- 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
- Civil War Vets Help Popularize The National Pastime
- Historical Inaccuracies in 'The Conspirator'
- Reenactment Calendar
- The Lincoln Assassination: New research unravels old myths
- Frederick Aiken The Attorney - Historians Weigh In
- The bridge that saved an Army: The ‘Grapevine Bridge’ and the Battle of Fair Oaks
- On this date in Civil War history: April 9, 1864 - Battle of Pleasant Hill
- On This Date in Civil War History: May 1-3, 1863 - The Battle of Chancellorsville
- Historian Recounts Role of Chinese Americans Who Fought In US Civil War
Tag Archives: Charles Henry Crane
Another take on President Abraham Lincoln’s Assassination
Easy Plugin for AdSense by Unreal by Jeffrey S. Williams The son of a well-known actor, John Wilkes Booth was an accomplished actor by 1859 and was performing in Richmond, Virginia, in November of that year when he spontaneously joined … Continue reading →
Posted in 1865, Assassination, Biography, Books, Booth, Cemeteries, Frederick Aiken, Graves, Lincoln, Obituaries, Surratt, This Date in Civil War History
|
Tagged 16th New York Cavalry, 1865, 1995, 54th Massachusetts, abolitionist, Abraham Johnson, Abraham Lincoln, Albert King, Alexander Pinckney, american brutus, Anderson Ruffin Abbott, Andrew Johnson, April, Armed Forces Institute of Pathology, Asa Trenchard, Baltimore, Baltimore Circuit Court, Bloody Kansas, Boston Corbett, Bowling Green, Brad Meltzer's Decoded, Bradley Tyler Johnson, Canada, Caster Hanway, Charles Henry Crane, Charles Leale, Charles Taft, Charlestown, Chatham, Christiana Riot, Clinton, Confederate Secret Service, David E. George, David Herold, Detroit, Dickinson Gorsuch, Douglas H. Ubelaker, Edward Gorsuch, Edward Ingraham, Edwin Booth, Edwin Stanton, Elmira, Enid, Escape and Suicide of John Wilkes Booth, exhumation of remains, F Street, Finis L. Bates, Ford's Theatre, Fugitive Slave Act, Garrett Farm, George Atzerodt, George Hammond, George Washington University School of Law, Georgetown, Gettysburg, Glencoe, Gorsuch Farm, Goucher College, Granbury, Green Mount Cemetery, Gus Russo, Harpers Ferry, Harry Hawk, Henry H. Kline, History Channel, India, James A. Tanner, James O. Hall, James Starrs, Jean Baker, Jeffrey S. Williams, John Brown, John E. Smialek, John F. Kennedy assassination, John St. Helen, John Surratt, John T. Mathews, John W. Boyd, John Wilkes Booth, Joseph "Peanuts" Burroughs, Joseph H.H. Kaplan, Joseph K. Barnes, Joshua Hammond, Junius Brutus Booth, Kirkwood Hotel, Kline v. The Green Mount Cemetery, Lancaster Black Self-Preservation Society, Lancaster County, Lewis Powell, Luther Byron Baker, Mark S. Zaid, Mary Surratt, Maryland, Michael O'Laughlen, Michael W. Kauffman, Michigan, Military Order of the Loyal Legion, Milton Academy, Mosby's Rangers, Muskets and Memories, Nathaniel Orlowek, National Archives, National Museum of Health and Medicine, National Museum of Natural History, Navy Yard Bridge, Nelson Ford, New York, New York Avenue Presbyterian Church, New York State Commandery, Noah Buley, Northern Virginia Community College, Oklahoma, Old Soldiers Home, Ontario, Our American Cousin, Paul Sledzik, Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Phineas D. Gurley, Port Tobacco, Richard Garrett, Richmond, Richmond Grays, Robert King Stone, Samuel Arnold, Samuel Mudd, San Diego State University, Sergeant Cobb, sic semper tyrannis, Smithsonian Museum of Natural History, Sparks, Special Court of Appeals, St. Timothy Military Academy, Steven Miller, Surratt Tavern, Surrattsville, Terry Alford, Texas, The Marble Heart, Thomas J. Jackson, Thus Always to Tyrants, Tommy Gorsuch, U.S. Treasury Department flags, Ulysses Grant, United States Commissioner, Useless Useless, Vicksburg, Virginia, Virginia Military Institute, VMI, White House, William C. Trimble Jr., William H. Seward, William Hanchett, William Parker, William Petersen, William T. Clark, Zekiah Swamp
|
Leave a comment