Toys in Wartime - Suggestions to Parents on Making Toys in Wartime
Chapter 11 Section 3 Page 351 Life During Wartime.
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Transcript of Chapter 11 Section 3 Page 351 Life During Wartime.
Chapter 11 Section 3Page 351
Life During Wartime
African American SoldiersUnion nor Confederacy
accepted African Americans at the beginning of the war.
1862, Union began allowing blacks to serve.
10% of Union army was black
Served in segregated units Could not rise above the
rank of captain.Alexander Augusta, a
surgeon, did become a lieutenant.
African American SoldiersBlack troops were paid less than whites.Some black regiments served w/o pay rather then
take the lesser amount offered.Congress finally equalized the pay for all troops in
1864.Mortality rates for African Americans was higher b/c
they served in high disease areas.When African American troops were captured by the
Confederates they were executed rather than treated as prisoners.
A particularly gruesome massacre occurred at Fort Pillow Tennessee were Confederate troops murdered 200+ men as they begged for their lives.
Slave Resistance in the ConfederacyAs Union forces pushed deeper into
Confederate territory, thousands of slaves sought freedom behind the lines of the Union army.
Slaves who remained on plantations broke tools and sabotaged the farms.
Southerners were fearful of a slave uprising so they spread rumors about the poor treatment of freed slaves.
By 1864 many Confederates realized that slavery was doomed.
Southern ShortagesFood Shortage
Drain of man power to the warUnion occupation of food growing areasLoss of slaves to work the fields
Meat became a luxuryFood prices skyrocketed1863, women and children were rioting over
bread & riceUnion blockade of southern ports created
shortages of items including salt, sugar, coffee, medicine, ect.
Northern Economic GrowthWar had a more positive affect on the Northern
economy.Most industries were boomingWages did not keep up w/ prices so many people’s
standard of living declined.When white male workers went on strike,
employers hired women, free blacks, immigrants, & boys to replace the men at lower wages.
Northern women got gov. jobs for the first time.Many businesses became corrupt by cheating the
gov. on their contracts.Nation’s first income tax was used during the war.
Lives on the LineLife on the front lines was difficult.
Men were not given baths on a regular bases.
Bathrooms and garbage disposal was almost unheard of.
Body lice, dysentery, & diarrhea were common.
Army rations were not appealing.Union troops lived on beans, bacon, & hard
biscuits.Southerners food was even less appealing.
Civil War MedicineEstablished a Sanitary
Commission to improve the conditions for troops.
It sent agents to teach troops how to sanitize water & set up hospitals.
Dorthea Dix became the first female superintendent of women nurses.She insisted nurses be
30+ & plain looking.Clara Barton served on
the front lines of battle.
Civil War MedicineAs a result of the Sanitary Commission, the
death rate among Union troops dropped.The South did not have a Sanitary
Commission but thousands of women volunteered as nurses.
PrisonsImprovements didn’t
reach prisons where life was worse than in camps.
The worst Confederate prison was a Andersonville, GA.
Prisoners had no shelter & they drank from the same steam that acted as the sewer.
1/3 of the prisoners at Andersonville died.
PrisonsThe South’s lack of food & supplies also
contributed to the bad conditions as prisons.
Prison camps in the North were only slightly better.
Did provide shelter and food15% of the prisoners in the South died12% of the prisoners in the North died
Answer the following questions1. What was the experience of African American
soldiers in the Union army?2. How did slaves aid the fight for freedom in the
South?3. How did the war affect the economy in the South?4. How did the war affect the economy in the North?5. How were women affected by the war?6. What new measure did the U.S. government use
to pay for the war?7. What kinds of conditions did soldiers live in during
the war?8. How were prisoners of war treated?9. How did the U.S. Sanitary Commission and Clara
Barton help soldiers?