CIVIL WAR
AMERICA’S EPIC STRUGGLE


A TEACHER RESOURCE


CONTENTS OF Disk I

A. Quick Overview
B. Causes of the War
C. Chronology of the War
D. Major Battles

E. History Makers
F. View from Washington
G. View from Richmond

A. THE QUICK OVERVIEW SECTION
Provides a 15 minute multimedia presentation on the war. It starts with the opening shots and ends with assassination of Abraham Lincoln.

B. THE CAUSES OF THE WAR
Covers the major events along the road to war. Each event is narrated and includes a photo and text. There is also a multimedia presentation that gives the author’s opinion on the major causes of the war.

The following are the major entries in this section:

• First Slaves Arrive
• Slavery Grows
• Slavery And Independence
• Slavery And The Constitution
• Cotton Gin Invented
• Missouri Compromise
• Walker's Appeal
• The Liberator Published
• Turner Revolt
• Mexican War
• Slavery Becomes n Election Issue
• The Issue Of California
• The Compromise Of 1850
• Fugitive Slave Act
• Blood Spilled
• Boston In Uproar
• Uncle Tom's Cabin Published
• Kansas Nebraska Act Enacted
• Bloody Kansas
• Violence Comes To Washington
• Temporary Compromise In Kansas
• Dredd—Scott Decision
• Lincoln—Douglas Debates
• John Brown's Revolt
• Democratic Party Splits
• Lincoln Nominated
• Lincoln Elected
• South Carolina Secedes


C. CHRONOLOGY
The chronology includes a day to day chronology of the war. It can be accessed by year. Events that are covered elsewhere in the program are linked. Thus if a general is mentioned you can jump to the biography of the general. If a major battle is covered in the chronology you can jump to the in-depth presentation on that battle.


D. MAJOR BATTLES
The major battles of the war are covered in this section. Each entry includes a photo section, a series of first hand account on the battle. Also included in this section is a battle narration that lasts from three to fifteen minutes. You can stop the battle narration in the middle and print out an image, and then resume it at any time. In most cases there are also a section screen on maps of the battle and casualties.

The following are the battles and important events covered in this section.

• 40 Days
• Antietam
• Atlanta
• Bull Run— 2nd
• Bull Run— 1st
• Chancellorsville
• Chattanooga
• Chickamauga
• Draft Riots
• Fredericksburg
• Ft. Henry & Ft. Donelson
• Ft. Sumter
• Gettysburg
• Gettysburg Address
• Monitor Vs.Virginia
• Nashville, Battle Of
• New Orleans
• Pea Ridge, Battle Of
• Peninsula Campaign
• Petersburg
• Reactions To Ft. Sumter
• Red River Campaign
• Seven Days
• Sherman's March Across Georgia
• Shiloh
• Surrender
• Vicksburg
• West Virginia
• Wilderness


E. THE HISTORYMAKER SECTION
Links you to separate section with biographies of Union Generals, Confederate Generals and leading other civil war figures.

The following are the Confederate Generals covered in the biography section.

