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Top Posts & Pages
- The Battle of Honey Springs - July 17, 1863
- The Monitor, the Merrimack and… U.S.S. Minnesota?
- On this Date in Civil War History: The Battle of Gettysburg - July 1-3, 1863
- Photo of the Day: 1st Minnesota Monument at Gettysburg
- Brigadier General Lloyd Tilghman, C.S.A. (Jan. 18,1816- May 16,1863)
- This Week in the American Civil War: January 13-19, 1864
- Bombardment of Fort Henry (Feb. 2-6, 1862)
- On this date in Civil War history: November 19, 1861 - Battle of Round Mountain
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Tag Archives: Henry Hastings Sibley
This Week in the American Civil War: July 22-28, 1863
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 July 22, 1863 As action increased at Manassas and … Continue reading
Posted in 1863, This Week in the Civil War
Tagged 10th Minnesota Volunteer Infantry, 1863, 6th Minnesota Volunteer Infantry, 7th Minnesota Volunteer Infantry, Alabama, Ambrose Powell Hill, Athens, Bayou Teche, Big Mound, Blue Ridge Mountains, Braxton Bragg, Bridgeport, Cassville, Charleston Harbor, Chester Gap, Columbus, Confederate States Senate, Cook's Canyon, Culpeper Courthouse, Dade County, Dakota Territory, Dead Buffalo Lake, Department of East Tennessee, Department of Tennessee, Eagleport, Fayetteville, Fort Wagner, Frankfort, Front Royal, George G. Meade, Henry Hastings Sibley, High Grove, Huntsville, III Corps, Inkpaduta, James Longstreet, Jefferson Davis, John Hunt Morgan, John J. Crittenden, John Pope, Josiah S. Weiser, July, Kentucky, Little Crow, Louisiana, Luray Valley, Manassas Gap, Marshall, Minnesota Civil War Commemoration Task Force, Missouri, Missouri River, Montgomery, New Mexico Territory, New York Chamber of Commerce, Ohio, Ohio State Penitentiary, Rappahannock River, Richard Ewell, Richmond, Rogersville, Salinesville, Sam Houston, Santee, Santee Sioux, Shenandoah River, South Carolina, Spirit Lake Massacre, Springfield, Standing Buffalo, Steubenville, Stony Lake, Tall Crown, Teton, Texas, U.S.-Dakota War, Virginia, Wahpekute, Wapping Heights, Warrenton, Washington, West Virginia, William H. French, William Lowndes Yancey, Yankton, Yanktonai
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An American Tragedy – Revisiting the sad conclusion to the U.S.-Dakota War
By Jeffrey S. Williams Minnesota Civil War Commemoration Task Force Following the U.S.-Dakota War in August-September, 1862, Henry Hastings Sibley was promoted to the rank of brigadier general in the United States Army on September 29, 1862, and placed in … Continue reading
Posted in 1862, This Date in Civil War History
Tagged 1862, Abraham Lincoln, Alexander Ramsey, Alfred Sully, Battle of Gettysburg, Camp Release, Chaska, Chaskadon, Commissioner of Indian Affairs, Crow Creek, Dakota, Dakota 38, Dakota Sioux Warriors, Dakota Territory, December 1890, December 26, Department of the Northwest, Fort Snelling, Henry Hastings Sibley, Henry Rice, Henry Whipple, Hiram P. Grant, hiram S. Bailey, Hutchinson, Indians, Iowa, Jacob Nix, John Pope, Lake Shetek Massacre, Little Crow, Lower Sioux Agency, Mankato, Massacre at Wounded Knee, Minnesota, Minnesota Civil War Commemoration Task Force, Missouri River, Nathan Lamson, Nebraska, New Ulm, Plains Indian Wars, Rollin C. Olin, Sarah Wakefield, Second Bull Run, Sioux, South Dakota, St. Paul, Stephen Riggs, U.S.-Dakota War, William Crooks, William Duley, William P. Dole, William R. Marshall, Wowinape
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This Week in the American Civil War: September 17-23, 1862
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 September 17, 1862 BATTLE OF ANTIETAM This September day along Antietam Creek in Maryland was … Continue reading
Posted in 1862, This Week in the Civil War
Tagged 3rd Minnesota Volunteer Infantry, 6th Minnesota Volunteer Infantry, Abraham Lincoln, Ambrose Burnside, Ambrose Powell Hill, Antietam Creek, Ashby's Gap, Battle of Antietam, Battle of Iuka, Battle of Wood Lake, Blackford's Ford, Braxton Bragg, Don Carlos Buell, Dunkard Church, E. Kirby Smith, Emancipation Proclamation, George B. McClellan, Glasgow, Hagerstown, Harpers Ferry, Henry Hastings Sibley, Iuka, John Sanborn, Kentucky, Lac qui Parle, Lewis Little, Little Crow, Maryland, Maryland Campaign, Mill Road, Minnesota, Minnesota Civil War Commemoration Task Force, Mississippi, Munfordville, O.C. Ord, Opequon Creek, Potomac River, Robert E. Lee, San Francisco, Shepherdstown, Sterling Price, U.S.-Dakota War, Ulysses Grant, Williamsport, Yellow Medicine County
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This Week in the American Civil War: August 27-Sept 2, 1862
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 August 27, 1862 Confederate operations in the Manassas, Virginia area led to skirmishing at Bull … Continue reading
Posted in 1862, This Week in the Civil War
Tagged Abraham Lincoln, Alabama, Ambrose Burnside, Army of Northern Virginia, Army of the Potomac, Army of Virginia, Battle of Chantilly, Birch Coulee, Bristoe Station, Broad Run, Bull Run, Chantilly, Dakota Indian, Fairfax Court House, Falmouth, Fitz John Porter, Fort Ridgely, Franklin, George B. McClellan, Groveton, Henry Hastings Sibley, Isaac Stevens, James Longstreet, John Pope, Little River Bridge, Manassas, Minnesota Civil War Commemoration Task Force, Missouri, Ox Hill, Philip Kearny, Robert E. Lee, Rogers' Gap, Rufus King, Salem, Second Bull Run, Sioux Uprising, Stevenson, Tennessee, Thomas J. Jackson, Virginia, Warrenton Turnpike, Waterford
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