunteered in order to escape the draft and to take advantage of generous cash bounties on offer from states and localities Draft resistance was notable in some larger cities especially in parts of New York City with its massive anti draft riots of July 1863 and in some remote districts such as the coal mining areas of Pennsylvania Contents 1 Etymology 2 Size and strength 3 Public opinion 4 President Lincoln 5 Congress 5 1 Opposition 5 2 Copperheads 6 Soldiers 6 1 Recruiting volunteers 6 1 1 Motivations of soldiers 6 1 2 The paperwork war 6 2 Medical conditions 6 3 Prisoners of war 6 4 Draft riots 7 Economy 7 1 Financing the war 7 1 1 Tariffs 7 2 Land grants 7 3 Agriculture 7 4 Cotton trade 7 5 Industrial and business leaders and military inventors 8 Society 8 1 Religion 8 1 1 Methodists 8 2 Family 8 2 1 Children 9 Unionists in Southern and Border states 9 1 Guerrilla warfare 9 1 1 Missouri 9 1 2 Kentucky 10 Union states 10 1 Union territories 11 See also 12 Notes 13 Bibliography 13 1 Surveys 13 2 Politics 13 3 Constitutional and legal 13 4 Economic 13 5 Intellectual and cultural 13 6 Medical 13 7 Race 13 8 Religion and ethnicity 13 9 Social and demographic history 13 10 Soldiers 13 11 State and local 13 12 Women and family 13 13 Primary sources 14 External linksEtymology Edit Charleston Mercury Secession Broadside 1860 The Union had been a way to refer to the American Republic In the context of the American Civil War the Union The United States of America is sometimes referred to as the North both then and now as opposed to the Confederacy which was the South The Union United States of America never recognized the legitimacy of the Confederacy s secession and maintained at all times that it remained entirely a part of the United States of America In foreign affairs the Union was the only side recognized by all other nations none of which officially recognized the Confederate government The term Union occurs in the first governing document of the United States the Articles of Confederation and Perpetual Union The subsequent Constitution of 1787 was issued and ratified in the name not of the states but of We the People of the United States in order to form a more perfect Union Union for the United States of America is then repeated in such clauses as the Admission to the Union clause in Article IV Section 3 Even before the war started the phrase preserve the Union was commonplace and a union of states had been used to refer to the entire United States of America Using the term Union to apply to the non secessionist side carried a connotation of legitimacy as the continuation of the pre existing political entity 6 Confederates generally saw the Union as being opposed to slavery occasionally referring to them as abolitionists as in reference to the U S Navy as the Abolition fleet and the U S Army as the Abolition forces 7 In 2015 historian Michael Landis called for an end to the use of the term Union writing The employment of Union instead of United States implicitly supports the Confederate view of secession wherein the nation of the United States collapsed In reality however the United States never ceased to exist The dichotomy of Union v Confederacy lends credibility to the Confederate experiment and undermines the legitimacy of the United States as a political entity 8 In 2021 the Army University Press noted that it was replacing usages of the word Union with Federal Government or U S Government The Army University Press stated this was more historically accurate as the term Union always referred to all the states together 1 Size and strength Edit The Union had large advantages in men and resources at the start of the war and the ratio grew steadily in favor of the Union In the chart cauc men means white men Caucasian Unlike the Confederacy the Union had a large industrialized and urbanized area the Northeast and more advanced commercial transportation and financial systems than the rural South 9 Additionally the Union states had a manpower advantage of five to two at the start of the war 10 Year by year the Confederacy shrank and lost control of increasing quantities of resources and population Meanwhile the Union turned its growing potential advantage into a much stronger military force However much of the Union strength had to be used to garrison former Confederate areas and to protect railroads and other vital points The Union s great advantages in population and industry would prove to be vital long term factors in its victory over the Confederacy but it took the Union a long while to fully mobilize these resources Public opinion EditThe attack on Fort Sumter rallied the North to the defense of American nationalism Historian Allan Nevins writes The thunderclap of Sumter produced a startling crystallization of Northern sentiment Anger swept the land From every side came news of mass meetings speeches resolutions tenders of business support the muster of companies and regiments the determined action of governors and legislatures 11 McClintock states At the time Northerners were right to wonder at the near unanimity that so quickly followed long months of bitterness and discord It would not last throughout the protracted war to come or even through the year but in that moment of unity was laid bare the common Northern nationalism usually hidden by the fierce battles more typical of the political arena 12 Historian Michael Smith argues that as the war ground on year after year the spirit of American republicanism grew stronger and generated fears of corruption in high places Voters became afraid of power being centralized in Washington extravagant spending and war profiteering Democratic candidates emphasized these fears The candidates added that rapid modernization was putting too much political power in the hands of Eastern financiers and industrialists They warned that the abolition of slavery would bring a flood of freed blacks into the labor market of the North Republicans responded with charges of defeatism They indicted Copperheads for criminal conspiracies to free Confederate prisoners of war and played on the spirit of nationalism and the growing hatred of the slave owners as the guilty party in the war 13 President Lincoln EditMain article Presidency of Abraham Lincoln Historians have overwhelmingly praised the political genius of Abraham Lincoln s performance as president 14 His first priority was military victory This required that he master entirely new skills as a strategist and diplomat He oversaw supplies finances manpower the selection of generals and the course of overall strategy Working closely with state and local politicians he rallied public opinion and at Gettysburg articulated a national mission that has defined America ever since Lincoln s charm and willingness to cooperate with political and personal enemies made Washington work much more smoothly than Richmond the Confederate capital and his wit smoothed many rough edges Lincoln s cabinet proved much stronger and more efficient than Davis s as Lincoln channeled personal rivalries into a competition for excellence rather than mutual destruction With William Seward at State Salmon P Chase at the Treasury and from 1862 Edwin Stanton at the War Department Lincoln had a powerful cabinet of determined men Except for monitoring major appointments and decisions Lincoln gave them free rein to end the Confederate rebellion 15 Congress EditThe Republican Congress passed many major laws that reshaped the nation s economy financial system tax system land system and higher education system These included the Morrill tariff the Homestead Act the Pacific Railroad Act and the National Banking Act 16 Lincoln paid relatively little attention to this legislation as he focused on war issues but he worked smoothly with powerful Congressional leaders such as Thaddeus Stevens on taxation and spending Charles Sumner on foreign affairs Lyman Trumbull on legal issues Justin Smith Morrill on land grants and tariffs and William Pitt Fessenden on finances 17 Military and reconstruction issues were another matter Lincoln as the leader of the moderate and conservative factions of the Republican Party often crossed swords with the Radical Republicans led by Stevens and Sumner Author Bruce Tap shows that Congress challenged Lincoln s role as commander in chief through the Joint Committee on the Conduct of the War It was a joint committee of both houses that was dominated by the Radical Republicans who took a hard line against the Confederacy During the 37th and 38th Congresses the committee investigated every aspect of Union military operations with special attention to finding commanders culpable for military defeats It assumed an inevitable Union victory Failure was perceived to indicate evil motivations or personal failures The committee distrusted graduates of the US Military Academy at West Point since many of the academy s alumni were leaders of the enemy army Members of the committee much preferred political generals with a satisfactory political record Some of the committee suggested that West Pointers who engaged in strategic maneuver were cowardly or even disloyal It ended up endorsing incompetent but politically correct generals 18 Opposition Edit Anti Lincoln Copperhead pamphlet from 1864 The opposition came from Copperhead Democrats who were strongest in the Midwest and wanted to allow Confederate secession In the East opposition to the war was strongest among Irish Catholics but also included business interests connected to the South typified by