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AMERICAN
HISTORY
Civil War Facts & Trivia |
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The U.S. Capitol with flag flying
half-mast.
This image available for
photographic prints and downloads
HERE!
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"We are not enemies, but friends. We must not be enemies. Though
passion may have strained it must not break our bonds of affection.
The mystic chords of memory, stretching from every battlefield and
patriot grave to every living heart and hearthstone all over this
broad land, will yet swell the chorus of the Union, when again
touched, as surely they will be, by the better angels of our nature."
--
Abraham Lincoln, March 4, 1861, From His First Inaugural Address.
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More than three million men fought in the
Civil War
about 900,000 for the
Confederacy and 2.1 million for the Union.
An estimated 300
women disguised themselves as men and fought in the ranks.
More than
620,000 people, or two percent of the population, died in the
Civil War.
Approximately 6,000
battles, skirmishes, and engagements were fought during the
Civil War.
There were over 2,000
boys who were 14 years-old or younger in the Union ranks. Three
hundred were 13 years or less, while there were 200,000 no older than
16 years.
At the Battle of Shiloh, on the banks of the
Tennessee River, more
Americans fell than in all previous American wars combined.
There were 23,700 casualties.
At Fredericksburg in
1862, the Confederate trenches stretched for a distance of seven
miles. The troop density was
11,000
per mile, or six men to the yard.
3,530
Native Americans fought for the Union, of which, 1,018 were
killed.
The greatest cavalry
battle ever fought in the Western hemisphere was at
Brandy Station, Virginia, on June 9, 1863. Nearly 20,000
cavalrymen were engaged on a relatively confined terrain for more than
12 hours.
An Iowa regiment had
a rule that any man who uttered an oath should read a chapter in the
Bible. Several of them got nearly through the Old Testament
There were more Northern-born Confederate
generals than Southern-born Union generals.
The famous
Confederate blockade-runner, the C.S.S. Alabama, never entered
a Confederate port during the length of her service.
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During the Battle
of
Antietam,
Clara Barton tended the wounded so close to the fighting that a bullet
went through her sleeve and killed a man she was treating.
In March 1862,
“new” ironclad war ships, the Monitor and
Merrimack
battled off Hampton Roads, Virginia. From then on, every other wooden navy
ship on earth was obsolete.
There were 100 men in a Company and 10 Companies in a Regiment.
Not fond of
ceremonies or military music, Ulysses S. Grant said he could only
recognize two tunes. "One was Yankee Doodle, the other one wasn’t."
President Abraham Lincoln was the first
president to be assassinated.
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Caring for the wounded at
Antietam, 1862.
This image available for
photographic prints and downloads
HERE!
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Missouri
sent 39 regiments to fight in the siege of Vicksburg: 17 to the
Confederacy and 22 to the Union.
At the start of the
war, the value of all manufactured goods produced in all the Confederate
states added up to less than one-fourth of those produced in
New York State alone.
In 1862, the U.S.
Congress authorized the first paper currency, called "greenbacks."
Oliver Wendell
Holmes, Jr., future chief Justice, was wounded three times during the
Civil War: in the
chest at Ball’s Bluff, in the back at
Antietam
and in the heel at
Chancellorsville.
Surgeons never washed their hands after an
operation, because all blood was assumed to be the same, nor did he wash
his instruments
Confederate Private
Henry Stanley fought for the Sixth Arkansas, and was captured at
Shiloh, but survived to
go to Africa
to find Dr. Livingston.
On
July 4, 1863, after 48 days of siege, Confederate General John C.
Pemberton surrendered the city of
Vicksburg to the Union’s
General, Ulysses S. Grant. For the next 81 years, the city Vicksburg did
not celebrate the Fourth of July.
Disease killed twice as
many men during the war than did battle wounds.
The 12th Connecticut Regiment entered the war
with a compliment of 1,000 men. Before it entered its first engagement,
sickness had reduced its strength to 600 able bodied soldiers.
On both sides of the conflict, potential
recruits were offered monetary rewards,
or "bounties," for enlisting, as much as $677 in
New
York. “Bounty jumping” soon became so popular, that hundreds of men signed
up, and then deserted, to enlist again elsewhere.
For
those who were drafted, the law allowed them to pay a substitute to go in
their place. Another type of “bounty jumper” was born when men would hire
out to more than one draftee and then make a hasty exit once they were
paid. The record for bounty jumping was held by John O’Connor, who
admitted to hiring himself out 32 times before being caught. He received a
4 year prison term.
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African-American soldiers in the Civil War.
This image available for
photographic prints and downloads
HERE!
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Though African Americans
constituted less than one percent of the northern population, by the war’s
end made up ten percent of the Union Army. A total of 180,000 black men,
more than 85% of those eligible, enlisted. By the time of the Confederate
surrender in 1865, there were more African Americans in the Union army
than there were soldiers in the Confederate army.
In November 1863, President Lincoln was invited to offer a "few
appropriate remarks" at the opening of a new Union cemetery at Gettysburg.
Though Lincoln spoke just 269 words in his Gettysburg address, the main
speaker, an orator from Massachusetts, spoke for nearly two hours.
Confederate General
Nathan Bedford Forrest had 30 horses shot from under him and personally
killed 31 men in hand-to-hand combat. "I was a horse ahead at the end," he
said.
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