Chronology - Events of the Civil War

 1849 – Gold discovered in California

1850 – Compromise of 1850: California remains slaveless but the Fugitive Slave Law is enforced. Texas and New Mexico are slave states
Democrats kept the South’s interpretation of the Constitution secure
1852 – Franklin Pierce – Democrat president elected; Jefferson Davis is his secretary of War; Whigs wane
1854 – Kansas-Nebraksa Act (Kansas becoming a slave state infringes the Missouri Compromise)
1856 – Bleeding Kansas: sack of Lawrence and consequent retaliation of John Brown
1856 – Elections with the new Republican party but Democrat James Buchanan wins
1858 – Senatorial election in Illinois. Lincoln against Douglas delivers the “House Divided Speech” in June 16
1859 – slave traffick increases. Besides slavery, there is economic friction, the South his against the high tariffs that Northerners want to pass; John Brown's execution.
November 1860: Abraham Lincoln elected president
20 Dec. 1860: South Carolina secedes
January- Feb. 1861 – Mississippi, Florida, Georgia, Alabama, Louisiana and Texas secede from the Union (Jefferson Davis will be president of the Confederacy)
April 1861 – Union Blockade and Battle of Fort Sumter in South Carolina. Virginia, Arkansas, North Carolina, and Tennessee secede from the Union. Civil War under way
1861-1862: key battles include  the First and Second Battles of Bull Run, The Battle of Shiloh, The Battle of Antietam, and the Battle of Fredericksburg. 
Jan. 1 1863: Emancipation Proclamation, 13th Amendment
July 1, 1863: Battle of Gettysburg; Gettysburg's address

Sep 2, 1864. General Sherman captures the city of Atlanta, Georgia. Later in the year he would march to the sea and capture Savannah, Ga
April 9, 1865General Robert E. Lee, the leader of the Confederate Army, surrenders to General Ulysses S. Grant 
March 4, 1865: Abraham Lincoln’s second inaugural address
April 14, 1865While attending the Ford's Theatre, President Lincoln is shot and killed by John Wilkes Booth. Andrew Johnson will assume the presidency until 1869
1865-1877: Reconstruction period

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