- Cactus Canyon Junior High School
- Articles
- Civil War Technology
Miller, Jason
-
My Home Page
- Industrial Revolution Timeline of Inventions
- Thematic Maps Pretest
- President Project
- Civics/Government Project
- Current Events Article Analysis Questions
- Contemporary United States Project
- Social Studies Compilation Project
- People, Events, & Places in History
- Bloom's Taxonomy Wheel
- Depth of Knowledge chart
- 2010 Arizona English Language Arts Literacy in History/Social Studies Standard s ( Common Core)
- Research-Based Project Rubric
- Rubric for Writing Assignments
- Geography Pre-Test/Post-Test: The World in Spatial Terms
- Geography Pre-Test/Post-Test: Places and Regions
- Geography Pre-Test/Post-Test: Human Systems
- Geography Pre-Test/Post-Test: Environment and Society
- Geography Test: Geographic Applications
- 100 Influential People
- Influential People Project
- Country Project outline (Geography)
- Curriculum Map (Geography Studies for Quarter 1)
- List of Countries A-Z
- Industrial Revolution Project
- Curriculum Map for Quarters 3 & 4
- Curriculum Map for Quarter 2
- Important Events in History Project
- Superstition Mountains (image)
- Primary source examples
- Revolutionary War Causes
- TEST: Causes of the Civil War
- Missouri Compromise Map
- Civil War Slideshow Outline
- Solar Eclipse 2015 graphic
- Superstition Mountain T-Chart pic
- Lesson Plan 9-17
- The Political Spectrum
- Study Skills Q1
- Today in Social Studies
- Government Systems
- Wrangel Island
- Singapore Standardized Test Answer
-
Articles
- Abraham Lincoln's Assassination Activity
- The Trillion Dollar Coin
- How the Rabbit got its Cotton-White Tail
- Waves of Trash in Indonesia
- Fifty Amazing Facts About Earth (Infographic)
- Mona Lisa's Skeleton
- The Immortal Henrietta Lacks
- London Crossrail Dig Unearths Big Discoveries
- Bill Gates on Education
- The Workplace of the Future
- Population Control Campaigns
- The Fate of Easter Island
- The Hyperloop
- Industrial Revolution's British Beginnings
- Thomas Edison
- The Gettysburg Address
- The Alamo
- Missouri Compromise of 1820
- Ellis Island
- John Brown's Harper's Ferry Raid
- The Great Depression & Hoovervilles
- Hoover Dam
- Trail of Tears
- Triangle Shirtwaist Fire 1911
- Andrew Carnegie
- Eli Whitney & the Cotton Gin
- The Model-T
- St. Valentine's Day Massacre
- Women's Suffrage Movement
- Harriet Tubman
- Slavery in America
- Fugitive Slave Act
- Robert E. Lee
- Ulysses S. Grant
- Emancipation Proclamation
- Abraham Lincoln
- John Wilkes Booth
- Confederate States of America
- Prohibition
- Civil War Technology
- Mexican-American War
- Mount Rushmore
- Pearl Harbor
- Area 51 Revealed
- Everest Maxed Out
- Wrangel Island
- Sky Caves of Nepal
- The City Solution
- Hothouse Earth
- Iceman Autopsy
- Reconstruction
- The Empathy Gap
- Reversing Negative Thoughts
- Scientists and Volunteers Track Trash in Ocean
- Denali, Ongtupqa and other Native American names for landmarks
- How much would you pay for the world's worst video game?
- Apparently, you shop like your parents
- Garbage collector creates library from rescued books
- Are summer jobs a thing of the past?
- Man provides tiny houses to homeless
- How mummies are made
- New York City wants to cut waste by 90 percent
- Raw Talent vs. Hard Work
- Whole Language Text with Encryption
- Technology and Privacy
- Can Dogs Detect Cancer?
- Hypotheses for the Perception of Time
- Dred Scott Decision
- 11 Traits of Likable People
- My Calendar
- My Links
- Assignments
- Practical Money Skills
- Grades and Achievement
- Spend Bill Gates' $
- Cold War in Pictures
- Life 50 Years Ago
- 25 Unwritten Rules you Should Follow but Don't
- Spend Jeff Bezos' $
Civil War Technology
-
From: History Channel
New Kinds of Weapons
Before the Civil War, infantry soldiers typically carried muskets that held just one bullet at a time. The range of these muskets was about 250 yards. However, a soldier trying to aim and shoot with any accuracy would have to stand much closer to his target, since the weapon’s “effective range” was only about 80 yards. Therefore, armies typically fought battles at a relatively close range.
