A Turning Point

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“From April 12, 1861, to June 2, 1865, the light of the great experiment of democracy burned but dimly as more than 8,700 battles and skirmishes swept across the land and extinguished more than 620,000 lives North and South. For all Americans, it was the longest night.” As, David Eicher writes in his book, The Longest Night, the American Civil War tore apart the nation, and devastated the lives of millions. The Civil War determined whether the United States of America would remain a nation or divide, becoming the Union and Confederate States of America. Totaling five years, the war was longer than anticipated; it was a brutal fight, and casualties were horrendous- over six-hundred thousand Union and Confederate troops lost their lives, during the course of the war. There were sieges, battles, and skirmishes tipping the scale from Union to Confederate dominance, and back again, each conflict slowly determining which side would win the war. Within the Civil War, the year that ultimately decided the course of the rest of the war was 1863. In this year, the war witnessed the Siege of Vicksburg, lasting forty-seven days, and the Battle of Gettysburg, totaling three days. These conflicts were bloody affairs, and the casualties were high on both sides, but without these conflicts the American Civil War would have ended differently. The Siege of Vicksburg and the Battle of Gettysburg were the turning points of the war, but the Siege of Vicksburg was the more important turning point of the two conflicts.
The Siege of Vicksburg was part of Ulysses S. Grant’s campaign to capture the city; this took at least a year, and the siege of the city came at the end of this yearlong struggle. The first assault on Vicksburg was in July of 1...

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...federacy. Scott understood that taking the Mississippi River meant more than dividing the South, it meant leaving three states with no way to ship supplies: food, and man power to the rest of the Confederate States. This Northern strategy focused on the city of Vicksburg as a key to the plan’s implementations. Furthermore, it was believed to be a viable plan to bring the South “to terms with less bloodshed than any other plan.” While the plan did not lessen the bloodshed, taking Vicksburg gave the Union total control over the Mississippi River; Scott’s plan succeeded to the last dot. The Anaconda Plan ‘shut down’ the Western Theater of the war, drawing the focus of the war back to Lee, and the Eastern Theater. Lee was a formidable adversary, and the fall of Vicksburg along with a crushing defeat at Gettysburg devastated Lee and the Army Northern Virginia.

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