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Top Posts & Pages
- On this date in Civil War history – Lee Surrenders at Appomattox Court House – April 9, 1865
- Brigadier General Felix Kirk Zollicoffer (1812-1862) C.S.A.
- On This Date in Civil War History: Vicksburg Campaign - May-July 1863
- In Memory: Senator Edward Dickinson Baker (1811-1861)
- The Lincoln Assassination: New research unravels old myths
- Bombardment of Fort Henry (Feb. 2-6, 1862)
- On this date in Civil War history: The Great Locomotive Chase - April 12, 1862
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- On this date in Civil War history: Battle of Falling Waters - July 14, 1863
Tag Archives: St. Charles
This Week in the American Civil War: October 19-25, 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 October 19, 1864 BATTLE OF CEDAR CREEK AND ST. ALBANS, VT RAID Concealed by an early … Continue reading
Posted in 1864, This Week in the Civil War
Tagged 1864, 9th Wisconsin Artillery, Abraham Lincoln, Alabama, Alfred Pleasonton, Alkali Station, Arkansas, Army of Tennessee, Battle of Cedar Creek, Battle of Westport, Belle Grove, Bennett H. Young, Benton County, Big Blue River, Blue Pond, Brush Creek, Bryant's Plantation, Byram's Ford, Canada, Cedar Creek, Charleston, Fisher's Hill, Florida, Gadsden Road, Gaylesville, Gettysburg of the West, Guntersville, Halfway House, Harrodsburg, Horatio Wright, Independence, James G. Blount, John Bell Hood, Jubal Early, Kansas, Kansas City, Kentucky, Leesburg, Lexington, Little Blue River, Little River, Little Rock, Louisiana, Marais des Cygnes River, Memphis, Midway Station, Milford, Mine Creek, Minnesota Civil War Commemoration Task Force, Mississippi River, Missouri, Missouri-Kansas state line, Mockabee Farm, Nebraska Territory, North Carolina, October, Phil Sheridan, Pine Bluff, Platte Valley, Round Mountain, Samuel Curtis, Shenandoah Valley, Sneedville, South Carolina, St. Albans, St. Charles, State Line, Stephen D. Ramseur, Sterling Price, Swan Creek, Tennessee, Tennessee River, Three-Top Mountain, Turkeytown, Vermont, Virginia, Waterloo, Westport, White River, Wild Bill Hickok, Wilmington, Winchester
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This Week in the American Civil War: January 7-13, 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 January 7, 1863 Confederates captured Ozark, Missouri and moved onto Springfield. A group of 450 … Continue reading
Posted in 1863, This Week in the Civil War
Tagged 1863, Abraham Lincoln, Alexander McCook, Ambrose Burnside, Arkansas, Arkansas Post, Arkansas River, Army of the Cumberland, Army of the Potomac, Caleb Smith, Clarendon, Cumberland River, David Dixon Porter, Department of the East, Des Arc, DeValls Bluff, Emancipation Proclamation, Fairfax Court House, First Confederate Congress, Florida, foreign relations, Fort Hindman, Fourteenth Corps, George H. Thomas, Harpeth Shoals, Helena, Henry W. Halleck, Indiana, January, Jefferson Davis, John A. McClernand, John E. Wool, John P. Usher, Joseph Wheeler, Knob Creek, Lick Creek, Minnesota Civil War Commemoration Task Force, Mississippi River, Missouri, Ozark, Republican Party, Richmond, Richmond Enquirer, Ripley, salt works, Secretary of the Interior, South Carolina, Springfield, St. Charles, St. Joseph's, State of the Confederacy, T.J. Churchill, Tennessee, Thomas L. Crittenden, Thomas Wentworth Higginson, Twentieth Corps, Twenty-First Corps, U.S. Senate, U.S.S. Ethan Allen, U.S.S. Sidell, Virginia, Washington DC, White River, William S. Rosecrans, XIV Corps, XX Corps, XXI Corps
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