American Civil War

American Civil War

Top left: William Rosecrans at Stones River, Tennessee; top right: Confederate prisoners at Gettysburg; bottom: Battle of Fort Hindman, Arkansas
DateApril 12, 1861 – May 9, 1865
Location
United States, Atlantic Ocean
Result

The Union won.

Belligerents
 United States of America  Confederate States
Commanders and leaders

United States Abraham Lincoln
United States Ulysses S. Grant
United States George B. McClellan
United States William T. Sherman
United States Winfield Scott
United States Henry Halleck
United States George G. Meade
United States Joseph Hooker
United States Benjamin F. Butler
United States Philip Sheridan
United States William Rosecrans
United States George H. Thomas
United States John Pope
United States Edward Canby

United States Nathaniel P. Banks

Confederate States of America Jefferson Davis
Confederate States of America Robert E. Lee
Confederate States of America Joseph E. Johnston
Confederate States of America P. G. T. Beauregard
Confederate States of America A.S. Johnston
Confederate States of America Samuel Cooper
Confederate States of America Braxton Bragg
Confederate States of America John Bell Hood
Confederate States of America Stonewall Jackson
Confederate States of America J.E.B. Stuart
Confederate States of America Jubal Early
Confederate States of America James Longstreet
Confederate States of America Edmund K. Smith
Confederate States of America John C. Pemberton

Confederate States of America Richard Taylor
Strength
2,100,000 1,064,000
Casualties and losses
140,414 killed in action[1]
~ 365,000 total dead[1]
275,200 wounded
72,524 killed in action[1]
~ 260,000 total dead
137,000+ wounded

The American Civil War (1861–1865) was a civil war in the United States of America. It was fought when 11 Southern states left the United States and formed the Confederate States of America (also called the Confederacy). The US government and the states that remained loyal to it were called the Union.

The main cause of the war was slavery, which was allowed in the South, including all 11 Confederate States. Slavery was illegal in most of the North. The Confederate States tried to leave the Union after Abraham Lincoln, who disliked slavery, was elected US president. The Union believed that it was illegal for the states to break away. There were five states that allowed slavery which stayed in the Union.

The war began on April 12, 1861, when Confederate forces attacked Fort Sumter, a fort in South Carolina that was held by Union soldiers.[2] The war lasted four years and caused much damage in the South. Most battles were in northern states until 1862 and in southern states after 1862.

After four years of fighting, the Union won the war, and soon, slavery was made illegal everywhere in the United States of America.

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 John W. Chambers, II, ed. in chief, The Oxford Companion to American Military History. Oxford University Press, 1999, ISBN 978-0-19-507198-6. P. 849.
  2. "Fort Sumter". Civil War Trust. Retrieved October 20, 2015.

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