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Top Posts & Pages
- Historical Inaccuracies in 'The Conspirator'
- Civil War Vets Help Popularize The National Pastime
- 2013-2015 Civil War Reenactment Calendar
- Frederick Aiken The Attorney - Historians Weigh In
- On this date in Civil War history: April 9, 1864 - Battle of Pleasant Hill
- On This Date in Civil War History: May 1-3, 1863 - The Battle of Chancellorsville
- Full Text of the Dedication of the Soldier's National Cemetery, Gettysburg, Pennsylvania - November 19, 1863
- Major General Patrick Ronayne Cleburne, CSA (1828-1864)
- Reenactment Calendar
- The Lincoln Assassination: New research unravels old myths
Tag Archives: Washington DC
This Week in the American Civil War: December 28, 1864 – January 3, 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 December 28, 1864 Confederate Lieutenant General John Bell Hood’s Army … Continue reading
Posted in 1864, 1865, This Week in the Civil War
Tagged 1864, 1865, Abraham Lincoln, Alabama, Arkansas, Army of Northern Virginia, Army of Tennessee, Army of the James, Bainbridge, Beaufort, Benjamin Butler, Bentonville, Caruthersville, Decatur, December, Franklin, Franklin-Nashville Campaign, Georgia, Hardeeville, Hillsborough, January, John Bell Hood, Kentucky, Leighton, Lexington, Mechanicsburg, Minnesota Civil War Commemoration Task Force, Mississippi, Missouri, Mobile and Ohio Railroad, Okolona, Oliver O. Howard, P.G.T. Beauregard, Paint Rock Bridge, Petersburg, Pond Springs, Richard Taylor, Richmond, Russellville, Savannah, Sharpsburg, South Carolina, Tennessee, Tennessee River, Tupelo, Ulysses Grant, Virginia, Washington DC, White House, William T. Sherman
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2013-2015 Civil War Reenactment Calendar
NOTE: We receive a lot of requests for information on Civil War reenactment events throughout the country. Below is a listing of events to assist people in their search for an event near them. This Week in the Civil War does … Continue reading
Posted in Events, Reenactment
Tagged 100th Birthday Committee, 136th New York, 136th New York Volunteer Infantry, A Wilderness Evening, Aldie, Aldie Mill, Alexandria, Andersonville, Andersonville National Historic Site, Annapolis, Antietam National Battlefield, Appomattox 150, Appomattox County Historical Society, Arkansas, Atlanta Campaign, Bacon Creek Station, Baldwin City, Ball's Bluff Battlefield Regional Park, Battery Wagner, Battle for Chattanooga, Battle of Black Jack, Battle of Cheatham Hill, Battle of Chickamauga, Battle of Fort Branch, Battle of Fort Crawford, Battle of Iuka, Battle of Marshall, Battle of Olustee, Battle of Utoy Creek, Bauer Park, Bay City, Bell of Louisville, Belle of Cincinnati, Bentonville Battlefield, Big Pool, Blackford County, Blue-Gray Alliance, Bonnieville, Bost Grist Mill, Brandy Station, Bristoe Station, Bristow, Brooksville, Brooksville Raid, Bruce Boxleitner, Buckland Farm, Burwood-Morgan Mill, California, Camp Jefferson, Camp Nelson, Camp Nelson Civil War Heritage Park, Camp Wildcat, Camp William Penn, Cape May, Cedar Creek, Celebration Belle, Charleston, Checotah, Cheltenham Township, Chickamauga National Battlefield Park, Christmas in Camp, City County Park, Civil War, Civil War 150, Civil War Annapolis, Civil War Christmas, Civil War Events, Civil War Foodfest, Civil War reenacting, Civil War Reenactment, Civil War Reenactments, Clinton, Clover Hill Village, Cold Spring Village, Colonial Planation, Columbus, Columbus-Belmont Park, Concord, Connecticut, Cornersville, Cowtown, David Carpenter, Detroit, Droop Mountain, Durham, Ellwood, events, Fairfax, Florida, Fort Benton, Fort Frederick, Fort Harrison, Fort Huger, Fort Oglethorpe, Fort Sanders, Fort Shenandoah, Fort Ward, Four Oaks, Franconia, Frederick County, Fredericksburg, Friends of Honey Springs Battlefield, Friends of Wilderness Battlefield, George G. Meade, Georgia, Gettysburg, Gettysburg Remembrance Day, Glen Allen, Greenbush, Guyandotte, Hallsville, Hamilton, Harpers Ferry, Harpers Ferry National Historical Park, Harris-Kearney House, Hartford City, Haunted Battlefield Tour, Hempstead, Henry County, Hermann, Hermann Farm, Hernando Historical Museum Association, Historic Fort Wayne, Holland, Hollywood Cemetery, Honey Springs, Illinois, Illumination, Indiana, Iowa, Iuka, Jacksonville, James