August Belmont The Democratic Party was deeply split In 1861 most Democrats supported the war However the party increasingly split down the middle between the moderates who supported the war effort and the peace element including Copperheads who did not It scored major gains in the 1862 elections and elected the moderate Horatio Seymour as governor of New York They gained 28 seats in the House of Representatives but Republicans retained control of both the House and the Senate Lincoln met with his Cabinet for the first reading of the Emancipation Proclamation draft on July 22 1862 The 1862 election for the Indiana legislature was especially hard fought Though the Democrats gained control of the legislature they were unable to impede the war effort Republican Governor Oliver P Morton was able to maintain control of the state s contribution to the war effort despite the Democratic majority 19 Washington was especially helpful in 1864 in arranging furloughs to allow Hoosier soldiers to return home so they could vote in elections 20 Across the North in 1864 the great majority of soldiers voted Republican Men who had been Democrats before the war often abstained or voted Republican 21 As the federal draft laws tightened there was serious unrest among Copperhead strongholds such as the Irish in the Pennsylvania coal mining districts The government needed the coal more than the draftees so it ignored the largely non violent draft dodging there 22 23 The violent New York City draft riots of 1863 were suppressed by the U S Army firing grape shot down cobblestone city streets 24 25 The Democrats nominated George McClellan a War Democrat for the 1864 presidential election but gave him an anti war platform In terms of Congress the opposition against the war was nearly powerless as was the case in most states In Indiana and Illinois pro war governors circumvented anti war legislatures elected in 1862 For 30 years after the war the Democrats carried the burden of having opposed the martyred Lincoln who was viewed by many as the salvation of the Union and the destroyer of slavery 26 Copperheads Edit Main article Copperheads politics The Copperheads were a large faction of northern Democrats who opposed the war demanding an immediate peace settlement They said they wanted to restore the Union as it was that is with the South and with slavery but they realized that the Confederacy would never voluntarily rejoin the U S 27 The most prominent Copperhead was Ohio s Clement L Vallandigham a Congressman and leader of the Democratic Party in Ohio He was defeated in an intense election for governor in 1863 Republican prosecutors in the Midwest accused some Copperhead activists of treason in a series of trials in 1864 28 Copperheadism was a grassroots movement strongest in the area just north of the Ohio River as well as some urban ethnic wards Some historians have argued that it represented a traditionalistic element alarmed at the rapid modernization of society sponsored by the Republican Party It looked back to Jacksonian Democracy for inspiration with ideals that promoted an agrarian rather than industrialized concept of society Weber 2006 argues that the Copperheads damaged the Union war effort by fighting the draft encouraging desertion and forming conspiracies 29 However other historians say the Copperheads were a legitimate opposition force unfairly treated by the government adding that the draft was in disrepute and that the Republicans greatly exaggerated the conspiracies for partisan reasons 30 Copperheadism was a major issue in the 1864 presidential election its strength waxed when Union armies were doing poorly and waned when they won great victories After the fall of Atlanta in September 1864 military success seemed assured and Copperheadism collapsed 27 Soldiers EditMain article Union Army Recruiting volunteers Edit Union soldiers on the Mason s Island Theodore Roosevelt Island 1861 Enthusiastic young men clamored to join the Union army in 1861 They came with family support for reasons of patriotism and excitement Washington decided to keep the small regular army intact it had only 16 000 men and was needed to guard the frontier Its officers could however join the temporary new volunteer army that was formed with expectations that their experience would lead to rapid promotions The problem with volunteering however was its serious lack of planning leadership and organization at the highest levels Washington called on the states for troops and every northern governor set about raising and equipping regiments and sent the bills to the War Department The men could elect the junior officers while the governor appointed the senior officers and Lincoln appointed the generals Typically politicians used their local organizations to raise troops and were in line if healthy enough to become colonel The problem was that the War Department under the disorganized leadership of Simon Cameron also authorized local and private groups to raise regiments The result was widespread confusion and delay Pennsylvania for example had acute problems When Washington called for 10 more regiments enough men volunteered to form 30 However they were scattered among 70 different new units none of them a complete regiment Not until Washington approved gubernatorial control of all new units was the problem resolved Allan Nevins is particularly scathing of this in his analysis A President more exact systematic and vigilant than Lincoln a Secretary more alert and clearheaded than Cameron would have prevented these difficulties 31 Union soldiers before Marye s Heights Fredericksburg May 1863 By the end of 1861 700 000 soldiers were drilling in Union camps The first wave in spring was called up for only 90 days then the soldiers went home or reenlisted Later waves enlisted for three years The new recruits spent their time drilling in company and regiment formations The combat in the first year though strategically important involved relatively small forces and few casualties Sickness was a much more serious cause of hospitalization or death In the first few months men wore low quality uniforms made of shoddy material but by fall sturdy wool uniforms in blue were standard The nation s factories were converted to produce the rifles cannons wagons tents telegraph sets and the myriad of other special items the army needed While business had been slow or depressed in spring 1861 because of war fears and Southern boycotts by fall business was hiring again offering young men jobs that were an alternative way to help win the war Nonpartisanship was the rule in the first year but by summer 1862 many Democrats had stopped supporting the war effort and volunteering fell off sharply in their strongholds The calls for more and more soldiers continued so states and localities responded by offering cash bonuses By 1863 a draft law was in effect but few men actually were drafted and served since the law was designed to get them to volunteer or hire a substitute Others hid away or left the country With the Emancipation Proclamation taking effect in January 1863 localities could meet their draft quota by sponsoring regiments of ex slaves organized in the South 32 Soldiers of the Fourth United States Colored Infantry at Fort Lincoln 1865 Michigan was especially eager to send thousands of volunteers 33 A study of the cities of Grand Rapids and Niles shows an overwhelming surge of nationalism in 1861 whipping up enthusiasm for the war in all segments of society and all political religious ethnic and occupational groups However by 1862 the casualties were mounting and the war was increasingly focused on freeing the slaves in addition to preserving the Union Copperhead Democrats called the war a failure and it became an increasingly partisan Republican effort 34 Michigan voters remained evenly split between the parties in the presidential election of 1864 35 Motivations of soldiers Edit Perman 2010 says historians are of two minds on why millions of men seemed so eager to fight suffer and die over four years Some historians emphasize that Civil War soldiers were driven by political ideology holding firm beliefs about the importance of liberty Union or state rights or about the need to protect or to destroy slavery Others point to less overtly political reasons to fight such as the defense of one s home and family or the honor and brotherhood to be preserved when fighting alongside other men Most historians agree that no matter what he thought about when he went into the war the experience of combat affected him profoundly and sometimes affected his reasons for continuing to fight 36 The paperwork war Edit On the whole the national state and local governments handled the avalanche of paperwork effectively Skills developed in insurance and financial companies formed the basis of systematic forms copies summaries and filing systems used to make sense of masses of human data The leader in this effort John Shaw Billings later developed a system of mechanically storing sorting and counting numerical information using punch cards Nevertheless old fashioned methodology had to be recognized and overcome An illustrative case study came in New Hampshire where the critical post of state adjutant general was held in 1861 64 by elderly politician Anthony C Colby 1792 1873 and his son Daniel E Colby 1816 1891 They were patriotic but were overwhelmed with the complexity of their duties The state lost track of men who enlisted after 1861 it had no personnel records or information on volunteers