there are a selection of historians who're no longer "hicks and rednecks" who would tell a bigot such as you that the proximate motives of the Civil war were no longer as major because the underlying one which became economics. The imbalance between the agrarian Southern States and the commercial Northern States became as previous because the Republic and is meditated interior the variety of the U. S. structure. Many Southerners were searching for strategies to end the commercial organization of slavery which became no longer as usual as many believe. Even favourite Robert E. Lee hostile slavery. different topics extremely led to the outbreak of hostilities and triumphing social and political concept from that era made it extra uncomplicated for the final inhabitants to assign blame to slavery because the significant concern, truly than understand the complicated underlying motives. this isn't a lot different from those immediately who won't be able to discover Iraq on a map yet have very outspoken evaluations on it. you need to in all likelihood say no longer some thing to all and sundry interior the South about the Civil war as you look to have little understanding about it. Get some good historic previous books till now you spout off again.
2016-10-18 23:43:55
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answer #2
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answered by fernande 4
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No battle in Ohio, just the raid by Morgan others mentioned
However Ohio troops took part in nearly every battle of the war
as to hero's, depends on whose side you were on, but Grant and Sherman who basically won the war were both Ohioans
2007-06-22 07:06:10
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answer #3
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answered by rbenne 4
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One of the famous battles of Ohio was in fact a raid, it was known as 'Morgan's Ohio Raid'. Brigadier John H. Morgan, C.S.A. set out from Burkesville on the 2nd of July, 1863, on orders from General Braxton Bragg, to ride into Kentucky, to break up the railroad, attack General Rosecrans's detachments, and threaten Louisville, KY. To gain more time, Morgan wanted to extend his sweep beyond the Ohio, even though Bragg had not oredered this and did not give his consent to this.
Morgan crossed the Ohio, and on the 4th he attacked the 25th Michigan under Colonel Orlando H. Moore at a position guarding the Green River. On the 5th, Morgan defeated and captured the garrison of Lebanon, then kept marching to Brandenburg, on the Ohio, and arrived on the 9th. Morgan's raiders crossed the Ohio, was contested by a small force, but by midnight the whole command was on the Indiana shore.
Turning to the east, Morgan's raiders rode through Corydon, Salem, Vienna, Lexington, Paris, Vernon, Dupont, Sumansville, and Harrison, Ohio, burning bridges, impressing fresh horses, and pillaging freely. After passing through the suburbs of Cincinnati, Morgan's raiders reached the bank of the Ohio on the 18th of July, near Buffington's Bar and Blennerhasset's Island, where Morgan had planned to make his escape.
With pursuers coming from all directions, Morgan and his raiders eluded the net, with a loss of about 120 killed and 700 captured (of his 2,460 men). After nearly reaching the West Virginia shore, Morgan returned and made for Pennsylvania, but his pursuers closed in and he was captured and surrendered on July 26th, near Beaver Creek.
Morgan was confined at the State Penitentiary at Columbus Ohio, until November 26th, 1863 - when he made his escpape by tunneling. Morgan made another disastrous raid into Kentucky, where he was killed at Greeneville, TN, on the 4th of September, 1864.
2007-06-21 15:33:44
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answer #4
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answered by WMD 7
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I don't think there was much action in Ohio. I found a few sites that may help, though...
http://americancivilwar.com/statepic/oh.html
http://www.nps.gov/history/hps/abpp/battles/bystate.htm#oh
2007-06-21 15:02:25
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answer #5
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answered by BethS 6
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