• Adams, John
• Alexander, Edward P.
• Allen, Henry W.
• Anderson, James P.
• Anderson, Joseph R.
• Anderson, Richard H.
• Anderson, Robert H.
• Archer, James
• Armistad, Lewis
• Ashby, Turner
• Baker, Alpheus
• Baldwin, William
• Barksdale, William
• Barton, Seth
• Bartow, Francis
• Brandon, William
• Breckinridge, John
• Buchanan, Franklin
• Buckner, Simon
• Bullock, Robert
• Carter, John
• Cheatham, Benjamin
• Colquitt, Alfred
• Colston, Raleigh
• Cook, Philip
• Drayton, Thomas
• Early, Jubal
• Echols, John
• Elzey, Arnold
• Ewell, Richard
• Floyd, John
• Forrest, Nathan
• Frost, Daniel
• Garnett, Richard
• Gibson, Randall
• Gladden, Adley
• Gordon, George
• Gracie, Archibald
• Bragg, Braxton
• Granbury, Hiram
• Gray, Henry
• Hampton, Wade
• Hardee, William
• Hill, Ambrose P.
• Hood, John B.
• Huger, Benjamin
• Humphreys, Benjamin
• Imboden, John
• Jackson, Thomas (Stonewall)
• Jenkins, Albert
• Lowrey, Mark
• Johnston, Joseph
• Johnston, Sidney
• Johnson, Bushrod
• Kemper, James
• Kershaw, Joseph
• Law, Evander McIvor
• Lawton, Alexander
• Lee, Robert E.
• Lee, Fitzhugh
• Lee,Stephen
• Logan,Thomas
• Longstreet, James
• Lovell, Mansfield
• Lyon, Hylan
• Magruder, John
• McComb, William
• McIntosh, James
• McNair, Evander
• McRae, Dandridge
• McCullough, Henry
• Mercer, Weedon
• Moody, Marshall
• Moore, John
• Morgan, John
• Munford, Thomas
• Nicholls, Francis
• Parson, Mosby
• Pemberton, John
• Pender, William
• Perry, William
• Pettigrew, James
• Pettus, Edmund
• Pickett, George
• Pike, Albert
• Pillow, Gideon
• Polignac, Camille
• Polk, Leonidas
• Pryor, Roger
• Reynolds, Daniel
• Roberts, William
• Robertson, Beverly
• Rodes, Robert
• Ross, Lawrence
• Semmes, Raphael
• Shoup, Francis
• Sibley, Henry
• Simms, James
• Slack, William
• Slaughter, James
• Smith, William
• Smith, Martin
• Smith, Thomas
• Starke, Peter
• Steele, William
• Stuart, James
• Taliaferro, William
• Taylor, Richard
• Thomas, Bryan
• Toombs, Robert
• Trimble, Isaac
• Van Dorn, Earl
• Price, Sterling
• Walker, John
• Walker, Reuben
• Whitfield, John
• Wigfall, Louis
• Wilcox, Cadmus
• Wood, Sterling
• Wright, Ambrose
• Young, Pierce
• Zollicoffer, Felix
• Vaughan, Jefferson


The following are the Union Generals covered in the biography section.
• Allen, Robert
• Ames, Adelbert
• Anderson, Robert
• Augur, Christopher
• Averell, Williams
• Ayers, Romeyn
• Bailey, Theodorus
• Banks, Nathaniel
• Barlow,Francis
• Barnes, Joseph
• Barry, William
• Bartlett, Joeseph
• Bayard, George
• Belknap, William
• Davis, Jefferson Columbus
• Dix, John
• Eaton, Amos
• Blunt, James
• Brown, Egbrty
• Buell, John Carlos
• Buford, John
• Burnside, Ambrose
• Butler, Benjamin
• Butterfield, Daniel
• Canby, Edward
• Carr, Eugene
• Carter, Samuel
• Casey,Silas
• Chamberlain, Joshua
• Cooke, George
• Cooper, Joseph
• Corcoran, Michael
• Corse, John
• Cox, Jacob
• Crook, George
• Curtis, Samuel
• Custer, George Armstrong
• Hamilton, Andrew
• Hancock, Winfield Scott
• Egan,Thomas
• Ellet,Alfred
• Elliot, Washington
• Ewing, Hugh
• Farnsworth, Elton
• Farragut, David
• Fessenden, James
• Foote, Andrew
• Forsyth, James
• Foster, John
• Foster, Robert
• Franklin, William
• Fremont, John
• French, William
• Garfield, James
• Gillem, Alvan
• Gillmore, Adams
• Granger, Gordon
• Grant, Ulysses S.
• Grierson, Benjamin
• Griffin, Charles
• Halleck, Henry
• Harker, Charles
• Hartsuff, George
• Hascall, Milo
• Hatch, Edward
• Haupt, Herman
• Hawkins, John
• Hays, William
• Hays, Alexander
• Hazen, William
• Heintzelman, Peter
• Hooker, Joseph
• Hovey, Alvin
• Howard, Otis
• Humphreys, Andrew
• Hunter, David
• Judah, Henry
• Kearny, Philip
• Keyes, Erasmus
• Kilpatrick, Hugh
• Kimball, Nathan
• Leggett, Mortimer
• Logan, John
• Lyon, Nathaniel
• McArthur, John
• McClellan, George
• McDowell, Irvin
• McPherson, James
• Meade, George
• Miles, Nelson
• Ord, Edward
• Parke, Grubb
• Patterson, Robert
• Pope, John
• Porter, David
• Potter, Robert
• Rawlins, John
• Reynolds, John
• Richardson, Bush
• Rodgers, John
• Rosecrans,William
• Ruger, Thomas
• Saxton, Rufus
• Schenck, Robert
• Schofield, John
• Scott, Winfield
• Sheridan, Philip
• Sherman, William T.
• Shields, James
• Sickles, Daniel
• Sigel, Franz
• Slocum, Henry
• Smith, Andrew
• Smith, William
• Stahel, Julius
• Stanley, David
• Steedman, James
• Stone, Charles
• Stoneman, George
• Strong, George
• Sturgis, Samuel
• Sumner, Edwin
• Sweeney, Thomas
• Terry, Alfred
• Thomas, George
• Torbert, Alfred
• Turchin, John
• Sedgwick, John
• Seymour, Truman