substitutes or draftees and there was no inventory of weaponry and supplies Nathaniel Head 1828 1883 took over in 1864 obtained an adequate budget and office staff and reconstructed the missing paperwork As result widows orphans and disabled veterans received the postwar payments they had earned 37 Medical conditions Edit Main article Medicine in the American Civil War Field hospital after the Battle of Savage s Station 1862 More soldiers died of disease than from battle injuries and even larger numbers were temporarily incapacitated by wounds disease and accidents The Union responded by building army hospitals in every state The hygiene of the camps was poor especially at the beginning of the war when men who had seldom been far from home were brought together for training with thousands of strangers First came epidemics of the childhood diseases of chicken pox mumps whooping cough and especially measles Operations in the South meant a dangerous and new disease environment bringing diarrhea dysentery typhoid fever and malaria There were no antibiotics so the surgeons prescribed coffee whiskey and quinine Harsh weather bad water inadequate shelter in winter quarters poor policing of camps and dirty camp hospitals took their toll 38 This was a common scenario in wars from time immemorial and conditions faced by the Confederate army were even worse What was different in the Union was the emergence of skilled well funded medical organizers who took proactive action especially in the much enlarged United States Army Medical Department 39 and the United States Sanitary Commission a new private agency 40 Numerous other new agencies also targeted the medical and morale needs of soldiers including the United States Christian Commission as well as smaller private agencies such as the Women s Central Association of Relief for Sick and Wounded in the Army WCAR founded in 1861 by Henry Whitney Bellows a Unitarian minister and the social reformer Dorothea Dix Systematic funding appeals raised public consciousness as well as millions of dollars Many thousands of volunteers worked in the hospitals and rest homes most famously poet Walt Whitman Frederick Law Olmsted a famous landscape architect was the highly efficient executive director of the Sanitary Commission 41 States could use their own tax money to support their troops as Ohio did Under the energetic leadership of Governor David Tod a War Democrat who won office on a coalition Union Party ticket with Republicans Ohio acted vigorously Following the unexpected carnage at the battle of Shiloh in April 1862 Ohio sent three steamboats to the scene as floating hospitals equipped with doctors nurses and medical supplies The state fleet expanded to 11 hospital ships and the state set up 12 local offices in main transportation nodes to help Ohio soldiers moving back and forth 42 The Christian Commission comprised 6 000 volunteers who aided chaplains in many ways 43 For example its agents distributed Bibles delivered sermons helped with sending letters home taught men to read and write and set up camp libraries 44 The Army learned many lessons and modernized its procedures 45 and medical science especially surgery made many advances 46 In the long run the wartime experiences of the numerous Union commissions modernized public welfare and set the stage for large scale community philanthropy in America based on fund raising campaigns and private donations 47 Additionally women gained new public roles For example Mary Livermore 1820 1905 the manager of the Chicago branch of the US Sanitary Commission used her newfound organizational skills to mobilize support for women s suffrage after the war She argued that women needed more education and job opportunities to help them fulfill their role of serving others 48 The Sanitary Commission collected enormous amounts of statistical data and opened up the problems of storing information for fast access and mechanically searching for data patterns 49 The pioneer was John Shaw Billings 1838 1913 A senior surgeon in the war Billings built two of the world s most important libraries Library of the Surgeon General s Office now the National Library of Medicine and the New York Public Library he also figured out how to mechanically analyze data by turning it into numbers and punching onto the computer punch card later developed by his student Herman Hollerith Hollerith s company became International Business Machines IBM in 1911 50 Prisoners of war Edit Main article American Civil War prison camps Both sides operated prison camps they handled about 400 000 captives but many other prisoners were quickly released and never sent to camps The Record and Pension Office in 1901 counted 211 000 Northerners who were captured In 1861 63 most were immediately paroled after the parole exchange system broke down in 1863 about 195 000 went to Confederate prison camps Some tried to escape but few succeeded By contrast 464 000 Confederates were captured many in the final days and 215 000 imprisoned Over 30 000 Union and nearly 26 000 Confederate prisoners died in captivity Just over 12 of the captives in Northern prisons died compared to 15 5 for Southern prisons 51 52 Draft riots Edit New York City draft riots Discontent with the 1863 draft law led to riots in several cities and in rural areas as well By far the most important were the New York City draft riots of July 13 to July 16 1863 53 Irish Catholic and other workers fought police militia and regular army units until the Army used artillery to sweep the streets Initially focused on the draft the protests quickly expanded into violent attacks on blacks in New York City with many killed on the streets 54 Small scale riots broke out in ethnic German and Irish districts and in areas along the Ohio River with many Copperheads Holmes County Ohio was an isolated parochial area dominated by Pennsylvania Dutch and some recent German immigrants It was a Democratic stronghold and few men dared speak out in favor of conscription Local politicians denounced Lincoln and Congress as despotic seeing the draft law as a violation of their local autonomy In June 1863 small scale disturbances broke out they ended when the Army sent in armed units 55 56 57 Economy EditFurther information Economic history of the United States Civil War The Union economy grew and prospered during the war while fielding a very large army and navy 58 The Republicans in Washington had a Whiggish vision of an industrial nation with great cities efficient factories productive farms all national banks all knit together by a modern railroad system to be mobilized by the United States Military Railroad The South had resisted policies such as tariffs to promote industry and homestead laws to promote farming because slavery would not benefit With the South gone and Northern Democrats weak the Republicans enacted their legislation At the same time they passed new taxes to pay for part of the war and issued large amounts of bonds to pay for most of the rest Economic historians attribute the remainder of the cost of the war to inflation Congress wrote an elaborate program of economic modernization that had the dual purpose of winning the war and permanently transforming the economy 59 For a list of the major industrialists see Financing the war Edit In 1860 the Treasury was a small operation that funded the small scale operations of the government through land sales and customs based on a low tariff 60 Peacetime revenues were trivial in comparison with the cost of a full scale war but the Treasury Department under Secretary Salmon P Chase showed unusual ingenuity in financing the war without crippling the economy 61 Many new taxes were imposed and always with a patriotic theme comparing the financial sacrifice to the sacrifices of life and limb The government paid for supplies in real money which encouraged people to sell to the government regardless of their politics By contrast the Confederacy gave paper promissory notes when it seized property so that even loyal Confederates would hide their horses and mules rather than sell them for dubious paper Overall the Northern financial system was highly successful in raising money and turning patriotism into profit while the Confederate system impoverished its patriots 62 The United States needed 3 1 billion to pay for the immense armies and fleets raised to fight the Civil War over 400 million just in 1862 alone 63 Apart from tariffs the largest revenue by far came from new excise taxes a sort of value added tax that was imposed on every sort of manufactured item Second came much higher tariffs through several Morrill tariff laws Third came the nation s first income tax only the wealthy paid and it was repealed at war s end 1862 Greenbacks Apart from taxes the second major source of income was government bonds For the first time bonds in small denominations were sold directly to the people with publicity and patriotism as key factors as designed by banker Jay Cooke State banks lost their power to issue banknotes Only national banks could do that and Chase made it easy to become a national bank it involved buying and holding federal bonds and financiers rushed to open these banks Chase numbered them so that the first one in each city was the First National Bank 64 Third the government printed paper money called greenbacks They led to endless controversy because they caused inflation 65 The North s most important war measure was perhaps the creation of a system of national banks that provided a sound