War Lee Grant
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War Lee Grant

Which side did Robert E. Lee and Ulysses S. Grant represent in the Civil war?
dont put any wrong answers please.
Robert E. Lee commanded the Army of Northern Virginia for the Confederacy for most of the war.
U.S. Grant commanded the Union forces in the last years of the war.
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![]() | Battle of Appomattox Civil War Soldiers Playset BMC 1/32 54MM Lee Grant Toy | ![]() | ![]() | US $9.99 | 29d 2h 15m |
![]() | 8 CIVIL WAR U S ARMY & ARMY OF CONFEDERACY general robert e lee ulysses s grant | ![]() | ![]() | US $65.00 | 29d 2h 2m |
![]() | NEW**BMC Civil War Genls Lee & Grant Character figs wPainted TSSD Colors 1/32 | ![]() | ![]() | US $25.00 | 4d 4h 34m |
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| | The Meeting of Lee and Grant at Appomattox Court-House Ending the War Between the States $34.99 H.m. Paget The Meeting of Lee and Grant at Appomattox Court-House Ending the War Between the States - Giclee Print |
| | Lee Grant $7.99 Lee Grant - Photo |
| | Descandants Ulysses S. Grant III and Robert E. Lee IV Dedicating a Civil War Memorial $79.99 Descandants Ulysses S. Grant III and Robert E. Lee IV Dedicating a Civil War Memorial - Premium Photographic Print |
| | American Experience: Lee and Grant - Generals of the Civil War (DVD) $49.48 This film from the documentary series THE AMERICAN EXPERIENCE takes an in-depth look at the lives and careers of Ulysses S. Grant and Robert E. Lee, the two opposing generals who led the Northern and Southern forces respectively, in the American Civil War. |
| | Lee and Grant (DVD) $39.58 Produced with the assist of FORREST GUMP author Winston Groom, and originally screened on cable`s History Channel, this biographical documentary profiles the two most prominent figures in the U.S. Civil War Era after Abe Lincoln: confederacy leader: General Robert E. Lee (1807-70) and union leader General Ulysses S. Grant (1882-85). The program examines historical events on an immediate scale - looking at how each of the men, wielding godlike authority, made decisive decisions in individual battle - and a long-term one, with examinations of how those choices determined the course of history. |
| | Lee Grant - Airport '77 $7.99 Lee Grant - Airport '77 - Photo |
| | Lee & Grant Generals Of The Civil War $17.55 Rated: NASynopsis: NA |
| | Ulysses S. Grant $11.7 Rated: NRSynopsis: The greatest Union hero of the Civil War, General Ulysses S. Grant was a brilliant military strategist whose ruthlessness earned him the nickname "Unconditional Surrender." His victory at Vicksburg, which irrevocably changed the course of the war, won him the admiration of the North and the undying respect of Abraham Lincoln. Grant was a leader for whom thousands of Northern soldiers were willing to fight and die, and for whom thousands did. Perhaps most memorably, he was the general who took Lee's surrender at Appomattox, and the author of its generous terms for peace. The story of Grant's record in the White House is less triumphant. For two terms, as his presidency was rocked by scandal and economic depression, Grant struggled to define the meaning of the war he had fought so hard to win, and the Union he had fought to preserve. While not overlooking Grant's many failings, this film reappraises Grant's career, from his pre-Civil War days as a failed soldier haunted by rumors of drunkenness, to his last hours, when he raced to finish his war memoirs as he was dying of cancer. It argues that the 18th president was an honorable man, who tried to keep promises made to African Americans and who managed to keep the country together in the face of deep divisions. (English) |
| | War, Terrible War $18.8 Riveting, moving, and impossible to put down, War, Terrible War takes us into the heart of the Civil War, from the battle of Manassas to the battle of Gettysburg and on to the South`s surrender at Appomattox Court House. Follow the common soldiers in blue and gray as they endure long marches, freezing winter camps, and the bloodiest battles ever fought on American soil. Off the war fields, War, Terrible War captures the passion and commitment of abolitionists and slaveowners alike in their fiery debates throughout the land. With profiles of Abraham Lincoln, Robert E. Lee, Ulysses S. Grant, John Brown, Harriet Tubman, Jefferson Davis, soldiers on both sides, slave owners, abolitionists, average citizens, and others, War, Terrible War is the compelling story of a people affected by the horrors of war during this tragic and dramatic period in A History of US. |
| | Ulysses S. Grant Ulysses S. Grant $32.36 1925. The story of the life and events of U.S. Grant, beginning with his birth parentage and childhood, his education and as a West Point Cadet, falling in love, his exploits in Mexico, then a general of the army, his battles in the war between the North and South, the surrender of General Lee, the fall of the Confederacy, his election and eight years as President until his death. Author: Coombs, Lovell Binding Type: Paperback Number of Pages: 268 Publication Date: 2010/09/10 Language: English Dimensions: 6.00 x 9.02 x 0.56 inches |
| | Grant Comes East $33.95 [A]n exciting alternative history of the Civil War....Building on their strong first volume, Gingrich and Forstchen craft an original, dramatic and historically plausible'what if?' story. Character depictions--of Lincoln, Grant and Lee; of the soldiers who fight and die; and of the civilians who plot and panic--are vivid, detailed and insightful. This is one of the best novels of the Civil War to appear in recent years. |
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Grant-Lee Phillips - It Ain't The Same Old Cold War Harry (Live on KEXP)
How were Robert E. Lee, Abraham Lincoln, and Ulysses S. Grant significant in the Civil War?
this is for a school history project worth a test grade and I am toootally at a loss, I would really love some help.
That covers alot of territory, R.E.Lee was the main General of the Confederate Army, as he was the US Army before the Civil War, Lincoln had asked him to head the US Army. but he had took an Oath when graduating from West Point, before the Civil War, the Oath was to protect your native state, later, after the wart stared, it was changed to protect the USA, but this Oath did not allow Lee to draw his sword against Virginia and he said that," I cannot draw my sword against my Native State of Virginia" --This is where things could have been alot different ,if Lee had taken the US command, the Civil War may have only lasted a couple of years , he may have gone on to become President , instead of Grant, but his honor prevented all this, Lee's secret weapon was a general called Stonewall Jackson, his tactic's was simple , attack the enemy at it weakest point and once you have them on the run, stay on their heals, never allow them time to regroup--this tactic has been used by several since then, it was very similar to Hitler's Blitzkrieg or "Blitz"
Grant had been a failure at everything he attempted, he had a drinking problem, he used slaves that belonged to his father -in-law to farm, his wife owned 4 slaves, but they failed at this farm venture too, these failures amy have motivated him to become successful as a general in the US Army, he was not a great general, but he would hang onto the enemy like a bulldog, he lost nearly 60,000 men in a matter of weeks, fighting R.E.Lee, but he keep moving and fighting replacing lost troops and staying on Lee's Army, he would not retreat, like the former US generals did, this tenacity is what made him successful
Lincoln--well it's plenty available on him, you do not want my opinion of him******************************
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