According to Historians, Leeâ??s reason for invading the North in September 1862 was based on strategic, logistical and political factors. Lee wanted to surprise the Union army specifically in Washington D.C. and Pennsylvania because he believed McClellan and his Union army were weak. Leeâ??s decision was a show of force and wit against the Union army.
To assert the credibility of the Confederate States as a nation strong enough to carry the war into the enemy camp and win.
This would encourage Britain and France to grant recognition to the Confederacy and send military aid.
Robert E. Lee decided to invade the North because of 4 reasons.
1. He needed to feed his troops with the Union food
2. To prove that they can win battles and get European allies
3. To lure out the Federal army and destroy it
4. To make the northern public tired of the war
He wanted to have an offensive victory in the Civil War. The Confederacy was not as established politically or economically as the Union was at the time. The South was hoping for foreign aid, especially from Great Britain. If Lee won a victory on "foreign soil," he would prove that the Confederacy was capable of winning the Civil War against the Union. Lee knew an offensive victory would also boost Confederate morale and weaken Union morale. People in the Union would blame Lincoln for the war and the Union would begin to collapse internally. The border states, four states that Lincoln wanted to keep in the Union at all costs, may also have seceded if Lee had a victory on Union soil.
Because he failed to crack the side of the General Meade's Union line.
Robert e. Lee
Lee was hoping to take pressure off of the siege of Vicksburg, hoping the North would recall troops from the West to counter his threat. He also hoped that by putting pressure on the North, he could show that the South was still robust and not ready to collapse, as some in the North hoped. He wanted to force Washington to sue for peace under military threat, and he wanted to take some of the strain off of Virginia, which had borne the brunt of the fighting in the Eastern Theater of Operations since 1861. By capturing provisions, he also hoped to supplement his meager material resources.
There were many different Generals in the Civil War, but Lincoln hired all of the generals for the North who was the Union and the South who was the Confederates was mostly general Robert E. Lee. Douglas was the president of the South since the south wanted to break away from the union.
He was a general in the Civil war. * Robert Evans Lee was the son of General "Lighthorse" Harry Lee * Robert E. Lee graduated 2nd in his class (and 1st in artillery and tactics) from West Point in 1829 * Robert E. Lee was an engineering officer in the Mexican War along with other US officers who later became US or CS generals. * Colonel Robert E. Lee commanded the US Marines from Washington DC who recaptured Harper's Ferry from John Brown. * Winfield Scott wanted Lee as a general of the North, and Lee would have done it if his home state of Virginia had not gone with the South. * Lee was somewhat unknown in the Civil War until his victory at Second Manassass (known as Second Bull Run in the North). * Lee made the calls at Gettysburg, one of the two decisive battles, and he lost. * Lee surrendered the South to General Grant. All other Confederate armies had been destroyed except for Lee's, and he surrendered to avoid more killing.
North: General Ulysses S. Grant South: General Robert E. Lee
Lee for the south and Grant for the north. The north wanted Lee but he said that he can't raise a sword to his fallow Virgina because that was the state he was born in.
Meade turned back Lee's last invasion of the North. Although the true strategic turning point was Vicksburg.
He wanted to invade the north for four reasons. 1. to feed his troops with the north's food 2. to prove they can win battles to get European allies 3. to lure out the Federal army and destroy it and 4. to make the northern public tire of the war
He was the commander for the Confederate States (south) after leaving the North. He surrendered to the Union (north) to end the Civil War. Abriham Lincon wanted Robert E. Lee for the commander for the Union, but he went to the South because he was born in Virginia.
It was Robert E Lee. Lincoln wanted him to be the general for the north but he slipped away and ended up in the south.
During the American Civil War, the North (Union) wanted to preserve the unity of the United States by defeating the Confederacy and ending slavery. They sought to maintain a strong central government and prevent the secession of Southern states.
General Lee was well aware of the numerical superiority of the Union forces. For the most part, Lee wanted to avoid major battles with the North. Lee made exceptions to this at times, and did use offensive strategies. Lee's goal however, was not to "conquer the North" but to prolong the war as long as possible. This was the Confederate goal for independence. Develop public opinion in the North to tire of the war, and settle for the succession of the South.
the general for the north(Union, U.S.A) is Robert E. Lee
No. North wanted to end slavery and south wanted slavery
the Antietam battle was caused because the north wanted revenge on the south
During Lee's invasion of the North, Lee needed to find shoes for his poorly shod army. He heard here was a warehouse in Gettysburg and detoured to there. Upon hearing that his troops had made contact with Lee there, Meade determined to take up a strong defensive position across Lee's path that would force Lee to attack him or abandon the invasion. As an aside, Lee was initially glad that Meade had replaced Pope. He believed there would be confusion with the Army of the Potomac.
President Abraham Lincoln, wanted Robert E. Lee to command the Union army. Lee was one of the greatest military men in the United States, and was admired by people in both the North and the South. However, Lee could not accept Lincoln's offer. Born and raised in the state of Virginia, Lee just couldn't bring himself to fight the place he considered his home. Robert E. Lee never wanted war. But, he knew he had to do what he could to help the South.