currency for the industrial expansion Even more important the hundreds of new banks that were allowed to open were required to purchase government bonds Thereby the nation monetized the potential wealth represented by farms urban buildings factories and businesses and immediately turned that money over to the Treasury for war needs 66 Tariffs Edit Secretary Chase though a long time free trader worked with Morrill to pass a second tariff bill in summer 1861 raising rates another 10 points in order to generate more revenues 67 These subsequent bills were primarily revenue driven to meet the war s needs though they enjoyed the support of protectionists such as Carey who again assisted Morrill in the bill s drafting The Morrill Tariff of 1861 was designed to raise revenue The tariff act of 1862 served not only to raise revenue but also to encourage the establishment of factories free from British competition by taxing British imports Furthermore it protected American factory workers from low paid European workers and as a major bonus attracted tens of thousands of those Europeans to immigrate to America for high wage factory and craftsman jobs 68 Customs revenue from tariffs totaled 345 million from 1861 through 1865 or 43 of all federal tax revenue Land grants Edit The U S government owned vast amounts of good land mostly from the Louisiana Purchase of 1803 and the Oregon Treaty with Britain in 1846 The challenge was to make the land useful to people and to provide the economic basis for the wealth that would pay off the war debt Land grants went to railroad construction companies to open up the western plains and link up to California Together with the free lands provided farmers by the Homestead Law the low cost farm lands provided by the land grants sped up the expansion of commercial agriculture in the West The 1862 Homestead Act opened up the public domain lands for free Land grants to the railroads meant they could sell tracts for family farms 80 to 200 acres at low prices with extended credit In addition the government sponsored fresh information scientific methods and the latest techniques through the newly established Department of Agriculture and the Morrill Land Grant College Act 69 70 Agriculture Edit Agriculture was the largest single industry and it prospered during the war 71 72 Prices were high pulled up by a strong demand from the army and from Britain which depended on American wheat for a fourth of its food imports The war acted as a catalyst that encouraged the rapid adoption of horse drawn machinery and other implements The rapid spread of recent inventions such as the reaper and mower made the work force efficient even as hundreds of thousands of farmers were in the army Many wives took their place and often consulted by mail on what to do increasingly they relied on community and extended kin for advice and help 73 The Union used hundreds of thousands of animals The Army had plenty of cash to purchase them from farmers and breeders but especially in the early months the quality was mixed 74 Horses were needed for cavalry and artillery 75 Mules pulled the wagons The supply held up despite an unprecedented epidemic of glanders a fatal disease that baffled veterinarians 76 In the South the Union army shot all the horses it did not need to keep them out of Confederate hands Cotton trade Edit The Treasury started buying cotton during the war for shipment to Europe and northern mills The sellers were Southern planters who needed the cash regardless of their patriotism The Northern buyers could make heavy profits which annoyed soldiers like Ulysses Grant He blamed Jewish traders and expelled them from his lines in 1862 but Lincoln quickly overruled this show of anti semitism Critics said the cotton trade helped the South prolonged the war and fostered corruption Lincoln decided to continue the trade for fear that Britain might intervene if its textile manufacturers were denied raw material Another goal was to foster latent Unionism in Southern border states Northern textile manufacturers needed cotton to remain in business and to make uniforms while cotton exports to Europe provided an important source of gold to finance the war 77 Industrial and business leaders and military inventors Edit Matthias W Baldwin Benjamin Bates IV John Jacob Bausch Andrew Carnegie Gardner Colby Samuel Colt Jay Cooke George Henry Corliss William Wesley Cornell Erastus Corning John Crerar industrialist Charles I du Pont James Buchanan Eads John Ericsson William P Halliday Benjamin Tyler Henry Gouverneur Kemble Benjamin Knight Robert Knight industrialist Benedict Lapham David Leavitt banker John Lenthall shipbuilder Henry Lomb William Mason locomotive builder William Metcalf manufacturer Samuel Morse Asa Packer Robert Parker Parrott Daniel Pratt industrialist George Pullman Christian Sharps David Sinton Horace Smith inventor Christopher Miner Spencer George Luther Stearns Henry J Steere Ezekiel A Straw John Edgar Thomson Cornelius Vanderbilt Ezra Warner inventor Daniel B Wesson Rollin White Amos Whitney Oliver Winchester John F Winslow George Worthington businessman Society EditReligion Edit The Protestant religion was quite strong in the North in the 1860s The United States Christian Commission sent agents into the Army camps to provide psychological support as well as books newspapers food and clothing Through prayer sermons and welfare operations the agents ministered to soldiers spiritual as well as temporal needs as they sought to bring the men to a Christian way of life 43 Most churches made an effort to support their soldiers in the field and especially their families back home Much of the political rhetoric of the era had a distinct religious tone 78 The Protestant clergy in America took a variety of positions In general the pietistic denominations such as the Methodists Northern Baptists and Congregationalists strongly supported the war effort Catholics Episcopalians Lutherans and conservative Presbyterians generally avoided any discussion of the war so it would not bitterly divide their membership The Quakers while giving strong support to the abolitionist movement on a personal level refused to take a denominational position Some clergymen who supported the Confederacy were denounced as Copperheads especially in the border regions 79 80 Methodists Edit Many Northerners had only recently become religious following the Second Great Awakening and religion was a powerful force in their lives No denomination was more active in supporting the Union than the Methodist Episcopal Church Carwardine 81 argues that for many Methodists the victory of Lincoln in 1860 heralded the arrival of the kingdom of God in America They were moved into action by a vision of freedom for slaves freedom from the persecutions of godly abolitionists release from the Slave Power s evil grip on the American government and the promise of a new direction for the Union 81 Methodists formed a major element of the popular support for the Radical Republicans with their hard line toward the white South Dissident Methodists left the church 82 During Reconstruction the Methodists took the lead in helping form Methodist churches for Freedmen and moving into Southern cities even to the point of taking control with Army help of buildings that had belonged to the southern branch of the church 83 84 The Methodist family magazine Ladies Repository promoted Christian family activism Its articles provided moral uplift to women and children It portrayed the War as a great moral crusade against a decadent Southern civilization corrupted by slavery It recommended activities that family members could perform in order to aid the Union cause 85 Family Edit Historian Stephen M Frank reports that what it meant to be a father varied with status and age He says most men demonstrated dual commitments as providers and nurturers and believed that husband and wife had mutual obligations toward their children The war privileged masculinity dramatizing and exaggerating father son bonds Especially at five critical stages in the soldier s career enlistment blooding mustering out wounding and death letters from absent fathers articulated a distinctive set of 19th century ideals of manliness 86 Children Edit There were numerous children s magazines such as Merry s Museum The Student and Schoolmate Our Young Folks The Little Pilgrim Forrester s Playmate and The Little Corporal They showed a Protestant religious tone and promoted the principles of hard work obedience generosity humility and piety trumpeted the benefits of family cohesion and furnished mild adventure stories innocent entertainment and instruction 87 Their pages featured factual information and anecdotes about the war along with related quizzes games poems songs short oratorical pieces for declamation short stories and very short plays that children could stage They promoted patriotism and the Union war aims fostered kindly attitudes toward freed slaves blackened the Confederates cause encouraged readers to raise money for war related humanitarian funds and dealt with the death of family members 88 By 1866 the Milton Bradley Company was selling The Myriopticon A Historical Panorama of the Rebellion that allowed children to stage a neighborhood show that would explain the war It comprised colorful drawings that were turned on wheels and included pre printed tickets poster advertisements and narration that could be read aloud at the show 89 Caring for war orphans was an important function for local organizations