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Top Posts & Pages
- 2013-2015 Civil War Reenactment Calendar
- Delaware Archives uses Facebook, Twitter to relay Civil War soldier's diary
- Lieutenant General Thomas J. "Stonewall" Jackson (1824-1863) C.S.A.
- Frederick A. Aiken Biography
- On this date in Civil War history: Battle of Falling Waters - July 14, 1863
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- The Lincoln Assassination: New research unravels old myths
- Colonel Robert Gould Shaw (1837-1863)
- On this date in history: July 21, 1861 - Battle of 1st Bull Run/1st Manassas
- Lincoln Assassination
Tag Archives: George Washington
This Week in the American Civil War: February 24-March 1, 1864
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 February 24, 1864 Confederate General Braxton Bragg was charged … Continue reading
Posted in 1864, This Week in the Civil War
Tagged 1864, Abraham Lincoln, Americus, Andersonville, Armies of the Confederacy, Army of the Cumberland, Benjamin Butler, Braxton Bragg, Buzzard Roost, Canton, Chickahominy River, chief-of-staff, Demonstration on Dalton, February, George Washington, Georgia, J.M. Palmer, Jefferson Davis, John C. Breckinridge, Joseph E. Johnston, Judson Kilpatrick, lieutenant general, March, Meridian Campaign, Minnesota Civil War Commemoration Task Force, Missionary Ridge, Mississippi, Rapidan River, Richmond, Samuel Jones, Trans-Allegheny Department, U.S. Senate, Ulric Dahlgren, Ulysses S. Grant, Virginia, Washington D.C., Western Department of Virginia, William T. Sherman, Winfield Scott
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This Week in the American Civil War: February 18-24, 1863
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 February 18, 1863 General P.G.T. Beauregard commanding from Charleston, warned Confederates against anticipated attacks on … Continue reading
Posted in 1863, This Week in the Civil War
Tagged 1863, Abraham Lincoln, Alabama, Arizona Territory, Army of Northern Virginia, California, Carlisle, Central Pacific Railroad, Charleston, Cincinnati, Confederate Congress, currency, Dakota Territory, Emancipation Proclamation, February, Fort Halleck, Fredericksburg, George Brown, George Washington, Georgia, Great Britain, James Longstreet, James River, Liverpool, Manchester Pike, Minister to Russia, Minnesota Civil War Commemoration Task Force, Mississippi, Nashville, New Mexico Territory, Ohio, P.G.T. Beauregard, Peninsula, Rappahannock River, Richmond, Russellville, Sacramento, Savannah, Secretary of War, Shelbyville Pike, Simon Cameron, South Carolina, Tennessee, Tuscumbia, U.S.S. Indianola, U.S.S. Queen of the West, Ulysses Grant, Vicksburg, Virginia, Ware's Point, White House
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The First Minnesota and the Siege of Yorktown - May 5, 1862
By Darryl Sannes Minnesota Civil War Commemoration Task Force On May 5, 1862, the Union Army of the Potomac entered the abandoned Confederate entrenchments at Yorktown, Virginia. The first major confrontation in this campaign had been a success for the … Continue reading
Posted in 1862, This Date in Civil War History
Tagged 1862, 1st Minnesota Volunteer Infantry, Abraham Lincoln, Army of Northern Virginia, Army of the Potomac, artillery, corduroy, Darryl Sannes, Fort Monroe, George B. McClellan, George Washington, Ignatius Donnelly, James River, John B. Magruder, John Pope, land mines, Lord Cornwallis, May 5, Minnesota Civil War Commemoration Task Force, Peninsula Campaign, Revolutionary War, Richmond, sharpshooters, Stephen Miller, Stephen W. Sears, To the Gates of Richmond, Virginia, York River, Yorktown
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