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Top Posts & Pages
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Tag Archives: East Room
This Week in the American Civil War: April 19-25, 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 Wednesday April 19, 1865 FUNERAL SERVICES FOR PRESIDENT LINCOLN President Andrew … Continue reading
Posted in 1865, This Week in the Civil War
Tagged 1865, Abraham Lincoln, Alabama, Albany, Andrew Johnson, April, Arkansas, Big Gravois River, Blue Ridge Mountains, Buzzard Roost, Cabinet, Capitol building, Charlotte, City Hall, Confederate Rangers, Congress, David Herold, Department of the Gulf, diplomatic corps, E. Kirby Smith, East Room, Fort Zarah, Georgia, Gumbo Creek, Harrisburg, Hendersonville, Henry Halleck, Howard's Gap, Illinois, Independence Hall, Indiana, James Harrison Wilson, Jefferson Davis, John Pope, John Singleton Mosby, John Wilkes Booth, Joseph E. Johnston, Kansas, Lincoln Assassination, Lincoln Funeral Train, Linn Creek, Macon, Marines, Mary Todd Lincoln, Military Division of the James, Military Division of the Missouri, Millwood, Mimms Mills, Minnesota Civil War Commemoration Task Force, Mississippi River, Missouri, Montpelier Springs, Munford's Station, Nathaniel P. Banks, New York, New York City, North Carolina, Old Capitol, Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Port Conway, Potomac River, Radical Republicans, Rappahannock River, Richard H. Garrett, Robert E. Lee, Robert Todd Lincoln, Rocky Creek Bridge, Spring Hill, Springfield, St. Louis, Supreme Court, Tad Lincoln, Thirteenth Amendment, Tobesofkee Creek, Trans-Mississippi Department, U.S. Capitol, Ulysses Grant, Virginia, White House, William T. Sherman
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On this date in Civil War history - President Abraham Lincoln Assassinated - April 14, 1865
President Abraham Lincoln knew that the possibility of his assassination was a constant possibility. In his desk drawer was an envelope marked “Assassination,” full of threats written to him during his administration. On the evening of Good Friday, 14 April … Continue reading
Posted in 1865, Assassination, Biography, Booth, Casualties, Frederick Aiken, Lincoln, Maryland, Obituaries, Surratt, This Date in Civil War History
Tagged 1865, A.F.A. King, Abraham Lincoln, Abraham Lincoln Assassination, Abraham Lincoln The Man Behind the Myths, Andrew Johnson, April '65, Assassination, Bel Alton, Boston Corbett, Bryantown, Buffalo, Capitol, Charles A. Taft, Charles Leale, Chicago, Clara Harris, Clara Laughlin, Cleveland, Clinton, Come Retribution, David Herold, David M. DeWitt, David S. Heidler, David Winfred Gaddy, East Room, Edman Spangler, Edwin Booth, Edwin Stanton, Encyclopedia of the American Civil War, Ford's Theater, George Atzerodt, George S. Bryan, Good Friday, Henry Rathbone, Illinois, Ira T. Harris, James O. Hall, Jeanne T. Heidler, Jefferson Davis, John Surratt Jr., John Wilkes Booth, Judson Kilpatrick, Junius Brutus Booth, Larry Starkey, Laura Keene, Lewis Paine, Lewis Powell, Mary Surratt, Mary Todd Lincoln, Michael O'Laughlin, Navy Yard Bridge, New York, New York Avenue Presbyterian Church, Oak Ridge Cemetery, Otto Eisenschiml, Our American Cousin, Petersen House, Philadelphia, Phineas Gurley, Port Royal, Potomac River, Reconstruction, Richard Garrett, Richmond, Samuel Arnold, Samuel Cox, Samuel Mudd, sic semper tyrannis, Springfield, Stephen B. Oates, Steven Fisher, Surratt Tavern, Surrattsville, The Assassination of Abraham Lincoln and its Expiation, The Death of Lincoln, The Great American Myth, The Lincoln Conspiracy, The Lincoln Murder Conspiracies, The Web of Conspiracy, Thomas A. Jones, Thomas T. Eckert, Ulric Dahlgren, Ulysses S. Grant, Virginia, Washington DC, White House, Why Was Lincoln Murdered, Wilkes Booth Came to Washington, William A. Tidwell, William H. Seward, William Hanschett
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This Week in the American Civil War: April 12-18, 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 April 12, 1865 SURRENDER OF MOBILE, ALABAMA The final major city of the Confederacy fell as … Continue reading
Posted in 1865, This Week in the Civil War
Tagged 1865, Abraham Lincoln, Alabama, Andrew Johnson, Appomattox Court House, April, Bennett House, Charles Leale, Charleston Harbor, Charlotte, Concord, Crawford, David Herold, Durham Station, East Room, Edward R.S. Canby, Edwin Stanton, Ford's Theater, Fort Sumter, Germantown, Gideon Welles, Girard, Greensborough, Harry Hawk, Henry Halleck, Henry Ward Beecher, Hillsborough, Jefferson Davis, John Brown Gordon, John Wilkes Booth, Johnston-Sherman, Joseph E. Johnston, Kentucky, Kirkwood Hotel, Lexington, Maryland, Minnesota Civil War Commemoration Task Force, Mobile, Morrisville, North Carolina, Opelika, Our American Cousin, P.G.T. Beauregard, Peterson House, Port Tobacco, Potomac River, Radical Republicans, Raleigh, Rich Hill, Robert Anderson, Salisbury, Salmon P. Chase, Samuel Cox, Samuel Mudd, South Carolina, Surrender of Mobile, Swift Creek, Taylorsville, Tennessee, U.S. Navy, Ulysses Grant, Virginia, Washington D.C., White House, William H. Seward, William Peterson, William T. Sherman
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