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How did the strategies of the Union and Confederacy differ during the Civil War? In your response, be sure to include the tactical and technological innovations as well as the impact the strategies had on the outcome of the war.

Sagot :

Records indicate that the Union initially sought to reunite the country, but with the Emancipation Proclamation of 1863, the Union's purpose shifted to include the abolition of slavery. Throughout the conflict, the

Confederacy had the same goal: to integrate all slave states, separate from the Union, survive, and protect its territory.

It worthy of note that Northern states (the Union) believed in a unified government free of slavery and founded on equal rights; on the other hand, Southern states (the Confederates) did not want to outlaw slavery and therefore openly seceded in 1861.

What was the name of the Confederate strategy?

The Anaconda Plan was the first Civil War plan created by General Winfield Scott of the United States Army to put down the Confederacy's insurrection in 1861.

Scott devised the strategy in early 1861, wanting it to terminate the revolt primarily via economic tactics.

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