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The Civil War, Part 2: Crash Course US History #21 episode transcript - U.S. History by Crash Course

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The Civil War, Part 2: Crash Course US History #21

From: U.S. History by Crash Course

In which John Green teaches you how the Civil War played a large part in making the United States the country that it is today. He covers some of the key ways in which Abraham Lincoln influenced the outcome of the war, and how the lack of foreign intervention also helped the Union win the war. John also covers the technology that made the Civil War different than previous wars. New weapons helped to influence the outcomes of battles, but photography influenced how the public at large perceived the war. In addition, John gets into the long-term effects of the war, including the federalization and unification of the United States. All this plus homesteading, land grant universities, railroads, federal currency, and taxes.

Full Transcript

The Civil War Part 2 Crash Course US History 21

speaker01 00:00:00

Hi I'm John Green, this is Crash Course us history and today we return to wait, what are we talking about today? Stand the Civil War and I can tell because Lincolns here, but this week we're not going to talk about casualty counts or battles or generals with their heroic and probably fictional dying declarations.

speaker01 00:14:00

Mr Green Mr Green, Wait, did that one guy not really say honey Bun? How do I look in the face? Because that was the best part of this whole class. Ye Stewart did say that me from the past, but it probably wasn't his last words.

speaker01 00:23:00

But anyway, today we're going to try to focus on what's really important. In the end, the really vital stuff isn't like Pickett's Charge or Lee saying it is. Well, that war is so terrible, otherwise we would grow too fond of it. Or the surrender at the Appomattox Courthouse. That stuff matters, and I don't want to deny it, but the Civil War and the way we remember it is still shaping the world today, and that's what I want to focus on because it's the stuff that might actually change the way you think about your own life in your own country, whether it's the United States or the green parts of North America.

speaker01 01:00:00

So let's start with one of the big questions historians still ask about the Civil War. Did Lincoln free the slaves? The answer, as with so much here on Crash Course, is yes and also no. Let's go straight to the Thought Bubble today.

speaker01 01:12:00

So Lincoln's reputation is the Great Emancipator rests largely on his Emancipation Proclamation, an executive order which went into effect on January 1, 1863. This order ostensibly freed all the slaves in territory currently rebelling against the United States, that is, in areas where the us government had no authority to free slaves. This is rather like the United States announcing that from here on out North Korea will be ruled by Lady Gaga. Sure, it's a great idea, but it's not really your jurisdiction in areas where the U did have the authority to free slaves, the border states in some of the areas of the Confederacy that had been effectively conquered and occupied by federal troops, those slaves were not freed. So Lincoln didn't free the slaves that he actually had the power to free.

speaker01 01:55:00

Many historians argue that, in fact, slaves freed themselves how? By running away to U lines and becoming, quote, contrabands because this was a time of war and slaves were seen as a valuable resource to the enemy when they escaped and sought refuge with Union troops, union commanders wouldn't give them back, despite fugitive slave laws still being on the books, many slaves escaped. The argument goes that Lincoln was basically forced to issue the Emancipation Proclamation because until he did so, those contraband slaves were still technically property of their Southern masters, and the Union generals were breaking American laws by not returning. The Emancipation Proclamation then had the added bonus of encouraging more slaves to come over to the Union lines, many of whom joined the Army, which eventually included about 180000 former slaves and free black man banks, thought Bubble. So Lincoln may also have issued the proclamation of in order to shift the focus of the war from Union to slavery to prevent the British from recognizing the Confederacy, arguably the Confederacy's best chance to win the Civil War was to get some kind of foreign patron, and Britain was the likeliest choice, as it was very dependent on Confederate textiles. But as you'll remember from all those people going Canada, Britain had already abolished slavery, and it was the historic source of abolitionist sentiment. And so it was very shrewd of Lincoln to make the war about slavery off topic, but if I may put on my world historian hat for a moment, thank you, Stan. The fact that the British did not recognize the South had profound effects on the whole world because it meant that the British shifted their focus to Egypt and India as sources of cotton for their textile mills.

speaker01 03:22:00

All that noted, I think Lincoln does deserve some credit for freeing the slaves for two reasons. First, he pushed for the 13th Amendment, which actually ended slavery in the United States. And perhaps more importantly, he continued the war to its conclusion and demanded that the end of slavery and the return of the Southern States to the Union be conditions for peace. This may seem obvious today, but in 1864 it wasn't. In fact, there were numerous calls in the North for an end to the war that would allow the South to exist as a separate country and leave slavery intact. Now, of course, the rest of world history indicates that at some point slavery would have ended. But by prosecuting the war to its end, Lincoln brought about slavery's end sooner.

speaker01 03:57:00

But the Civil War didn't just end slavery If it had gone differently, me from the past might have been annoying teachers in a different country from the one in which I now live. I might have needed a passport to visit my parents in North Carolina, and slavery might have survived for decades. Brazil didn't fully abolish slavery until 18800 and eighty-eighth would be covered in green as part of not America or the North, depending on where you're watching this video, I guess.

speaker01 04:19:00

And the people who lived through the Civil War knew it was momentous. And his famous Gettysburg Address, Abraham Lincoln, fostered the idea that the Civil War was a kind of second American Revolution, or at least a culmination and reaffirmation of the first one from these honored dead, we take increased devotion to that cause for which they gave the last full measure of devotion that we here highly resolve, that these dead shall not have died in vain, that this nation under God shall have a new birth of freedom, and that government of the people by the people, for the people shall not perish from the we tried to hire Daniel Da Lewis for that, but he was unavailable that phrase. New birth of freedom had religious significance as well, because it was like the 19 century equivalent to born again, so the civil war was the first modern war in terms of its scale, and its destruction, like others have waged war on civilians to break the spirit of their enemies stand mogot to opportunity, but new technologies made this one of the most destructive wars yet recorded.

