- Loading
Muskets and Memories
Categories
- 1861
- 1862
- 1863
- 1864
- 1865
- African-American
- Architecture
- Artillery
- Assassination
- Battlefield Preservation
- Battles
- Biography
- Birthday
- Books
- Booth
- Casualties
- Causes
- Cemeteries
- Chinese
- Civilians
- Commemoration
- Diary
- Documents
- Education
- Events
- Film
- Flag
- Frederick Aiken
- Gettysburg
- Graves
- Journal
- Letters
- Letters to the Editor
- Lincoln
- Literature
- Marine Corps
- Maryland
- Medicine
- Miscellaneous
- Museums
- Music
- National Archives
- Navy
- News
- Obituaries
- Original Photos
- Poll
- Quantrill
- Railroad
- Reenactment
- Regiments
- Roster
- Slavery
- Spy
- Sultana
- Surratt
- Technology
- This Date in Civil War History
- This Week in the Civil War
- Trail of Blood on Ice
- Trans-Mississippi
- Uncategorized
Top Posts & Pages
- 2013-2015 Civil War Reenactment Calendar
- Frederick A. Aiken Biography
- On This Date in Civil War History: May 1-3, 1863 - The Battle of Chancellorsville
- On this date in Civil War history – Lee Surrenders at Appomattox Court House – April 9, 1865
- On this date in Civil War history: Battle of Falling Waters - July 14, 1863
- Quotes regarding the 14th Brooklyn N.Y.S.M. during the Civil War
- The bridge that saved an Army: The ‘Grapevine Bridge’ and the Battle of Fair Oaks
- The Lincoln Assassination: New research unravels old myths
- Major General Patrick Ronayne Cleburne, CSA (1828-1864)
- The Monitor, the Merrimack and… U.S.S. Minnesota?
Tag Archives: Andrew Jackson Smith
On this date in Civil War history: April 9, 1864 - Battle of Pleasant Hill
Easy Plugin for AdSense by Unreal Pleasant Hill was the last major battle of the Red River campaign of 1864. Persistent if not talented, Union Major General Nathaniel P. Banks still held onto his scheme to take Shreveport, Louisiana, despite … Continue reading
Posted in 1864, This Date in Civil War History
Tagged 1864, Alexandria, Andrew Jackson Smith, April, Camille de Polignac, David D. Porter, Grand Ecore, Hamilton P. Bee, Horace Randal, J.A. Mower, James C. Tappan, James Major, Jeff Kinard, John G. Walker, Joseph Brent, Lewis Benedict, Louisiana, Mansfield, Mosby M. Parsons, Muskets and Memories, Nathaniel P. Banks, Pleasant Hill, Red River Campaign, Red River Expeditionary Force, Richard Taylor, Sabine Road, Shreveport, Thomas Green, Thomas J. Churchill, Thomas Kilby Smith, William H. Emory, William T. Shaw, XVI Corps, XVII Corps
Leave a comment
This Week in the American Civil War: March 9-15, 1864
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 March 9, 1864 The President of the United States, Abraham Lincoln, in the presence of … Continue reading
Posted in 1864, This Week in the Civil War
Tagged 1864, Abraham Lincoln, Alabama, Alexandria, Andrew Jackson Smith, Arkansas, Army of the Potomac, Army of the Tennessee, Benjamin F. Kelley, Bent Creek, Bull's Gap, Carrollton, Charles Town, Cheek's Cross Roads, Clarendon, Clinton, Clysville, Department of the Arkansas, Department of the Cumberland, Department of the Ohio, Department of the Tennessee, Department of West Virginia, Division of the Mississippi, Flat Creek, Fort De Russy, Fort Sumter, Franz Sigel, George G. Meade, Henry W. Halleck, Hopefield, J.B. McPherson, Jefferson Davis, Jones County, Kabletown, Kentucky, lieutenant general, Los Patricios, Louisiana, March, Marksville Prairie, Mayfield, Michael Hahn, Minnesota Civil War Commemoration Task Force, Mississippi, Mississippi River, Nathaniel Banks, New Orleans, Red River, Red River Campaign, Simsport, Spring Hill, Tennessee, Texas, U.S. Navy, Ulysses S. Grant, Virginia, Washington D.C., West Virginia, White House, William T. Sherman
Leave a comment
Wisconsin Civil War hero could get Medal of Honor
by Richard Simon, Los Angeles Times WASHINGTON — Alonzo H. Cushing is close to receiving the Medal of Honor, almost 150 years after his heroic actions at the Civil War battle at Gettysburg. A little-noticed provision of a House-approved defense … Continue reading
Posted in Artillery, Gettysburg
Tagged 4th U.S. Artillery, Alonzo Cushing, Andrew Jackson Smith, Bill Clinton, Congressional Medal of Honor Society, Delafield, Frederick Fuger, Gettysburg, Gettysburg National Military Park, Herb Kohl, James Sensenbrenner, John Heiser, John McHugh, La Crosse, Margaret Zerwekh, Medal of Honor, Menomonee Falls, National Park Service, Pickett's Charge, poshumously, Ron Kind, Theodore Roosevelt, William Proxmire, Wisconsin
Leave a comment