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Only one day after their victory at Gettysburg, Union forces captured Vicksburg, the last Confederate stronghold on the Mississippi River. Lincoln and Union commanders began to make plans for finishing the war.
The Union strategy to win the war did not emerge all at once. By 1863, however, the Northern military plan consisted of five major goals:
- Fully blockade all Southern coasts. This strategy, known as the Anaconda Plan, would eliminate the possibility of Confederate help from abroad.
- Control the Mississippi River. The river was the South's major inland waterway. Also, Northern control of the rivers would separate Texas, Louisiana, and Arkansas from the other Confederate states.
- Capture Richmond. Without its capital, the Confederacy's command lines would be disrupted.
- Shatter Southern civilian morale by capturing and destroying Atlanta, Savannah, and the heart of Southern secession, South Carolina.
- Use the numerical advantage of Northern troops to engage the enemy everywhere to break the spirits of the Confederate Army.
"Northern Plans to End the War" by ushistory.org by the U.S. History Online Textbook. Available under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International.
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