as well as state and local government 90 A typical state was Iowa where the private Iowa Soldiers Orphans Home Association operated with funding from the legislature and public donations It set up orphanages in Davenport Glenwood and Cedar Falls The state government funded pensions for the widows and children of soldiers 91 Orphan schools like the Pennsylvania Soldiers Orphan School also spoke of the broader public welfare experiment that began as part of the aftermath of the Civil War These orphan schools were created to provide housing care and education for orphans of Civil War soldiers They became a matter of state pride with orphans were paraded around at rallies to display the power of a patriotic schooling 92 All the northern states had free public school systems before the war but not the border states West Virginia set up its system in 1863 Over bitter opposition it established an almost equal education for black children most of whom were ex slaves 93 Thousands of black refugees poured into St Louis where the Freedmen s Relief Society the Ladies Union Aid Society the Western Sanitary Commission and the American Missionary Association AMA set up schools for their children 94 Unionists in Southern and Border states EditMain article Southern Unionist See also Unionist Party United States Confederate soldiers hanging pro Union bridge burning conspirators People loyal to the U S federal government and opposed to secession living in the border states where slavery was legal and states under Confederate control were termed Unionists Confederates sometimes styled them Homemade Yankees However Southern Unionists were not necessarily northern sympathizers and many of them although opposing secession supported the Confederacy once it was formed East Tennessee never supported the Confederacy fully and Unionists there became powerful state leaders including governors Andrew Johnson and William G Brownlow Likewise large pockets of eastern Kentucky were Unionist and helped keep the state from seceding 95 Western Virginia with few slaves and slave owners along with a growing industrial base at the time was so strongly Unionist that it broke away and formed the new state of West Virginia in 1863 96 Nearly 100 000 Unionists from the South served in the Union Army during the Civil War and Unionist regiments were raised from every Confederate state except for South Carolina Among such units was the 1st Alabama Cavalry Regiment which served as William Sherman s personal escort on his march to the sea Southern Unionists were extensively used as anti guerrilla paramilitary forces 97 During the Reconstruction era 1865 1877 many Southern Unionists became Scalawags a derogatory term for white Southern supporters of the Republican Party 98 Guerrilla warfare Edit Besides organized military conflict the border states were beset by guerrilla warfare In states bitterly divided neighbors frequently used the excuse of war to settle personal grudges and took up arms against neighbors Missouri Edit Main article Missouri in the Civil War Quantrill s 1863 raid burned the town of Lawrence and killed 164 defenders Missouri was the scene of over 1 000 engagements between Union and Confederate forces and uncounted numbers of guerrilla attacks and raids by informal pro Confederate bands 99 Western Missouri was the scene of brutal guerrilla warfare during the Civil War Roving insurgent bands such as Quantrill s Raiders and the men of Bloody Bill Anderson terrorized the countryside striking both military installations and civilian settlements Because of the widespread attacks and the protection offered by Confederate sympathizers Federal leaders issued General Order No 11 in 1863 and evacuated areas of Jackson Cass and Bates counties They forced the residents out to reduce support for the guerrillas Union cavalry could sweep through and track down Confederate guerrillas who no longer had places to hide and people and infrastructure to support them On short notice the army forced almost 20 000 people mostly women children and the elderly to leave their homes Many never returned and the affected counties were economically devastated for years after the end of the war 100 Families passed along stories of their bitter experiences down through several generations future U S President Harry Truman s grandparents were caught up in the raids and he would tell of how they were kept in concentration camps 101 Some marauding units became organized criminal gangs after the war In 1882 the bank robber and ex Confederate guerrilla Jesse James was killed in Saint Joseph Missouri Vigilante groups appeared in remote areas where law enforcement was weak to deal with the lawlessness left over from the guerrilla warfare phase For example the Bald Knobbers were the term for several law and order vigilante groups in the Ozarks In some cases they too turned to illegal gang activity 102 Kentucky Edit Main article Kentucky in the Civil War In response to the growing problem of locally organized guerrilla campaigns throughout 1863 and 1864 in June 1864 Maj Gen Stephen G Burbridge was given command over the state of Kentucky This began an extended period of military control that would last through early 1865 beginning with martial law authorized by President Abraham Lincoln To pacify Kentucky Burbridge rigorously suppressed disloyalty and used economic pressure as coercion His guerrilla policy which included public execution of four guerrillas for the death of each unarmed Union citizen caused the most controversy After a falling out with Governor Thomas E Bramlette Burbridge was dismissed in February 1865 Confederates remembered him as the Butcher of Kentucky 103 Union states EditWashington D CList of Wikipedia articles on Union states and major cities California Connecticut Delaware Illinois Indiana Indianapolis Iowa Kansas Kentucky Lexington Louisville Maine Maryland Baltimore Massachusetts Michigan Minnesota Missouri St Louis Nevada New Hampshire New Jersey New York New York City Ohio Cincinnati Cleveland Oregon Pennsylvania Harrisburg Philadelphia Pittsburgh Rhode Island Vermont Virginia West Virginia Wisconsin Border states with slavery in 1861 Had two state governments one Unionist one Confederate both claiming to be the legitimate government of their state Kentucky s and Missouri s Confederate governments never had significant control West Virginia separated from Virginia and became part of the Union during the war on June 20 1863 Nevada also joined the Union during the war becoming a state on October 31 1864 Union territories Edit The Union controlled territories in April 1861 were 104 Colorado Territory Dakota Territory Indian Territory disputed with the Confederacy Nebraska Territory Nevada Territory became a state in 1864 New Mexico Territory Arizona Territory split off in 1863 Utah Territory Washington Territory Idaho Territory split off in 1863 Montana Territory split off in 1864 The Indian Territory saw its own civil war as the major tribes held slaves and endorsed the Confederacy 105 See also EditAmerican Civil War prison camps Perpetual Union Central ConfederacyNotes Edit a b Books and Manuscript Submission Guide Army University Press Retrieved April 28 2021 Lincoln Abraham The Papers And Writings Of Abraham Lincoln Volume 2 1860 1865 Jazzybee Verlag p 94 ISBN 9783849679682 Smith Michael T Engle Stephen D 2018 Review of GATHERING TO SAVE A NATION Lincoln and the Union s War Governors EngleStephen D Louisiana History The Journal of the Louisiana Historical Association 59 3 361 363 ISSN 0024 6816 JSTOR 26564816 Thomas Benjamin P September 26 2008 Abraham Lincoln A Biography SIU Press p 377 ISBN 9780809328871 Thomas Benjamin P September 26 2008 Abraham Lincoln A Biography SIU Press p 428 ISBN 9780809328871 Stampp Kenneth M 1980 The Concept of a Perpetual Union The Imperiled Union Essays on the Background of the Civil War p 30 The war of the rebellion a compilation of the official records of the Union and Confederate armies 1 Vol 14 pp 185 1 015 Retrieved March 19 2016 Landis Michael September 9 2015 A Proposal to Change the Words We Use When Talking About the Civil War Smithsonian Magazine Retrieved January 30 2022 Donald David Herbert amp Randall J G 1961 The Civil War and Reconstruction 2nd ed pp 3 13 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint uses authors parameter link Gary W Gallagher 2001 The American Civil War The War in the East 1861 May 1863 Osprey Publishing p 22 ISBN 9781841762395 Nevins Allan 1959 The War for the Union The Improvised War 1861 1862 pp 74 75 McClintock Russell 2008 Lincoln and the Decision for War The Northern Response to Secession p 255 Pages 254 74 provide details of support across the North Smith Michael Thomas 2011 The Enemy Within Fears of Corruption in the Civil War North Goodwin Doris Kearns 2005 Team of Rivals The Political Genius of Abraham Lincoln ISBN 9780684824901 Paludsn Phillip Shaw 1994 The Presidency of Abraham Lincoln pp 21 48 Leonard P Curry Blueprint for Modern America Nonmilitary Legislation of the First Civil War Congress 1968 Robert Cook Stiffening Abe William Pitt Fessenden and the Role of the Broker Politician in the Civil War Congress American Nineteenth Century History June 2007 Vol 8 Issue 2 pp 145 167 Bruce Tap Inevitability masculinity and the American military tradition the committee on the conduct of the war investigates the American Civil War American Nineteenth Century History 2004 5 2 pp 19 46 Kenneth M Stampp Indiana Politics during the Civil War 1949 online edition Steven