- 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
- Ulysses Simpson Grant - 18th U.S. President and General-in-Chief of the U.S. Army (1822-1885)
- 2013-2015 Civil War Reenactment Calendar
- The Lincoln Assassination: New research unravels old myths
- The Monitor, the Merrimack and… U.S.S. Minnesota?
- Bombardment of Fort Henry (Feb. 2-6, 1862)
- On this date in Civil War history: April 6-7, 1862 - Battle of Shiloh
- Frederick Aiken The Attorney - Historians Weigh In
- Major General William Wing Loring, C.S.A. (1818-1886)
- On This Date in Civil War History: May 1-3, 1863 - The Battle of Chancellorsville
- Frederick A. Aiken Biography
Tag Archives: Fort Larned
This Week in the American Civil War: March 1-7, 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 March 1, 1865 Federal Major General Phil Sheridan’s cavalry skirmished … Continue reading
Posted in 1865, This Week in the Civil War
Tagged 1865, 38th Congress, Abraham Lincoln, Albama, Andrew Johnson, Athens, Bureau for the Relief of Freedman and Refugees, Cape Fear River, Cheraw, Comptroller of the Currency, Department of North Carolina, East River Bridge, Elyton, Fayetteville, Flint Hill, Florida, Fort Larned, Freedman's Bureau, Freedman's Savings and Trust Company, George A. Custer, Governor of Tennessee, Hannibal Hamlin, Hugh McCulloch, Jacob D. Cox, Joseph E. Johnston, Jubal Early, Kansas, Lincoln's Second Inaugural Address, Maine, March, Minnesota Civil War Commemoration Task Force, Natural Bridge, New Berne, New Jersey, North Carolina, Patent Office, Pee Dee River, Petersburg, Phillips Cross Roads, President of the United States, Secretary of the Treasury, Shenandoah Valley, South Carolina, Tennessee, Thirteenth Amendment, Thompson's Creek, U.S. Senate, U.S. Transport Thorn, Ulysses Grant, Vice President of the United States, Virginia, Waynesborough, William Fessenden, William G. Brownlow, William T. Sherman, Wilmington, Wisconsin
Leave a comment
This Week in the American Civil War: November 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 November 9, 1864 The Federal 23rd Corps was pushing through Nashville on its way to reinforce … Continue reading
Posted in 1864, This Week in the Civil War
Tagged 1864, Abraham Lincoln, Alabama, Ash Creek, Atlanta, Cedar Creek, Chattanooga, Clinton, Collierville, Corinth, East Point, Florence, Fort Larned, George B. McClellan, George H. Thomas, Georgia, Henry Warner Slocum, John Bell Hood, John M. Schofield, Johnsonville, Jonesborough, Jubal Early, Kansas, Kernstown, Kingston, Louisiana, Manassas Junction, March to the Sea, Minnesota Civil War Commemoration Task Force, Mississippi, Nashville, Nathan Bedford Forrest, Neneveh, New Market, Newton, November, Oliver O. Howard, Petersburg, Phil Sheridan, Pulaski, Resaca, Richmond, Rome, Rough and Ready, Russellville, Shenandoah Valley, Shoal Creek, Stockbridge, Tennessee, Tennessee River, Virginia, William T. Sherman
Leave a comment