- 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
- On this date in Civil War history: Battle of Falling Waters - July 14, 1863
- The Upper Peninsula in the Civil War
- Historical Inaccuracies in 'The Conspirator'
- Full Text of the Dedication of the Soldier's National Cemetery, Gettysburg, Pennsylvania - November 19, 1863
- Creek Indians in the American Civil War
- Frederick A. Aiken Biography
- Frederick Aiken The Attorney - Historians Weigh In
- Reenactment Calendar
- This Week in the American Civil War: November 30 – December 6, 1864
- This Week in the American Civil War: November 25-December 1, 1863
Tag Archives: Boston
This Week in the American Civil War: June 14-20, 1865
Easy Plugin for AdSense by Unreal 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 June 14, 1865 John Mitchell, editor of the Richmond Examiner newspaper … Continue reading
Posted in 1865, This Week in the Civil War
Tagged 11th Ohio Veteran Cavalry, 1865, Abraham Lincoln, Altoona, Andrew J. Hamilton, Andrew Johnson, Arkansas, Boston, Cairo, Camp Chase, Dakota Indians, Edwin Stanton, Fields Cook, Galveston, General Order Number 3, Georgia, Gordon Granger, Illinois, James Johnson, John Mitchell, John Wilson and Son, June, Juneteenth, M. Jeff Thompson, Massachusetts, Memphis, Minnesota Civil War Commemoration Task Force, Nebraska, New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Richmond, Richmond Examiner, Tennessee, Texas, The Presidents Words, Ulysses Grant, Virginia, West Point, White House
Leave a comment
This Week in the American Civil War: January 11-17, 1865
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 11, 1865 Meeting in St. Louis, the Constitutional Convention of Missouri adopted an ordinance abolishing … Continue reading
Posted in 1865, This Week in the Civil War
Tagged 1865, Abraham Lincoln, Adelbert Ames, Alfred H. Terry, Army of Tennessee, Beaufort, Beverly, Boston, Braxton Bragg, Cape Fear River, Confederate Senate, Constitutional Convention of Missouri, David Dixon Porter, Edward Everett, Fort Fisher, Francis Preston Blair Sr., Georgia, January, Jefferson Davis, John Bell Hood, Joseph E. Johnston, Marine Corps, Massachusetts, Minnesota Civil War Commemoration Task Force, Mississippi, Missouri, North Carolina, P.G.T. Beauregard, Pocotaligo, Richard Taylor, Richmond, Robert E. Lee, Savannah, South Carolina, St. Louis, Thomas Rosser, Tupelo, Virginia, West Virginia, William H.C. Whiting, William Lamb, William T. Sherman, Wilmington
Leave a comment
Exhibit looks at role of railroads in the Civil War
Originally Published Apr 20, 2012 22:20 By LARRY ALEXANDER - Lancaster Online By the time of his death in 1885, just 35 days shy of his 60th birthday, Anson Stager had served as the president of several powerful companies: Western … Continue reading
Posted in Gettysburg, Museums, Railroad
Tagged ammunition, Andrew J. Etman, Anson Stager, Antietam, Arkansas, Boston, Charlie Fox, Chicago Edison Company, Chicago Telephone Company, Culp's Hill, George G. Meade, Gettysburg, Governor, Harrisburg, Henry Fonda, John White Geary, Jubal Early, Lancaster, Maryland, McKay and Aldus, Mississippi River, Mount Wolf, Nathaniel McKay, New York, Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Railroad Museum of Pennsylvania, Second Division, Stager's code, Susquehanna River, Taneytown, telegraph, Ten Eyck Hilton Fonda, U.S. Army, U.S. Military Telegraph, Virginia, Washington D.C., Western Electric, wiretappers, XII Corps
Leave a comment
Frederick A. Aiken Biography
Sarah Olivia WESTON was born in West Randolph, Orange, Vermont. Educated at home, chiefly under private tuition. She continued her studies in Boston, devoting her attention principally to the classics and history, under the direction of several noted professors at Cambridge, she being the … Continue reading
Posted in 1865, Assassination, Booth, Frederick Aiken, Lincoln, Surratt
Tagged Abraham Lincoln, Boston, Burlington Sentinel, Edwin Stanton, Elliot Couses, Frederick Aiken, Frederick Argyle Aiken, Hardwick, Harvard University, John H. Eaton, Judge Edmund Weston, Lincoln Assassination, Mary Surratt, Massachusetts, Middlebury College, National Republican, Oak Hill Cemetery, Orange County, ornithology, Sarah Aiken, Sarah Olivia Weston, Sarah Weston, Secretary of War, Shrewsbury, Solomon S. Aiken, Sunday Gazette, Supreme Court of the United States, Susan Rice, Tennessee, The Conspirator, Theosophic Society, Thomas B. Florence, U.S. Treasury Department, Vermont, Washington D.C., Washington Post, Washington Weekly Post, West Randolph, Winfield Scott Hancock, Worcester County
78 Comments