E Woodworth 2011 This Great Struggle America s Civil War Rowman amp Littlefield p 311 ISBN 9781442210875 Jonathan W White 2014 Emancipation the Union Army and the Reelection of Abraham Lincoln LSU Press p 116 ISBN 9780807154588 Arnold Shankman Draft Resistance in Civil War Pennsylvania Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography 1977 pp 190 204 online Robert M Sandow Deserter Country Civil War Opposition in the Pennsylvania Appalachians 2009 Adrian Cook 1974 The Armies of the Streets The New York City Draft Riots of 1863 University Press of Kentucky ISBN 9780813112985 Dupree A Hunter Fishel Leslie H 1960 An Eyewitness Account of the New York Draft Riots July 1863 The Mississippi Valley Historical Review 47 3 472 479 doi 10 2307 1888878 JSTOR 1888878 Joel Silbey A respectable minority the Democratic Party in the Civil War era 1860 1868 1977 online edition a b Cowden Joanna D 1983 The Politics of Dissent Civil War Democrats in Connecticut The New England Quarterly 56 4 538 554 doi 10 2307 365104 JSTOR 365104 Lewis J Wertheim The Indianapolis Treason Trials the Elections of 1864 and the Power of the Partisan Press Indiana Magazine of History 1989 85 3 236 250 Jennifer L Weber Copperheads The Rise and Fall of Lincoln s Opponents in the North 2006 Frank L Klement Lincoln s Critics The Copperheads of the North 1999 Nevins Allan 1959 War for the Union Vol 5 The Improvised War 1861 1862 p 235 Gallman J Matthew 1994 The North Fights the Civil War pp 56 73 Robert E Mitchell Civil War Recruiting and Recruits from Ever Changing Labor Pools Midland County Michigan as a Case Study Michigan Historical Review 35 Spring 2009 29 60 Martin J Hershock Copperheads and Radicals Michigan Partisan Politics during the Civil War Era 1860 1865 Michigan Historical Review 1992 18 1 pp 28 69 Peter Bratt A Great Revolution in Feeling The American Civil War in Niles and Grand Rapids Michigan Michigan Historical Review 2005 31 2 pp 43 66 Michael Perman and Amy Murrell Taylor ed 2010 Major Problems in the Civil War and Reconstruction Cengage p 178 ISBN 978 0618875207 Richard F Miller ed States at war a reference guide for Connecticut Maine Massachusetts New Hampshire Rhode Island and Vermont in the Civil War 2013 1 366 67 Kenneth Link Potomac Fever The Hazards of Camp Life Vermont History April 1983 Vol 51 Issue 2 pp 69 88 Mary C Gillett The Army Medical Department 1818 1865 1987 William Quentin Maxwell Lincoln s Fifth Wheel The Political History of the U S Sanitary Commission 1956 Justin Martin Genius of Place The Life of Frederick Law Olmsted 2011 pp 178 230 Eugene E Roseboom The Civil War Era 1850 1873 1944 p 396 a b Cannon M Hamlin 1951 The United States Christian Commission The Mississippi Valley Historical Review 38 1 61 80 doi 10 2307 1898252 JSTOR 1898252 Hovde David M 1989 The U S Christian Commission s Library and Literacy Programs for the Union Military Forces in the Civil War Libraries amp Culture 24 3 295 316 JSTOR 25542169 Frank R Freemon Lincoln finds a surgeon general William A Hammond and the transformation of the Union Army Medical Bureau Civil War History 1987 33 1 pp 5 21 Shauna Devine Learning from the Wounded The Civil War and the Rise of American Medical Science 2014 Robert H Bremner The Impact of the Civil War on Philanthropy and Social Welfare Civil War History December 1966 Vol 12 Issue 4 pp 293 303 Wendy Hamand Venet The Emergence of a Suffragist Mary Livermore Civil War activism and the Moral Power of Women Civil War History June 2002 Vol 48 Issue 2 pp 143 64 in Project MUSE James H Cassedy Numbering the North s Medical Events Humanitarianism and Science in Civil War Statistics Bulletin of the History of Medicine Summer 1992 Vol 66 Issue 2 pp 210 233 Carleton B Chapman Order out of chaos John Shaw Billings and America s coming of age 1994 James Ford Rhodes 1904 History of the United States from the Compromise of 1850 1864 1866 Harper amp Brothers pp 507 8 Michael B Chesson Prison Camps and Prisoners of War in Steven E Woodworth ed The American Civil War 1996 pp 466 78 online Barnet Schecter The Devil s Own Work The Civil War Draft Riots and the Fight to Reconstruct America 2005 The New York City Draft Riots In the Shadow of Slavery African Americans in New York City 1626 1863 by Leslie M Harris Kenneth H Wheeler Local Autonomy and Civil War Draft Resistance Holmes County Ohio Civil War History 1999 45 2 pp 147 58 Shannon Smith Bennett Draft Resistance and Rioting in by Maggi M Morehouse and Zoe Trodd eds Civil War America A Social and Cultural History with Primary Sources 2013 ch 1 Shannon M Smith Teaching Civil War Union Politics Draft Riots in the Midwest OAH Magazine of History 2013 27 2 pp 33 36 online Emerson David Fite Social and industrial conditions in the North during the Civil War 1910 online edition Heather Cox Richardson The Greatest Nation of the Earth Republican Economic Policies during the Civil War 1997 Jane Flaherty The Exhausted Condition of the Treasury on the Eve of the Civil War Civil War History 2009 55 2 pp 244 277 in Project MUSE John Niven Salmon P Chase a biography 1995 p 331 Jane Flaherty The revenue imperative 2009 Jerry W Markham A financial history of the United States 2001 vol 3 p 220 Bray Hammond Sovereignty and the Empty Purse Banks and Politics in the Civil War 1970 Wesley C Mitchell A history of the greenbacks with special reference to the economic consequences of their issue 1862 65 1903 online edition Hammond Sovereignty and the Empty Purse Banks and Politics in the Civil War 1970 Richardson 100 113 Huston James L 1983 A Political Response to Industrialism The Republican Embrace of Protectionist Labor Doctrines The Journal of American History 70 1 35 57 doi 10 2307 1890520 JSTOR 1890520 Harold M Hyman American Singularity The 1787 Northwest Ordinance the 1862 Homestead and Morrill Acts and the 1944 GI Bill U of Georgia Press 2008 Sarah T Phillips et al Reflections on One Hundred and Fifty Years of the United States Department of Agriculture Agricultural History 2013 87 3 pp 314 367 Fite Social and industrial conditions in the North during the Civil War 1910 pp 1 23 Paludan A People s Contest pp 159 69 Paul W Gates Agriculture and the Civil War 1965 covers 1850 1870 J L Anderson The Vacant Chair on the Farm Soldier Husbands Farm Wives and the Iowa Home Front 1861 1865 Annals of Iowa Summer Fall 2007 Vol 66 Issue 3 4 pp 241 265 Gervase Phillips Warhorses of the U S Civil War History Today December 2005 55 12 online Spencer Jones The Influence of Horse Supply Upon Field Artillery in the American Civil War Journal of Military History April 2010 74 2 pp 357 377 Sharrer G Terry 1995 The Great Glanders Epizootic 1861 1866 A Civil War Legacy Agricultural History 69 1 79 97 JSTOR 3744026 PMID 11639801 David S Surdam Traders or traitors Northern cotton trading during the Civil War Business amp Economic History Winter 1999 Vol 28 Issue 2 pp 299 310 online Randall M Miller Harry S Stout and Charles Reagan Wilson eds Religion and the American Civil War Oxford University Press 1998 p 4 Timothy L Wesley The Politics of Faith during the Civil War Louisiana State University Press 2013 George C Rable God s Almost Chosen Peoples A Religious History of the American Civil War University of North Carolina Press 2010 a b Carwardine Richard 2000 Methodists Politics and the Coming of the American Civil War Church History 69 3 578 609 doi 10 2307 3169398 JSTOR 3169398 S2CID 154489893 Morrow Ralph E 1956 Methodists and Butternuts in the Old Northwest Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society 49 1 34 47 JSTOR 40189481 Sweet William W 1915 Methodist Church Influence in Southern Politics The Mississippi Valley Historical Review 1 4 546 560 doi 10 2307 1886955 JSTOR 1886955 Morrow Ralph E 1954 Northern Methodism in the South during Reconstruction The Mississippi Valley Historical Review 41 2 197 218 doi 10 2307 1895802 JSTOR 1895802 Kathleen L Endres A Voice for the Christian Family The Methodist Episcopal Ladies Repository in the Civil War Methodist History January 1995 Vol 33 Issue 2 pp 84 97 Frank Stephen M 1992 Rendering Aid and Comfort Images of Fatherhood in the Letters of Civil War Soldiers from Massachusetts and Michigan Journal of Social History 26 1 5 31 doi 10 1353 jsh 26 1 5 JSTOR 3788810 James Marten Children for the Union The War Spirit of the Northern Home Front 2004 p 17 James Marten For the good the true and the beautiful Northern children s magazines and the Civil War Civil War History March 1995 Vol 41 Issue 1 pp 57 75 James Marten History in a Box Milton Bradley s Myriopticon Journal of the History of Childhood amp Youth Winter 2009 Vol 2 Issue 1 pp 5 7 Marten Children for the Union pp 107 166 George Gallarno How Iowa Cared for Orphans of Her Soldiers of the Civil War Annals of Iowa January 1926 Vol 15 Issue 3 pp 163 193 James Marten Children and Youth during the Civil War Era New York University Press Winter 2012 pp 188 195 F Talbott Some Legislative and Legal Aspects of the Negro Question in West Virginia during the Civil War and Reconstruction West Virginia History January 1963 Vol 24 Issue 2 pp 110 133 Lawrence O Christensen Black Education in Civil War St Louis Missouri Historical Review April 2001 Vol 95 Issue 3 pp 302 316 Kent Dollar et al eds Sister States Enemy States The Civil War in Kentucky and Tennessee 2009 William A Link This Bastard New Virginia Slavery West Virginia Exceptionalism and the Secession Crisis West Virginia History Spring 2009 Vol 3 Issue 1 pp 37 56 Richard N Current Lincoln s Loyalists Union Soldiers from the Confederacy 