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- This Week in the American Civil War: May 13-19, 1863
- Lieutenant General Thomas J. “Stonewall” Jackson (1824-1863) C.S.A.
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- A photo taken 150 years ago of a runaway slave changed the way Americans saw the Civil War
- On This Date in Civil War History: May 1-3, 1863 – The Battle of Chancellorsville
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Tag Archives: Washington DC
This Week in the American Civil War: January 7-13, 1863
Information courtesy of the Minnesota Civil War Commemoration Task Force (www.mncivilwar150.com and “Minnesota Civil War 150” on Facebook) Major Highlights for the Week Wednesday January 7, 1863 Confederates captured Ozark, Missouri and moved onto Springfield. A group of 450 … Continue reading
Posted in 1863, This Week in the Civil War
Tagged 1863, Abraham Lincoln, Alexander McCook, Ambrose Burnside, Arkansas, Arkansas Post, Arkansas River, Army of the Cumberland, Army of the Potomac, Caleb Smith, Clarendon, Cumberland River, David Dixon Porter, Department of the East, Des Arc, DeValls Bluff, Emancipation Proclamation, Fairfax Court House, First Confederate Congress, Florida, foreign relations, Fort Hindman, Fourteenth Corps, George H. Thomas, Harpeth Shoals, Helena, Henry W. Halleck, Indiana, January, Jefferson Davis, John A. McClernand, John E. Wool, John P. Usher, Joseph Wheeler, Knob Creek, Lick Creek, Minnesota Civil War Commemoration Task Force, Mississippi River, Missouri, Ozark, Republican Party, Richmond, Richmond Enquirer, Ripley, salt works, Secretary of the Interior, South Carolina, Springfield, St. Charles, St. Joseph's, State of the Confederacy, T.J. Churchill, Tennessee, Thomas L. Crittenden, Thomas Wentworth Higginson, Twentieth Corps, Twenty-First Corps, U.S. Senate, U.S.S. Ethan Allen, U.S.S. Sidell, Virginia, Washington DC, White River, William S. Rosecrans, XIV Corps, XX Corps, XXI Corps
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This Week in the American Civil War: December 24-30, 1862
Information courtesy of the Minnesota Civil War Commemoration Task Force (www.mncivilwar150.com and “Minnesota Civil War 150” on Facebook) Major Highlights for the Week Wednesday December 24, 1862 Union army forces occupied Galveston, Texas, already partially in control of the … Continue reading
Posted in 1862, This Week in the Civil War
Tagged 1862, Abraham Lincoln, Ambrose Burnside, Arkansas, Army of the Frontier, Army of the Potomac, Bacon Creek, Bear Wallow, Bolivar, Braxton Bragg, Brentwood, C.S.S. Merrimack, Cape Hattaras, Charles Town, Chickasaw Bayou, Christmas, Dakota Indians, December, Dripping Springs, Edmonson Pike, Emancipation Proclamation, Franklin, Fredericksburg, Galveston, Glasgow, Green's Chapel, Haynes's Bluff, James G. Blunt, Jefferson Pike, John C. Pemberton, John Hunt Morgan, Kentucky, Knob Gap, La Vergne, largest mass execution in American history, Maldraugh's Hill, Mankato, Martinsburg, Mary Todd Lincoln, Memphis, Middleburg, Milliken's Bend, Minnesota, Minnesota Civil War Commemoration Task Force, Mississippi, Mississippi River, Murfreesboro, Murfreesboro Pike, Nashville, Nolensville, Nolin, North Carolina, Prim's Blacksmith Shop, Ripley, Sioux Uprising, Snyder's Mill, Steele's Bayou, Stewart's Creek Bridge, Tennessee, Texas. U.S. Navy, Triune, U.S.-Dakota War, U.S.S. Monitor, U.S.S. Rhode Island, Van Buren, Vicksburg, Virginia, Walnut Hills, Warrenton, Washington DC, William S. Rosecrans, William T. Sherman, Wilson Creek Pike, wounded, Yazoo River
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This Week in the Civil War: April 16-22, 1862
Information courtesy of the Minnesota Civil War Commemoration Task Force Major Highlights for the week Wednesday April 16, 1862 Confederate President Jefferson Davis approved an act of the Confederate Congress calling for the conscription of every white … Continue reading
