



On March 9, in the first naval engagement between ironclad ships, the Monitor fought the Virginia to a draw, but not before the Virginia had sunk two wooden Union warships off Norfolk, Virginia.
General McClellan's troops left northern Virginia to beg in the Peninsular Campaign. By May 4th, they occupied Yorktown, Virginia. At Williamsburg, Confederate forces prevented McClellan from meeting the main part of the Confederate army, and McClellan halted his troops, awaiting reinforcements.
On July 1, a chance encounter between Union and Confederate forces began the Battle of Gettysburg. In the fighting that followed, Meade had greater numbers and better defensive postions. He won the battle, but failed to follow Lee as he retreated back to Virginia. Militarily, the Battle of Gettysburg was the high-water mark of the Confederacy; it is also significant because it ended Confederate hopes of formal recognition by foreign governments. On November 19, President Lincoln dedicated a portion of Gettysburg battlefield as a national cemetery, and delivered his memorable "Gettysburg Address."
General Sherman continued his march through Georgia to the sea. In the course of the march, he cut himself off from his source of supplies, planning for his troops to live off the land. His men cut a path 300 miles in length and 60 miles wide as they passed through Georgia, destroying factories, bridges, railroads, and public buildings.
| BATTLE | DATE | COMMANDER | STRENGTH | CASUALTIES | |
| Mill Springs | 1/19/1862 |
Crittenden Thomas | 6,000 4,000 |
533 262 | |
| Fort Donelson | 2/12/1862 | Floyd Grant | 21,000 27,000 |
2,832 | |
| Shiloh | 4/6/1862 | A.S. Johnston Grant |
40,000 63,000 |
10,694 13,047 | |
| Fair Oaks Seven Pines |
5/31/1862 | Joesph Johnston McClellan | 42,000 42,000 |
6,134 5,031 | |
| Seven Days | 5/31/1862 | Lee McClellan | 95,000 91,000 | 20,614 15,849 | |
| Second Manassas | 8/27/1862 | Lee Pope | 49,000 76,000 | 9,197 16,054 | |
| South Mountain | 9/14/1862 | D.H. Hill McClellan | 18,000 28,000 | 2,685 1,813 | |
| Antietam | 9/16/1862 | Lee McClellan | 52,000 75,000 | 13,724 12,410 | |
| Perryville | 10/8/1862 | Bragg Rosecrans | 16,000 37,000 | 3,396 4,211 | |
| Fredericksburg | 12/19/1862 | Lee Burnside | 72,000 114,000 | 5,309 12,653 | |
| Murfreesboro | 12/31/1863 | Bragg Rosecrans | 37,000 43,000 | 9,865 11,577 | |
| Chancellorsville | 5/1/1863 | Lee Hooker | 57,000 105,000 | 12,764 16,792 | |
| Champions Hill | 5/16/1863 | Pemberton Grant | 20,000 29,000 | 3,851 2,441 | |
| Vicksburg | 5/18/1863 | Pemberton Grant | 22,000 46,000 | 3,199 | |
| Tullahoma | 6/24/1863 | Bragg Rosecrans | 34,000 65,000 | 1,634 560 | |
| Gettysburg | 7/1/1863 | Lee Meade | 75,000 83,000 | 28,063 23,049 | |
| Chickamauga | 9/19/1863 | Bragg Rosecrans | 68,000 58,000 | 18,454 16,179 | |
| Chattanooga | 11/23/1863 | Bragg Grant | 46,000 56,000 | 6,667 5,824 | |
| Wilderness | 5/5/1864 | Lee Grant | 61,000 102,000 | 17,666 | |
| Spotsylvania | 5/12/1864 | Lee Hancock | 52,000 100,000 | 12,000 18,000 | |
| Cold Harbor | 6/1/1864 | Lee Grant | 62,000 108,000 | 2,500 12,000 | |
| Petersburg | 6/15/1864 | Beauregard Grant | 42,000 64,000 | 2,970 8,150 | |
| Peach Tree Creek | 7/20/1864 | Hood Thomas | 19,000 20,000 | 2,500 1,600 | |
| Atlanta Hoods Attack | 7/22/1864 | Hood Sherman | 37,000 30,000 | 8,000 3,722 | |
| Deep Bottom | 8/14/1864 | Lee Hancock | 20,000 28,000 | 2,901 | |
| Cedar Creek | 10/19/1864 | Early Sheridan | 18,000 31,000 | 2,910 5,665 | |
| Franklin | 11/30/1864 | Hood Schofield | 27,000 28,000 | 6,252 2,326 | |
| Nashville | 12/15/1864 | Hood Thomas | 23,000 50,000 | 3,061 | |
| Appomattox Campaign | 3/29/1865 | Lee Grant | 50,000 113,000 | 10,780 |
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