It took 30,000 Confederates out of the fight.
It liberated the Mississippi, denying its valuable use to anyone except Union forces.
It enabled Grant and Sherman to join the big campaign at Chattanooga.
The taking of Vicksburg, in conjunction with Admiral Farraguts actions cut off necessary agricultural exports from the South to Europe, making import of foreign weaonry impossible. Thseige at Vicksburg was a loss of a Southern Army under Braxton Bragg, the canmpaign starting point for Sherman's ravaging hordes to burn and piollage the South, and made possible industrail supplies from areas mear Pittsburgh and Wheeling to flow down the Ohio and Mississippi to augment and supply the Union armies of Grant, Sheridan , Sherman et al. Iron products fro the upper Ohio river were able to be distributed along the Ohio -Mississipi Rivers to augment union armies without impediment. The control of the Mississipi alos cut of supplies and re-inforcements to the Western Confedeerate States such as Arkansas, Missouri and Texas.
The siege of Vicksburg ended when the city surrendered on July 4, 1863. The major significance of its fall was that it was a Propaganda victory for the Union. A careful study of the facts concerning Vicksburg will indicate that it did no great harm to the Confederacy. In fact, its capture caused the Union to garrison the city when its troops could have been dealing with more important issues of the war.
gave union control of Richmond
IMPROVEMENT
The victory at Vicksburg and the following conquest of Port Hudson gave the Union the whole control of the River Mississippi.
Victory at Vicksburg secured control of the Mississippi Valley for the Union.
Vicksburg
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.
Take the city Vicksburg during the Civil War.
Vicksburg did. That's why Grant took it.
Do you mean which campaign was the turning-point of the American Civil War? It was the failure of Lee's invasion of Pennsylvania, ending at Gettysburg - on the same day that Grant took the surrender of Vicksburg on the Mississippi. After that, the North was bound to win - subject to Lincoln winning the Presidential Election of November 1864.
Vicksburg
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.
Vicksburg. It ended the war in the West andenabled Grant to go to the aid of the Army of the Cumberland in Chattanooga.
Grant's victory at Vicksburg, Mississippi was a turning point in the war.
Vicksburg was to valuable as a river port to destroy.
The real turning point of the Civil War was Grant's capture of Vicksburg, closing the Mississippi to Confederate control. It completed Phase Two of the Anaconda Plan, made Grant the prime candidate for overall Union command, and set the stage for Sherman's March to the Sea.
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 actual strategic turning point was Grant's capture of Vicksburg, closing the Mississippi to Southern traffic.
Take the city Vicksburg during the Civil War.
He employed a strategy known as a "siege" to capture the city of Vicksburg.
Though many historians see Gettysburg as the turning point, more recent scholarship sees Grant's seizure of Vicksburg, closing the Mississippi, as the actual strategic turning point, though less dramatic, and less costly in lives, and there was no Vicksburg Address to commemorate it.
When Grant was able to get his army across to the East bank of the Mississippi a few miles downstream from Vicksburg without the garrison commander noticing.