Large cities
The liberation of the Mississippi. This isolated all Confederate units to the West of the river.
Missouri,Kentucky,Maryland, and Delaware. Nearly 500,000 slave in these four states were not protected under the Emancipation proclamation
A battle where Grant was caught napping by the Confederates, and his whole army nearly pushed into the Tennessee river. But they rallied next morning and drove the enemy off. This marked the end of Confederate ascendancy in Western Tennessee, and paved the way for Grant's liberation of the Mississippi Valley.
Sherman's March during the Civil War resulting in great devastation to the southern states. The first city hit was Atlanta, Georgia, that was nearly burned to the ground and ended in Savannah, Georgia with devastation in every city along the way.
Atlanta and Richmond were the two major confederate cities which were nearly burned to the ground late in the Civil War.
Many towns and cities were destroyed during the American Civil War, in addition to countless homes and farms. The two largest and most famous example of cities that were destroyed are Atlanta, Georgia and Columbia, South Carolina.
a group pardon for nearly all former confederate soldiers
By 1840 there were nearly 4 million slaves in the southern states. One of the major cities was New Orleans and Charleston had a huge slave market.
Bob nearly. Vice - Tim berlin .
Standard stucco appearing structures in the cities; wooden framed homes in the rural areas; nearly always built off the ground upon stilts, for times when it floods out there.
Andersonville, in Georgia.. However, there were northern prisons nearly as bad.
You cannot ask a Confederate any questions. Or rather, you can ask any question you like, but since the last Confederate soldier died of old age nearly 100 years ago, you wouldn't get much of an answer.
Probably. There are still racits in nearly every state, and Georgia was part of the confederate.
Large cities
nearly every ground Pokemon and ones that have claws.
If they had gone Confederate, it could have made enough difference to swing the course of the war. In particular, Washington would have been surrounded by a Confederate state in Maryland. (It nearly was.)