Posted in 1862, This Week in the Civil War
Tagged 1862, abolition, Abraham Lincoln, April 16-22, Arkansas, Arkansas Bay, Benjamin F. Butler, Confederate Congress, conscription, David Glasgow Farragut, District of Columbia, druggists, Edisto Island, educators, Edwin Stanton, Falmouth, ferrymen, foundries, Fredericksburg, George B. McClellan, government officials, Henry W. Halleck, hospital employees, iron mines, Irvin McDowell, Jefferson Davis, Joseph E. Johnston, Louisiana, ministers, Minnesota Civil War Commemoration Task Force, Mississippi, Mississippi River, New Orleans, North Carolina, Pittsburg Landing, Pocahontas, printers, riverboat pilots, Salmon Chase, Ship Island, Slavery, South Carolina, South Mills, Talbot's Ferry, telegraph operators, Tennessee, Texas, This Week in the Civil War, Trent Road, U.S.S. Itasca, U.S.S. Pinola, Virginia, Washington DC, Yorktown
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This Week in the American Civil War – March 26- April 1, 1862
Information courtesy of the Minnesota Civil War Commemoration Task Force Major Highlights for the week Wednesday March 26, 1862 The Confederate campaign in New Mexico was nearing its climax. A Confederate column marched out on the Santa Fe Trail and … Continue reading
Posted in 1862, This Week in the Civil War
Tagged Abraham Lincoln, Alabama, Albert Sidney Johnston, Alexandria, Apache Canyon, Army of Central Kentucky, Brackett's Battalion, Braxton Bragg, Chickasaw, Clinton, Dakota Territory, David Hunter, Department of the South, Eastport, Edenburg, Fort Abercrombie, Fort Henry, Fort Monroe, Fort Ridgely, Fort Ripley, Fort Snelling, George B. McClellan, George Bibb Crittenden, George W. Morgan, Georgia, Glorieta Pass, Henry Hopkins Sibley, Hilton Head, Hiram Berdan, Island No. 10, J.M. Chivington, John B. Magruder, John C. Fremont, John P. Slough, John Porter McCown, Johnson's Ranch, Joseph E. Johnston, Kentucky, Leonidas Polk, Louis Blenker, Minnesota, Minnesota Civil War Commemoration Task Force, Missouri, Mountain Department, Nashville, New Madrid, New Mexico Territory, P.G.T. Beauregard, Peninsula Campaign, Pigeon's Ranch, Pittsburg Landing, Richmond, Santa Fe, Savannah, Second Baptist Church Battery, Shenandoah Valley, South Carolina, St. Louis, Strausburg, Tennessee, Thomas J. Jackson, Union City, Virginia, W.R. Scurry, Washington DC, Whitemarsh Island, William J. Hardee, William Rosecrans, William W. Mackall, Wilmington Island, Woodstock
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This Week in the American Civil War – March 19-25, 1862 (150 years ago)
Courtesy of the Minnesota Civil War Commemoration Task Force Major Highlights for the week Wednesday March 19, 1862 It was a light day today. The only action was a skirmish at Elk Mountain, in western Virginia, and Strasburg, Va. The … Continue reading
Posted in 1862, This Week in the Civil War
Tagged 1862, 1st United States Sharpshooters Company I, 2nd Independent Battery of Minnesota Light Artillery, 2nd Minnesota Volunteer Infantry, 5th Minnesota Infantry, Agnew's Ferry, Albert Sidney Johnston, Alexandria, Battle of Kernstown, Beaufort, Benjamin Butler, Bolivar Heights, Brackett's Battalion, Brigadier General James Shields, cavalry, Colonel Ashby Turner, compensated emancipation, Confederate, Corinth, Dakota Territory, Day-Book, Department of the Gulf, Federal, Fort Abercrombie, Fort Henry, Fort Macon, Fort Ridgely, Fort Ripley, John G. Parke, Little Santa Fe, Louisville & Nashville Railroad, Major General John Dix, Manchester, McMinnville, Middle Military Department, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Moniteau County, Mount Jackson, Murfreesboro, Norfolk, North Carolina, Pittsburg Landing, Post Oak Creek, Savannah, Senator James Shields, Shelbyville, Ship Island, St. Paul, Tennessee, Thomas J. Jackson, Tullahoma, Virginia, Washington DC, Winchester
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