speaker01 05:17:00

And yes, I know the Taiping Rebellion took more lives and in terms of percentage of population killed, the contemporaneous war in Paraguay was worth, but bear with me rifles and toward the end of the Civil War machine guns shifted the way that people fight it became easier to defend a line. So cavalry charges and huge waves of attacks started to be just slaughtering, although it would take World War 1 for the rest of the world to figure that out and the incredible numbers of dead and wounded really changed Americans relationship with death itself, like the Gettysburg Address was given to dedicate a new national cemetery and the Civil War helped to create a culture of meditation on mortality itself that led to cemeteries replacing churchyards as the final resting places for most Americans, the of slaughter and the sheer weight of it had profound existential effects on a generation of American intellectuals From Walt Whitman to Oliver Wendell Holmes, it's time for the mystery document.

speaker01 06:07:00

The rules here are simple, I guess, the mystery document. And usually I am shocked. Oh my gosh, today's mystery document is on an ipad.

speaker01 06:13:00

This appears to be a photograph of wounded soldiers in hospital. I'm going to go ahead and call it as being by Matthew Brady, what I already got it, but I to say the name, oh, it's called Wounded Soldiers in Hospital. Thank you for an easy one Stan.

speaker01 06:25:00

So Matthew Brady was a prolific photographer during the Civil War, although like a lot of prolific people, he often took credit for work done by his employees and Brady really changed the way that people thought about war. He and his staff created some 10000 images during the Civil War, and it was the first time that an event had been photographically documented so thoroughly. By the way, lest you think that the unreliability of images began with Photoshop, many of Brady's photographs were staged. He would move bodies. Sometimes. Soldiers were apparently told to act dead, but of course, at the time, photographs felt inherently authentic and written accounts of battles could now be accompanied by actual images of fighting in its aftermath.

speaker01 07:01:00

But perhaps the most important impact of the Civil War was the new nation that it created, like the American Civil War, fits right in with the global phenomenon of nation building that was happening. Soon we would have places on the map like Italy and Germany, and places like Greece would be reborn as nation states states-spain. All of these places would be known to Americans as not America. But by the way, congratulations to Italy on their recent election of their 730 second Nd Prime Minister in just 180 years of existing by far the most successful of these new nation states were the ones that embraced industrialization and modern ideas of organization and centralized government.

speaker01 07:35:00

Northern victory in the Civil War meant that the United States would follow the path that the North had laid down. It would become an industrial rather than agrarian nation with a national government preeminent over those of individual states, it would become a nation, and it's not a coincidence that over the course of the 19th century, people stopped pluralizing the United States. They stopped saying the United States are a great place to live and began saying the United States is a great place to live.

speaker01 08:00:00

The Civil War helped singularize what had been until then a plural nation, and Abraham Lincoln was the first president to truly expand the power of the executive. He ordered blockades and suspended habeas corpus in addition to emancipating the slaves. But the Republican dominated.

speaker01 08:14:00

Congress played a role in this federalization to Congress, passed the Homestead Act in 1862 that encouraged settlement of the West by basically giving away land to anyone who had 18 and was willing to lose, live on it, and farm it for five years. Meanwhile, the Moral Land Grant Act financed colleges to offer training and new scientific agricultural techniques. The Department of Agriculture was created to generate statistics and share best practices in farming. Congress also helped unify the country with land grants.

speaker01 08:40:00

In the Pacific Railway Act of 1862 and during the war, the Lincoln administration gave away 158 million acres to railroads to tie the nation together, get it, tie railroad ties the nation to get. I'll take my coat and go.

speaker01 08:54:00

Plus, as you may have noticed, wars are expensive, and in order to finance the Civil War Congress passed the first progressive in tax in American history, as well as floating huge bond issues to the public. And when that wasn't enough, the administration began printing federal money on green paper called greenbacks. These, along with notes issued by banks under the National Bank Act of 18 863, became the first national currency currency in the United States. Altogether, the total cost of the war for the union was $6.7 billion. Interestingly, if in 1860, the federal government had purchased every slave and granted a 40 acre farm to each family, the total would have been $3.1 billion. But a it would have been hard to get that bill through Congress. And B, at the time, the federal government had no way to raise that kind of money.

speaker01 09:36:00

The federal government also actively promoted the industrial economy that was to become dominant in the United States after war. In fact, industrialization was so healthy that visitors to cities in the North during the Civil War would have been hard pressed to notice that they were even in a war. So ultimately, the Civil War was a victory for Alexander Hamilton's federalist vision of what America should be.

speaker01 09:55:00

Thomas jeffer could never have imagined the United States that emerged from the Civil War. A government that supported an army of a million men carried a $2.5 billion national debt, distributed public lands, printed a national currency, and collected an array of internal taxes. It sounds like Britain. So the Civil War wasn't just a victory over north, over south, or of freedom over slavery. It created the nation that the United States of America has become.

speaker01 10:20:00

Thanks for watching I'll see you next week.

speaker01 10:21:00

Crash Course is produced and directed by Stan Mueller, our script supervisor is Meredith Danko Too far? Our associate producer is Dan Johnson. The show is written by my high school history teacher Raul Meier and myself and our graphics team is Thought Cafe. Every week there's a new caption for the Libertine. You can suggest some in comments where you can also ask questions about today's video that will be answered by our team of historians. Thank you for watching, and as we say in my hometown, don't forget to be awesome.