1994 James Alex Baggett The Scalawags Southern Dissenters in the Civil War and Reconstruction 2003 Michael Fellman Inside War The Guerrilla Conflict in Missouri during the Civil War 1989 Sarah Bohl A War on Civilians Order Number 11 and the Evacuation of Western Missouri Prologue April 2004 Vol 36 Issue 1 pp 44 51 Michael R Gardner et al Harry Truman and Civil Rights Moral Courage and Political Risks 2003 p 4 Elmo Ingenthron and Hartman Bald Knobbers Vigilantes on the Ozarks Frontier 1988 Louis De Falaise General Stephen Gano Burbridge s Command in Kentucky Register of the Kentucky Historical Society April 1971 Vol 69 Issue 2 pp 101 127 Ray C Colton The Civil War in the Western Territories Arizona Colorado New Mexico and Utah 1984 John Spencer and Adam Hook The American Civil War in Indian Territory 2006 Bibliography EditMain article Bibliography of American Civil War homefront Surveys Edit Cashin Joan E ed The War Was You and Me Civilians in the American Civil War 2001 Fellman Michael et al This Terrible War The Civil War and its Aftermath 2nd ed 2007 544 page university textbook Flaherty Jane June 2009 The Exhausted Condition of the Treasury on the Eve of the Civil War Civil War History 55 2 244 277 doi 10 1353 cwh 0 0058 ISSN 1533 6271 via Project MUSE Ford Lacy K ed A Companion to the Civil War and Reconstruction 2005 518 pp 23 essays by scholars excerpt and text search Gallman J Matthew The North Fights the Civil War The Home Front 1994 survey Gallman J Matthew Northerners at War Reflections on the Civil War Home Front 2010 essays on specialized issues Heidler David and Jeanne Heidler eds Encyclopedia of the American Civil War A Political Social and Military History 2002 2740pp McPherson James M Battle Cry of Freedom The Civil War Era 1988 900 page survey Pulitzer prize Nevins Allan War for the Union an 8 volume set 1947 1971 the most detailed political economic and military narrative by Pulitzer Prize winner vol 1 4 cover 1848 61 vol 5 The Improvised War 1861 1862 6 War Becomes Revolution 1862 1863 7 The Organized War 1863 1864 8 The Organized War to Victory 1864 1865 Resch John P et al Americans at War Society Culture and the Homefront vol 2 1816 1900 2005 Politics Edit Bogue Allan G The Congressman s Civil War 1989 Carman Harry J and Reinhard H Luthin Lincoln and the Patronage 1943 details on each state Donald David Herbert Lincoln 1999 the best biography excerpt and text search Engle Stephen D Gathering to Save a Nation Lincoln and the Union s War Governors u of North Carolina Press 2016 725 pp Fish Carl Russell 1902 Lincoln and the Patronage The American Historical Review 8 1 53 69 doi 10 2307 1832574 ISSN 0002 8762 JSTOR 1832574 via JStor Gallagher Gary W The Union War 2011 emphasizes that the North fought primarily for nationalism and preservation of the Union Goodwin Doris Kearns Team of Rivals The Political Genius of Abraham Lincoln 2005 excerpts and text search on Lincoln s cabinet Green Michael S Freedom Union and Power Lincoln and His Party during the Civil War 2004 400 pp Harris William C Lincoln and the Union Governors Southern Illinois University Press 2013 162 pp Hesseltine William B Lincoln and the War Governors 1948 Kleppner Paul The Third Electoral System 1853 1892 Parties Voters and Political Culture 1979 statistical study of voting patterns Lawson Melinda Patriot Fires Forging a New American Nationalism in the Civil War North University Press of Kansas 2002 Luthin Reinhard H The first Lincoln campaign 1944 on election of 1860 Neely Mark The Divided Union Party Conflict in the Civil War North 2002 Paludan Philip S The Presidency of Abraham Lincoln 1994 thorough treatment of Lincoln s administration Rawley James A The Politics of Union Northern Politics during the Civil War 1974 Richardson Heather Cox The Greatest Nation of the Earth Republican Economic Policies during the Civil War 1997 online edition Silbey Joel A Respectable Minority The Democratic Party in the Civil War Era 1977 Smith Adam I P No Party Now Politics in the Civil War North Oxford University Press 2006 Smith Michael Thomas The Enemy Within Fears of Corruption in the Civil War North 2011 online review Weber Jennifer L Copperheads The Rise and Fall of Lincoln s Opponents in the North 2006 excerpt and text searchConstitutional and legal Edit Hyman Harold A More Perfect Union The Impact of the Civil War and Reconstruction on the Constitution Alfred A Knopf 1973 Neely Jr Mark E The Fate of Liberty Abraham Lincoln and Civil Liberties Oxford University Press 1991 won the 1992 Pulitzer Prize for History Neely Jr Mark E Lincoln and the Triumph of the Nation Constitutional Conflict in the American Civil War University of North Carolina Press 2011 covers the U S and the Confederate constitutions and their role in the conflict Paludan Phillip S October 1972 The American Civil War Considered as a Crisis in Law and Order The American Historical Review 77 4 1013 1034 doi 10 2307 1859506 ISSN 0002 8762 JSTOR 1859506 via JStor Economic Edit Brandes Stuart Warhogs A History of War Profits in America 1997 pp 67 88 a scholarly history of the munitions industry concludes profits were not excessive Clark Jr John E Railroads in the Civil War The Impact of Management on Victory and Defeat 2004 Cotterill R S The Louisville and Nashville Railroad 1861 1865 American Historical Review 1924 29 4 pp 700 715 in JSTOR Fite Emerson David Social and industrial conditions in the North during the Civil War 1910 online edition old but still quite useful Hammond Bray The North s Empty Purse 1861 1862 American Historical Review October 1961 Vol 67 Issue 1 pp 1 18 in JSTOR Hill Joseph A The Civil War Income Tax Quarterly Journal of Economics Vol 8 No 4 July 1894 pp 416 452 in JSTOR appendix in JSTOR Lowenstein Roger Ways and Means Lincoln and His Cabinet and the Financing of the Civil War 2022 major scholarly survey online review Merk Frederick Economic history of Wisconsin during the Civil War decade 1916 online edition Smith Michael Thomas The Enemy Within Fears of Corruption in the Civil War North 2011 details on Treasury Department government contracting and the cotton trade Weber Thomas The northern railroads in the Civil War 1861 1865 1999 Wilson Mark R The Business of Civil War Military Mobilization and the State 1861 1865 2006 306 pp excerpt and text search Ziparo Jessica This grand experiment When women entered the federal workforce in Civil War Era Washington DC UNC Press Books 2017 Zonderman David A White Workers and the American Civil War Oxford Research Encyclopedia of American History 2021 Intellectual and cultural Edit Aaron Daniel The Unwritten War American Writers and the Civil War 2nd ed 1987 Brownlee Peter John et al eds Home Front Daily Life in the Civil War North 2013 online review Foote Lorien and Kanisorn Wongsrichanalai So Conceived and So Dedicated Intellectual Life in the Civil War Era North 2015 Gallman J Matthew Defining Duty in the Civil War Personal Choice Popular Culture and the Union Home Front 2015 how civilians defined their roles online review Fredrickson George M The Inner Civil War Northern Intellectuals and the Crisis of the Union 1993 Stevenson Louise A The Victorian Homefront American Thought and Culture 1860 1880 1991 Wilson Edmund Patriotic Gore Studies in the Literature of the American Civil War 1962 Medical Edit Adams George Worthington Doctors in Blue The Medical History of the Union Army in the Civil War 1996 253pp excerpt and text search Clarke Frances M War Stories Suffering and Sacrifice in the Civil War North University of Chicago Press 2012 Grant S M Mortal in this season Union Surgeons and the Narrative of Medical Modernisation in the American Civil War Social History of Medicine 2014 Maxwell William Quentin Lincoln s Fifth Wheel The Political History of the U S Sanitary Commission 1956 online edition Schroeder Lein Glenna R The Encyclopedia of Civil War Medicine 2012 excerpt and text searchRace Edit McPherson James M Marching Toward Freedom The Negro s Civil War 1982 first edition was The Negro s Civil War How American Negroes Felt and Acted During the War for the Union 1965 Quarles Benjamin The Negro in the Civil War 1953 standard history excerpt and text search Voegeli V Jacque Free But Not Equal The Midwest and the Negro during the Civil War 1967 Religion and ethnicity Edit Brodrecht Grant R Our Country Northern Evangelicals and the Union during the Civil War Era 2018 288pp Burton William L Melting Pot Soldiers The Union Ethnic Regiments 1998 Kamphoefner Walter D German Americans and Civil War Politics A Reconsideration of the Ethnocultural Thesis Civil War History 37 1991 232 246 Kleppner Paul The Third Electoral System 1853 1892 Parties Voters and Political Culture 1979 Miller Randall M Harry S Stout and Charles Reagan Wilson eds Religion and the American Civil War 1998 online edition Miller Robert J Both Prayed to the Same God Religion and Faith in the American Civil War 2007 260pp Moorhead James American Apocalypse Yankee Protestants and the Civil War 1860 1869 1978 Noll Mark A The Civil War as a Theological Crisis 2006 199 pp Stout Harry S Upon the Altar of the Nation A Moral History of the Civil War 2006 544 pp Social and demographic history Edit Brownlee Peter John et al Home Front Daily Life in the Civil War North University of Chicago Press 2013 193 pp heavily illustrated Morehouse Maggi M and Zoe Trodd eds Civil War America A Social and Cultural History with Primary Sources 2013 29 short essays by scholars excerpt Raus Edmund J Banners South Northern Community at War 2011 about Cortland