civil war jeopardy famous people important battles slaverydividing issues north vs. south 10 20 30...
TRANSCRIPT
Civil War Jeopardy
Famous People
Important Battles
Slavery Dividing Issues
North vs. South
10 10 10 10 10
20 20 20 20 20
30 30 30 30 30
40 40 40 40 40
Final Jeopardy ?
The President during the Civil War
Thomas Jefferson Thomas Jefferson
Jefferson DavisJefferson Davis
Abraham LincolnAbraham Lincoln
Barrack ObamaBarrack Obama
The President of the Confederacy was_______.
Dred ScottDred Scott
Thomas Jefferson Thomas Jefferson
Abraham LincolnAbraham Lincoln
Jefferson DavisJefferson Davis
These were two of the generals of the Confederate Army.
George Washington and Thomas GageGeorge Washington and Thomas Gage
Robert E. Lee and Stonewall JacksonRobert E. Lee and Stonewall Jackson
Ulysses S. Grant and William Tecumseh ShermanUlysses S. Grant and William Tecumseh Sherman
George Meade and George McClellanGeorge Meade and George McClellan
A famous nurse who followed the fighting from battle to battle across the U.S. caring for Union soldiers and who
founded the American Red Cross.
Molly PitcherMolly Pitcher
Betsy RossBetsy Ross
Betty CrockerBetty Crocker
Clara BartonClara Barton
An attack on this place caused the Civil War to begin.
Fort SumterFort Sumter
Fort McHenryFort McHenry
Camp DavidCamp David
The AlamoThe Alamo
This was the first battle of the War, and a big Confederate win.
Bunker HillBunker Hill
Bull RunBull Run
AntietamAntietam
GettysburgGettysburg
This was one of the deadliest battles of the Civil War in which more than
7,000 Union and Confederate soldiers were killed.
Bull RunBull Run
AppomattoxAppomattox
GettysburgGettysburg
VicksburgVicksburg
This is where the Civil War ended and Robert E. Lee surrendered to
Ulysses S. Grant
YorktownYorktown
RichmondRichmond
PhiladelphiaPhiladelphia
AppomattoxAppomattox
Those people who wanted to get rid of slavery were called _______.
abolitionists abolitionists
followersfollowers
compromiserscompromisers
conductorsconductors
This was a system of secret escape routes leading to free lands.
The Underground RailroadThe Underground Railroad
The Downtown InterstateThe Downtown Interstate
The Hidden ExpressThe Hidden Express
The Secret PassageThe Secret Passage
In the South, slavery was important because…
the slaves worked long hours in the factories.the slaves worked long hours in the factories.
the slaves enjoyed working to help their owners get wealthier.the slaves enjoyed working to help their owners get wealthier.
they needed slaves to travel to Africa to bring back more slaves.they needed slaves to travel to Africa to bring back more slaves.
owners had come to depend on the work of slaves to farm their land.owners had come to depend on the work of slaves to farm their land.
This law forced northerners to catch runaway slaves and to be punished with
fines or jail time if they did not.
The Emancipation ProclamationThe Emancipation Proclamation
The Kansas-Nebraska ActThe Kansas-Nebraska Act
The Compromise of 1850The Compromise of 1850
The Fugitive Slave ActThe Fugitive Slave Act
This Compromise allowed the number of free states and slave states to remain
equal.
The Compromise of 1850The Compromise of 1850
The Missouri CompromiseThe Missouri Compromise
The Dred Scott DecisionThe Dred Scott Decision
The Emancipation ProclamationThe Emancipation Proclamation
The North welcomed the high tariff on imported goods because…
most of the nation’s farms were located there.most of the nation’s farms were located there.
they bought a lot of imported goods from Europe.they bought a lot of imported goods from Europe.
they enjoyed paying higher tariffs.they enjoyed paying higher tariffs.
most of the nation’s factories were located there.most of the nation’s factories were located there.
This case, which came to the Supreme Court, was an important milestone in the debate of whether slavery should be allowed in certain
territories and decided that slaves were property.
The Dred Scott CaseThe Dred Scott Case
The Emancipation ProclamationThe Emancipation Proclamation
The Gettysburg Address The Gettysburg Address
The Compromise of 1850The Compromise of 1850
This man was known as the “Great Compromiser” because of his work to
settle the differences between the North and the South.
Andrew JacksonAndrew Jackson
Frederick DouglasFrederick Douglas
Henry ClayHenry Clay
William GarrisonWilliam Garrison
Weaknesses of this side included being a new nation, not
having a strong central government, and having a weak
economy.NorthNorth
SouthSouth
This side wanted the states to have more individual rights and the final
say in their own affairs.
NorthNorth
SouthSouth
The only regiment made up entirely of African-Americans were fighting for
this side.
NorthNorth
SouthSouth
Final Jeopardy
Explain the Kansas-Nebraska Act and how that led to “Bleeding Kansas.”
In Kansas and Nebraska, citizens were allowed to vote to decide if they were going to have
slavery or not. People from other states rushed in to cast their votes and fighting broke out
between the two sides. More than 200 people were killed making it known as Bleeding
Kansas.