The following are other Civil War figures covered in the biography section.
• Barton, Clara
• Bates, Edward
• Benjamin, Judah Philip
• Blair Francis Preston
• Blair Montgomery
• Booth, John Wilkes
• Boyd, Belle
• Brown, John
• Cameron, Simon
• Chase, Salmon
• Davis, Jefferson
• Douglass, Frederick
• Greeley, Horace
• Lincoln, Abraham
• Seddon, James Alexander
• Seward, William Henry
• Stanton, Edwin McMasters
• Stephens, Alexander
• Stevens, Thaddeus
• Stowe, Harriet
• Taney, Roger
• Truth, Sojourner


F. WASHINGTON CHRONOLOGY

The Washington Chronology covers the major events that took place in Washington. It includes many texts some narrated of Lincoln's important speeches.

Speeches include:

1861
February 9th- Lincoln departure from his home town
His speech Indianapolis
February 12th- His speech in Cincinnati
February 13th- His speech to Ohio legislature in Columbus
February 15th- Lincoln speech in Cleveland
February 19th- Lincoln arrival in New York and speech before 250,000
February 23th- Lincoln speech in Philadelphia- (also narrated)
March 4th Lincoln inaugural address- (also narrated)
April 15th- Lincoln's call for 250,000 troops (also narrated)
April 19th- President Lincoln’s call for blockade

1862
January 27th Lincoln issues general war order #1
September 22nd Emancipation proclamation

1863
November 19- Gettysburg Address

1864
March 8th Grant’s arrival in Washington (also narrated)
March 18th Lincoln’s Address before Sanitation Committee (also narrated)

1865
March 4th Lincoln second inaugural (also narrated)


G. RICHMOND CHRONOLOGY
This chronology of events taking place in Richmond's is presented in this section.
Also in this section is a the Confederate Constitution. How does it compare to the US Constitution?
CONTENTS OF Disk I I

The Main Menu of Disk 2 of Civil War has the following selections:

A. Americans Of 1861
B. America Of 1861
C. Economics
D. Songs Of The War
E. The Navies
F. Medical Care
G. Further Reading
H. Technology
I. Photo Archives
J. Maps
K. Statistics
L. Railroads
M. Credits.

A. THE SECTION ON AMERICANS OF 1861
Includes an overview of the American population during this period.

There are also essays on:
• African Americans*
• Chinese American
• Irish American
• German Americans
• Jewish Americans
• Native American
• Spanish American
• Women*

*The sections on African Americans and Women include a photo gallery as well.

B. AMERICA OF 1861
This section which has entries with text photos and text present a picture of life in America both in and out of the army as the civil war began.

Entries include:

• Introduction
• Life in the Military
• Union Camp
• Confederate Camps
• Prison Camps
• Spies
• Families
• Women
• Homes
• Food
• Education
• Clothing and Grooming
• Life in the North and Northwest
• Life in the South and Southwest


C. ECONOMICS
The section on economics includes a number of essays on economics. The first describes contrasting economics between the North and the South. There is as essay on the economics of secession as well as an essay on the economics of the Union victory.

D. SONGS OF THE CIVIL WAR
This section includes the words and in most cases original rendition of a number of the major songs of the war.

The Songs include:
• Battle Hymn of the Republic
• When Johnny Comes Marching Home
• All Quiet Along the Potomac Tonight
• We are Coming father Abraham
• Bonnie Blue Flag
• Dixie

E. THE NAVIES
This section includes a day to day chronology of naval affairs. There is also an extensive naval photo section.

F. MEDICAL CARE
This section includes of photo section depicting medical care during the war. It also includes a narrated essay on medical care as well as an essay on medical care written by a physician today.

G. FURTHER READING
This section contains an extensive bibliography of books on the Civil War.

H. TECHNOLOGY

This section shows the major technological advances of the war.

I. PHOTO ARCHIVES
This section contains a compendium of the various photos in the program.

The section is divided up between:
• Battle Photos
• Photos of Locations
• Miscellaneous.
(The miscellaneous section includes a series of color watercolors of camp scenes.)

J. MAPS
The map section includes maps of the United States and of all the major battles.

K. STATISTICS
This section contains statistics on the casualties of the various major battles.

L. RAILROADS
This section contains photographs on the railroads during the war. There is also a narrated presentation on the effect of railroads on the war.

M. CREDITS