New York Vinovskis Maris A ed Toward a Social History of the American Civil War Exploratory Essays 1991 new social history quantitative studies Vinovskis Maris A ed Have Social Historians Lost the Civil War Some Preliminary Demographic Speculations Journal of American History Vol 76 No 1 June 1989 pp 34 58 in JSTOR Veit Helen Zoe ed Food in the Civil War Era The North Michigan State University Press 2014 Soldiers Edit Geary James W We Need Men The Union Draft in the Civil War 1991 Geary James W Civil War Conscription in the North A Historiographical Review Civil War History 32 September 1986 208 228 Hams Emily J Sons and Soldiers Deerfield Massachusetts and the Civil War Civil War History 30 June 1984 157 71 Hess Earl J The 12th Missouri Infantry A Socio Military Profile of a Union Regiment Missouri Historical Review 76 October 1981 53 77 Cimbala Paul A and Randall M Miller eds Union Soldiers and the Northern Home Front Wartime Experiences Postwar Adjustments 2002 Costa Dora L and Matthew E Kahn Cowards and heroes Group loyalty in the American Civil War Quarterly Journal of Economics 118 2 2003 519 548 Statistical study based on sample of 32 000 Union soldiers online Current Richard N 1992 Lincoln s Loyalists Union Soldiers from the Confederacy Oxford England Oxford University Press ISBN 0195084659 McPherson James For Cause and Comrades Why Men Fought in the Civil War 1998 based on letters and diaries Miller William J Training of an Army Camp Curtin and the North s Civil War 1990 Mitchell Reid The Vacant Chair The Northern Soldier Leaves Home 1993 Rorabaugh William J Who Fought for the North in the Civil War Concord Massachusetts Enlistments Journal of American History 73 December 1986 695 701 in JSTOR Roseboom Eugene H The Civil War Era 1850 1873 1944 Ohio Scott Sean A Earth Has No Sorrow That Heaven Cannot Cure Northern Civilian Perspectives on Death and Eternity during the Civil War Journal of Social History 2008 41 843 866 Wiley Bell I The Life of Billy Yank The Common Soldier of the Union 1952 State and local Edit Appleton s Annual Cyclopedia 1863 1864 detailed coverage of events in all countries online for online copies see Annual Cyclopaedia Each year 1861 to 1902 includes several pages on each U S state Tucker Spencer ed American Civil War A State by State Encyclopedia 2 vol 2015 1019pp excerpt Aley Ginette et al eds Union Heartland The Midwestern Home Front during the Civil War 2013 Bak Richard A Distant Thunder Michigan in the Civil War 2004 239 pp Baker Jean H The Politics of Continuity Maryland Political Parties from 1858 to 1870 1973 Baum Dale The Civil War Party System The Case of Massachusetts 1848 1876 1984 Bradley Erwin S The Triumph of Militant Republicanism A Study of Pennsylvania and Presidential Politics 1860 1872 1964 Castel Albert A Frontier State at War Kansas 1861 1865 1958 Cole Arthur Charles The Era of the Civil War 1848 1870 1919 on Illinois Coulter E Merton The Civil War and Readjustment in Kentucky 1926 Current Richard N The History of Wisconsin The Civil War Era 1848 1873 1976 Dee Christine ed Ohio s war the Civil War in documents 2006 primary sources excerpt and text search Dilla Harriette M Politics of Michigan 1865 1878 Columbia University Press 1912 online at Google books Gallman Matthew J Mastering Wartime A Social History of Philadelphia During the Civil War 1990 Hall Susan G Appalachian Ohio and the Civil War 1862 1863 2008 Holzer Harold State of the Union New York and the Civil War 2002 Essays by scholars Hubbard Mark Illinois s War The Civil War in Documents 2012 excerpt and text search Karamanski Theodore J Rally Round the Flag Chicago and the Civil War 1993 Leech Margaret Reveille in Washington 1860 1865 1941 Pulitzer Prize Miller Richard F ed States at War Volume 1 A Reference Guide for Connecticut Maine Massachusetts New Hampshire Rhode Island and Vermont in the Civil War 2013 excerpt Miller Richard F ed States at War Volume 2 A Reference Guide for New York in the Civil War 2014 excerpt Nation Richard F and Stephen E Towne Indiana s War The Civil War in Documents 2009 primary sources excerpt and text search Niven John Connecticut for the Union The Role of the State in the Civil War Yale University Press 1965 O Connor Thomas H Civil War Boston 1999 Parrish William E A History of Missouri Volume III 1860 to 1875 1973 ISBN 0826201482 Pierce Bessie A History of Chicago Volume II From Town to City 1848 1871 1940 Schouler William 1868 A History of Massachusetts in the Civil War Boston E P Dutton amp Co ISBN 9781582180014 OCLC 2662693 Ponce Pearl T Kansas s War The Civil War in Documents 2011 excerpt and text search Raus Edmund J Banners South Northern Community at War 2011 about Cortland New York Roseboom Eugene The Civil War Era 1850 1873 History of Ohio vol 4 1944 online Detailed scholarly history Siddali Silvana R Missouri s War The Civil War in Documents 2009 primary sources excerpt and text search Stampp Kenneth M Indiana Politics during the Civil War 1949 Taylor Paul Old Slow Town Detroit during the Civil War Detroit Wayne State University Press 2013 x 248 pp Thornbrough Emma Lou Indiana in the Civil War Era 1850 1880 1965 Ware Edith E Political Opinion in Massachusetts during the Civil War and Reconstruction 1916 full text onlineWomen and family Edit Bonnet Brigades at Fifty Reflections on Mary Elizabeth Massey and Gender in Civil War History Civil War History 2015 61 4 pp 400 444 Anderson J L The Vacant Chair on the Farm Soldier Husbands Farm Wives and the Iowa Home Front 1861 1865 Annals of Iowa 2007 66 241 265 Attie Jeanie Patriotic Toil Northern Women and the American Civil War 1998 294 pp Bahde Thomas I never wood git tired of wrighting to you Journal of Illinois History 2009 12 129 155 Cashin Joan E American Women and the American Civil War Journal of Military History 2017 81 1 pp 199 204 Giesberg Judith Army at Home Women and the Civil War on the Northern Home Front 2009 excerpt and text search Giesberg Judith Ann From Harvest Field to Battlefield Rural Pennsylvania Women and the U S Civil War Pennsylvania History 2005 72 159 191 Harper Judith E Women during the Civil War An Encyclopedia 2004 472 pp McDevitt Theresa Women and the American Civil War an annotated bibliography Praeger 2003 Marten James Children for the Union The War Spirit on the Northern Home Front Ivan R Dee 2004 209 pp Massey Mary Bonnet Brigades American Women and the Civil War 1966 excellent overview North and South reissued as Women in the Civil War 1994 Bonnet Brigades at Fifty Reflections on Mary Elizabeth Massey and Gender in Civil War History Civil War History 2015 61 4 pp 400 444 Giesberg Judith Mary Elizabeth Massey and the Civil War Centennial Civil War History 61 4 2015 400 406 online Rodgers Thomas E Hoosier Women and the Civil War Home Front Indiana Magazine of History 97 2 2001 pp 105 128 in JSTOR Silber Nina Daughters of the Union Northern Women Fight the Civil War Harvard UP 2005 332 pp Venet Wendy Hamand A Strong Minded Woman The Life of Mary Livermore U of Massachusetts Press 2005 322 pp Primary sources Edit American Annual Cyclopaedia for 1861 N Y Appleton s 1864 an extensive collection of reports on each state Congress military activities and many other topics annual issues from 1861 to 1901 Appletons annual cyclopedia and register of important events Embracing political military and ecclesiastical affairs public documents biography statistics commerce finance literature science agriculture and mechanical industry Volume 3 1863 1864 thorough coverage of the events of 1863 Angle Paul M and Earl Schenck Miers eds Tragic Years 1860 1865 A Documentary History of the American Civil War Vol 1 1960 online edition Carter Susan B ed The Historical Statistics of the United States Millennial Edition 5 vols 2006 online at many universities Commager Henry Steele ed The Blue and the Gray The Story of the Civil War as Told by Participants 1950 excerpts from primary sources Dee Christine ed Ohio s War The Civil War in Documents 2007 244 pp Freidel Frank ed Union Pamphlets of the Civil War 1861 1865 2 vol 1967 Hesseltine William B ed The Tragic Conflict The Civil War and Reconstruction 1962 excerpts from primary sources online edition Marten James ed Civil War America Voices from the Home Front 2003 346 pp Risley Ford ed The Civil War Primary Documents on Events from 1860 to 1865 2004 320 pp Siddali Silvana R Missouri s War The Civil War in Documents 2009 256pp excerpt and text search Sizer Lyde Cullen and Jim Cullen ed The Civil War Era An Anthology of Sources 2005 434 pp Smith Charles Winston and Charles Judah eds Life in the North during the Civil War A Source History 1966 Voss Hubbard Mark ed Illinois s War The Civil War in Documents 2013 online review diaries journals reminiscences The Peoples Contest A Civil War era digital archiving project access to primary sources from Pennsylvania especially newspapers and other resourcesExternal links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Union American Civil War Lincoln Administration links Archived August 1 2015 at the Wayback Machine Civil War Soldiers Abraham Lincoln online Archived May 14 2011 at the Wayback Machine texts Home Front Daily Life in the Civil War North visual exhibit at the Financial Measures by Nicolay and Hay 1889 Lincoln Reelected by Nicolay and Hay 1889 First Plans for Emancipation by Nicolay and Hay 1889 Emancipation Announced by Nicolay and Hay 1889 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Union American Civil War amp oldid 1130010110, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.