Rifles, by contrast, had a much greater range than muskets did--a rifle could shoot a bullet up to 1,000 yards--and were more accurate. However, until the 1850s it was nearly impossible to use these guns in battle because, since a rifle’s bullet had roughly the same diameter as its barrel, they took too long to load. (Soldiers sometimes had to pound the bullet into the barrel with a mallet.)
In 1848, a French army officer named Claude Minié invented a cone-shaped lead bullet with a diameter smaller than that of the rifle barrel. Soldiers could load these “Minié balls” quickly, without the aid of ramrods or mallets. Rifles with Minié bullets were more accurate, and therefore deadlier, than muskets were, which forced infantries to change the way they fought: Even troops who were far from the line of fire had to protect themselves by building elaborate trenches and other fortifications.
"Repeaters"
Rifles with Minié bullets were easy and quick to load, but soldiers still had to pause and reload after each shot. This was inefficient and dangerous. By 1863, however, there was another option: so-called repeating rifles, or weapons that could fire more than one bullet before needing a reload. The most famous of these guns, the Spencer carbine, could fire seven shots in 30 seconds.
Like many other Civil War technologies, these weapons were available to Northern troops but not Southern ones: Southern factories had neither the equipment nor the know-how to produce them. “I think the Johnnys [Confederate soldiers] are getting rattled; they are afraid of our repeating rifles,” one Union soldier wrote. “They say we are not fair, that we have guns that we load up on Sunday and shoot all the rest of the week.”
Balloons and Submarines
Other newfangled weapons took to the air--for example, Union spies floated above Confederate encampments and battle lines in hydrogen-filled passenger balloons, sending reconnaissance information back to their commanders via telegraph--and to the sea. “Iron-clad” warships prowled up and down the coast, maintaining a Union blockade of Confederate ports.
For their part, Confederate sailors tried to sink these ironclads with submarines. The first of these, the Confederate C.S.S. Hunley, was a metal tube that was 40 feet long, 4 feet across, and held an 8-man crew. In 1864, the Hunley sank the Union blockade ship Housatonic off the coast of Charleston but was itself wrecked in the process.
The Railroad
More important than these advanced weapons were larger-scale technological innovations such as the railroad. Once again, the Union had the advantage. When the war began, there were 22,000 miles of railroad track in the North and just 9,000 in the South, and the North had almost all of the nation’s track and locomotive factories. Furthermore, Northern tracks tended to be “standard gauge,” which meant that any train car could ride on any track. Southern tracks, by contrast, were not standardized, so people and goods frequently had to switch cars as they traveled--an expensive and inefficient system.
Union officials used railroads to move troops and supplies from one place to another. They also used thousands of soldiers to keep tracks and trains safe from Confederate attack.
The Telegraph
Abraham Lincoln was the first president who was able to communicate on the spot with his officers on the battlefield. The White House telegraph office enabled him to monitor battlefield reports, lead real-time strategy meetings and deliver orders to his men. Here, as well, the Confederate army was at a disadvantage: They lacked the technological and industrial ability to conduct such a large-scale communication campaign.
In 1861, the Union Army established the U.S. Military Telegraph Corps, led by a young railroad man named Andrew Carnegie. The next year alone, the U.S.M.T.C. trained 1,200 operators, strung 4,000 miles of telegraph wire and sent more than a million messages to and from the battlefield.
Civil War Photography
The Civil War was the first war to be documented through the lens of a camera. However, the era’s photographic process was far too elaborate for candid pictures. Taking and developing photos using the so-called “wet-plate” process was a meticulous, multi-step procedure that required more than one “camera operator” and lots of chemicals and equipment. As a result, the images of the Civil War are not action snapshots: They are portraits and landscapes. It was not until the 20th century that photographers were able to take non-posed pictures on the battlefield.
Technological innovation had an enormous impact on the way people fought the Civil War and on the way they remember it. Many of these inventions have played important roles in military and civilian life ever since.