At the Battle of Gettysburg in 1863, the Confederate army suffered 28,000 casualties. This figure represents both wounded and killed soldiers.
gettysburg
a lot of soldiers died and they did not have a lot of soldiers for the civil war.... To be honest the battle of Gettysburg was not really that important... as many would have us believe.. If I had to say anything the biggest lose was due to the lose of Stonewall Jackson. Which was a great moral lose for the Confederate Army... StoneWall Jackson was a much better leader then Robert E.. Lee ever was...(opinion) but Robert E. Lee should of left Gettysburg... when Jackson advised him... it was clearly a lose cause and a lose of Men that the Confederate army could ill afford.... Plus... It seemed up to that point that the South may actually win.. Since, they had a few big wins... and many people in the North were tired of sending their boys to fight, die and lose.... Clearly, Lincoln needed a win so that he could give his Emancipation Proclamation speech... to do so before Gettysburg would of made it seem like , as one person stated, as a death howl before they lose..
haha do ur work
Thomas "Stonewall" Jackson, a Confederate general during the American Civil War, is primarily known for his successes rather than losses. However, he faced challenges at the Battle of Kernstown on March 23, 1862, which is considered a defeat as he was forced to retreat. Additionally, while he was not directly defeated at the Battle of Gettysburg, his absence due to injury significantly impacted the Confederate strategy, contributing to the overall loss of the campaign.
because they did
because they did
gettysburg
a lot of soldiers died and they did not have a lot of soldiers for the civil war.... To be honest the battle of Gettysburg was not really that important... as many would have us believe.. If I had to say anything the biggest lose was due to the lose of Stonewall Jackson. Which was a great moral lose for the Confederate Army... StoneWall Jackson was a much better leader then Robert E.. Lee ever was...(opinion) but Robert E. Lee should of left Gettysburg... when Jackson advised him... it was clearly a lose cause and a lose of Men that the Confederate army could ill afford.... Plus... It seemed up to that point that the South may actually win.. Since, they had a few big wins... and many people in the North were tired of sending their boys to fight, die and lose.... Clearly, Lincoln needed a win so that he could give his Emancipation Proclamation speech... to do so before Gettysburg would of made it seem like , as one person stated, as a death howl before they lose..
23,000 men.
it made the south lose the war
haha do ur work
Thomas "Stonewall" Jackson, a Confederate general during the American Civil War, is primarily known for his successes rather than losses. However, he faced challenges at the Battle of Kernstown on March 23, 1862, which is considered a defeat as he was forced to retreat. Additionally, while he was not directly defeated at the Battle of Gettysburg, his absence due to injury significantly impacted the Confederate strategy, contributing to the overall loss of the campaign.
www.historynet.com/battle-of-antietam-7th-maines-senseless-charge-on-the-piper-farm.htmtry this hope it helps
because they did
No one knows the exact numberbut I looked at some information and it says that there were 23,049 that died in the Union and over 28,000 that died in Confederates. I am pretty certain that the information above includes include ALL causalities .. .wounded, captured, missing, perished. The actual number who died appears to be significantly lower.
They lost because they eventually ran out of gunpowder and amo
It was due to an overload of the Confederacy's dwindling resources and a hard winter.