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Top Posts & Pages
- On this date in Civil War history: Battle of Falling Waters - July 14, 1863
- The Upper Peninsula in the Civil War
- Historical Inaccuracies in 'The Conspirator'
- Full Text of the Dedication of the Soldier's National Cemetery, Gettysburg, Pennsylvania - November 19, 1863
- Creek Indians in the American Civil War
- Frederick A. Aiken Biography
- Frederick Aiken The Attorney - Historians Weigh In
- Reenactment Calendar
- This Week in the American Civil War: November 30 – December 6, 1864
- This Week in the American Civil War: November 25-December 1, 1863
Tag Archives: Rio Grande
A Moment in Time: A Few Appropriate Remarks
Easy Plugin for AdSense by Unreal By Jeffrey S. Williams Most days were filled with some sort of military activity during November 1863 and the second day of the month was no exception. Skirmishing occurred at Bayou Bourbeau, Louisiana; Bates … Continue reading
Posted in 1863, Gettysburg, Lincoln, This Date in Civil War History
Tagged 121st Pennsylvania Infantry, 1863, 21st Pennsylvania Cavalry, 3rd Indiana Cavalry, Abraham Lincoln, Adolph Birgfield, Andrew Curtin, Arkansas, Army of Northern Virginia, Army of the Potomac, Baltimore, Baltimore and Ohio Railroad, Baltimore Street, Band of Philadelphia, Basil Biggs, Bates Township, Battle of Gettysburg, Bayou Bourbeau, Birgfield's Band of Philadelphia, Borough of Gettysburg, Brazos Island, Charles Anderson, Constitutional Union Party, Corinth, Darius Couch, David McConaughy, David Wills, Ebenezer H. James, Edward Everett, Federal District of the Frontier, Frank W. Biesecker, Gettysburg, Gettysburg Address, Gettysburg Sentinel, H. Paxton Bigham, Hanover Junction, Hanover Railroad, Henry Louis Baugher, Homage d'uns Heros, Indian Territory, James S. Townsend, John Bell, John Burns, John McNeil, Kansas, Louisiana, Mary Todd Lincoln, Mississippi, Missouri, Musical Association of Baltimore, Nathaniel P. Banks, North Central Railroad, November, Ohio, Old Hundred, Pennsylvania, Presbyterian Church of Gettysburg, Rio Grande, Robert G. Harper, Samuel Weaver, Soldiers National Cemetery Association, Steinwehr Avenue, Tad Lincoln, Taneytown Road, Tennessee, Texas, Thomas H. Stockton, U.S. Department of Agriculture, U.S. House of Representatives, U.S. Marine Corps Band, Ward Hill Lamon, Washington DC, William H. Seward, William Saunders, William Wallace Story, Wills House, Wilson G. Horner
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Top 10 Civil War destinations: The best places to relive the War Between the States
by the Marine Corps Times It’s hard to imagine, 150 years later, the carnage that occurred in just 12 hours of fighting. But as you walk along the infamous Sunken Road of Antietam National Battlefield, where thousands upon thousands fought … Continue reading
Posted in Battles, Marine Corps
Tagged Alcatraz, Alcatraz Cruises, Antietam National Battlefield, Arkansas, August 1862, California, Charleston Harbor, Chesapeake Bay, Civil War, Civil War Battlefield Trail, dolphin watching, Eastern National Bookstore, Fort Davis National Historic Site, Fort Monroe National Monument, Fort Pulaski National Monument, Fort Sumter, Fredericksburg, Fredericksburg National Military Park, Georgia, Glorieta Pass, Jefferson Davis, Labor Day, Marine Corps, Marine Corps Times, Marye's Heights, Maryland, Memorial Day, Mike Litterst, Missouri, National Park Service, New Mexico, Pea Ridge National Military Park, Pecos National Historical Park, Peninsula Campaign, Richmond, Richmond National Battlefield Park, Rio Grande, Robert E. Lee, Seven Days Battle, Shiloh, Shiloh National Military Park, South Carolina, Sunken Road, Tennessee, Texas, tourism, travel, Tybee Island, Virginia
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This Week in the American Civil War - February 26- March 4, 1862 (150 years ago)
From the Minnesota Civil War Commemoration Task Force Major Highlights for the week Wednesday February 26, 1862 Kentucky senator William E. Simms declared in the Confederate Congress that the Confederacy would defend her rights to the last extremity. In Washington, … Continue reading
Posted in 1862, This Week in the Civil War
Tagged Albert Sidney Johnston, Amelia Island, Andrew Johnson, Arkansas, Berryville, Charles F. Smith, Charleston, Columbus, Comanche Pass, Confederate, Corinth, Eastport, Fayetteville, Federal, Fort Donelson, Fort Henry, Fort Pillow, General George B. McClellan, gunboats, Harpers Ferry, Henry Hopkins Sibley, Henry W. Halleck, ironclad, Island No. 10, John C. Pemberton, John Minor Botts, John Pope, Joseph E. Johnston, Kentucky, Leonidas Polk, Loan and Treasury Bill, Martinsburg, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Murfreesboro, Nashville, New Madrid, New Mexico, New York, Norfolk, Osage Springs, P.G.T. Beauregard, Pittsburg Landing, Portsmouth, President Abraham Lincoln, President Jefferson Davis, Richmond, Rio Grande, Robert E. Lee, South Carolina, Tennessee, Tennessee River, U.S.S. Monitor, Ulysses S. Grant, Virginia, William Simms
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