Vicksburg was the main river port on the Mississippi River that took in supplies from the western Confederacy, namely cattle from Texas and Arkansas. With the fall of the town these supplies were cut of from the eastern theaters. It also meant that the South would have to rely on sea ports on the Gulf of Mexico and transport supplies overland.
The loss of Vicksburg also meant that the Union controlled the Mississippi River which blocked reinforcements from the west aiding the rest of the Confederate armies.
The turning point was not a battle but a siege, the Siege of Vicksburg.
being the turning point of the civil war.
What was the result of the battle of Vicksburg
It is really the Siege of Vicksburg.
You probably mean the battle of Vicksburg, in the American Civil War. According to http://www.answers.com/topic/battle-of-vicksburg, the capture of Vicksburg marked the turning point of the war.
Actually, Vicksburg was the true turning point. Grant sealed off the Mississippi from the South, making it unusable to send reinforcements and supplies. Battle-oriented historians go for Gettysburg, but Vicksburg is the strategic turning point.
The actual turning point was the fall of Vicksburg at around the same time.
The Battle of Vicksburg was the last major action of the Vicksburg Campaign of the American Civil War. Grant's Union forces drove the Confederate forces into a defense of the city of Vicksburg, Mississippi. Two major assaults were held off, but the third siege, lasting 10 days, resulted in the Confederate's surrender. This action is considered to be one of the major turning points of the American Civil War.
The true turning point of the Civil War was the seizure of Vicksburg, but it was really the result of a siege.
It gave the Union control of the entire Mississippi Valley.
The surrender of Vicksburg closed the Mississippi to southern traffic, making the transportation of troops and supplies impossible.
It used to be considered so, but contemporary historians favor Vicksburg.