Mr. Wilson's Georgia History Website Hendricks Middle School- Cumming, GA
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  • 1st Semester Units
    • Unit 1- Geography of Georgia
    • Unit 2- Prehistoric Georgia/ Age of Exploration
    • Unit 3- Colonial Georgia
    • Unit 4- The American Revolution in Georgia >
      • Nancy Hart
      • Austin Dabney
      • Sgt. William Jasper
      • The Chasseurs
      • Count Casimir Pulaski
    • Unit 5- Georgia Statehood and Indian Removal
    • Unit 6A- Antebellum Georgia
    • Unit 6B- Georgia and the Civil War
  • 2nd Semester Units
    • Unit 7- Reconstruction in Georgia
    • Unit 8- The New South and Progressive Era in Georgia
    • Unit 9- Georgia Between Two Wars
    • Unit 10- Georgia's Government >
      • Foundations of Ga. Government
      • The Legislative Branch
      • The Executive Branch
      • The Judicial Branch
      • The Juvenile Justice System
      • Local Government
    • Unit 11- Modern Georgia >
      • Post-WW2 Georgia
      • The Civil Rights Era
      • Modern Georgia
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Unit 7 - Georgia and the Civil War

SS8H5- Analyze the impact of the Civil War on Georgia.
B. Explain Georgia’s role in the Civil War; include the Union blockade of Georgia’s coast, the Emancipation Proclamation, Chickamauga, Sherman’s Atlanta Campaign, Sherman’s March to the Sea, and Andersonville.
Socratic Seminar Characters
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Above are the authors or subjects of the Socratic Seminar letters: On the left are the Branch brothers of Savannah, Georgia (John- left, Hamilton- middle, Sanford- right). The Branch brothers were members of Company B "The Oglethorpe Light Infantry" of the 8th Georgia Volunteer Infantry Regiment. On the right is Sullivan Ballou of Smithfield, Rhode Island. Ballou was a Major in the 2nd Rhode Island Infantry Regiment.

Resources of the North and South
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Confederate Flags.

Images below show the
four flags used by the Confederacy, not counting the unofficial Bonnie Blue Flag.
 • Battle Flag. The most familiar flag is the battle flag, which actually was supposed to be square rather than rectangular in shape. The battle flag had 13 stars—one for each of the 11 states that seceded, plus stars for the border states of Kentucky and Missouri.
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 • Stars and Bars. The stars and bars had two broad red bars, with a white bar in the middle, and a blue field with seven stars. The flag initially had seven stars, one for each of the states—Georgia, South Carolina, Florida, Alabama,Mississippi, Louisiana, and Texas—that formed the Confederacy. The flag was adopted as the Confederacy’s first national flag in March 1861 at Montgomery. Later, as other states joined, additional stars were added.
 • New national flags. In 1863, concern that from a distance the Stars and Bars looked like the U.S. flag led the Confederate government to adopt a new national flag. The flag incorporate the battle flag in the upper left corner on a field of white. Apparently, when the flag hung limp, it looked like a flag of truce, so in 1865, a third national flag was adopted. The length of the flag was reduced and a red band added to the end so it would not appear all white when hanging limp.

Civil War Battles in Georgia
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Artist Depiction of Andersonville (Camp Sumter)
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