River, John Brown's Raid, John Wilkes Booth, John Wilkes Booth Escape Route Bus Tour, Kansas, Kansas City, Kelly's Ford, Kennesaw, Kennesaw Mountain, Kennesaw State University, Kentucky, Kilpatrick's Breakthrough, Knoxville, Lairdland Farm House, Lake City, Lamoni, LaMott, Laurel Hill Cemetery, Lee's Summit, Leesburg, Letchworth State Park, Lewisburg, Liendo Plantation, Little Rock, Little Rock Campaign, London, Lookout Mountain, Luminary, Luray Caverns, Luray Valley, Madison, Manassas Gap, Marshall, Maryland, Massachusetts, Meadow Farm Museum, Media, Michigan, Middle Creek, Middletown, Middletown and Hummelstown Railroad, Military Ball, Millwood, Mine Run Campaign, Minnesota, Minnesota State Capitol, Missionary Ridge, Mississippi, Missouri, Missouri Town 1855, Moorpark, Mount Zion Historic Park, Mountain Cove Farms, Museums by Candlelight, Nash Farm, New Jersey, New Market, New York, Newburyport, North Carolina, North Pinellas County Scout Sertoma Club, North-South Skirmish Association, NSSA, Oak Brook, Ohio, Oklahoma, Olustee Battlefield Historic State Park, Orange County, Orchard Knob, Pamplin Historical Park, Patrick Gorman, Pennsylvania, Petersburg, Petersburg National Battlefield, Philadelphia, Poplar Grove National Cemetery, Port Arthur, Portage, Prairie Grove, Prestonburg, Prince William County historic Preservation Division, Princeton, Redley Creek State Park, Reed's Bridge Battlefield, Reenactments, Rice, Richmond, Richmond National Battlefield Park, Ringgold, Ringgold Gap, Sabine Pass, Sayler's Creek Battlefield Historical Park, Sharpsburg, Smithfield, Soldiers National Cemetery, South Carolina, Spirit of Peoria, St. Albans Raid, St. Paul, Stanhope, Surratt House Museum, Tennessee, Texas, Thanksgiving 1863, Thanksgiving in the Trenches, The Long Road Home, United States Colored Troop, USCT, Van Raalte Farm, Vermont, Virginia, Virginia Museum of the Civil War, Walker County, War Between the Tastes, Warrenton, Warrenton-Fauquier Heritage Days, Washington DC, Washington State Park, Waterloo Village, West Virginia, Westport, White House of the Confederacy, Wichita, William Lloyd Garrison, Winchester, Wisconsin, Zoar
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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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This Week in the American Civil War: December 24-30, 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 December 24, 1862 Union army forces occupied Galveston, Texas, already partially in control of the … Continue reading
Posted in 1862, This Week in the Civil War
Tagged 1862, Abraham Lincoln, Ambrose Burnside, Arkansas, Army of the Frontier, Army of the Potomac, Bacon Creek, Bear Wallow, Bolivar, Braxton Bragg, Brentwood, C.S.S. Merrimack, Cape Hattaras, Charles Town, Chickasaw Bayou, Christmas, Dakota Indians, December, Dripping Springs, Edmonson Pike, Emancipation Proclamation, Franklin, Fredericksburg, Galveston, Glasgow, Green's Chapel, Haynes's Bluff, James G. Blunt, Jefferson Pike, John C. Pemberton, John Hunt Morgan, Kentucky, Knob Gap, La Vergne, largest mass execution in American history, Maldraugh's Hill, Mankato, Martinsburg, Mary Todd Lincoln, Memphis, Middleburg, Milliken's Bend, Minnesota, Minnesota Civil War Commemoration Task Force, Mississippi, Mississippi River, Murfreesboro, Murfreesboro Pike, Nashville, Nolensville, Nolin, North Carolina, Prim's Blacksmith Shop, Ripley, Sioux Uprising, Snyder's Mill, Steele's Bayou, Stewart's Creek Bridge, Tennessee, Texas. U.S. Navy, Triune, U.S.-Dakota War, U.S.S. Monitor, U.S.S. Rhode Island, Van Buren, Vicksburg, Virginia, Walnut Hills, Warrenton, Washington DC, William S. Rosecrans, William T. Sherman, Wilson Creek Pike, wounded, Yazoo River
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This Week in the Civil War: April 16-22, 1862
Information courtesy of the Minnesota Civil War Commemoration Task Force Major Highlights for the week Wednesday April 16, 1862 Confederate President Jefferson Davis approved an act of the Confederate Congress calling for the conscription of every white … Continue reading
Posted in 1862, This Week in the Civil War
Tagged 1862, abolition, Abraham Lincoln, April 16-22, Arkansas, Arkansas Bay, Benjamin F. Butler, Confederate Congress, conscription, David Glasgow Farragut, District of Columbia, druggists, Edisto Island, educators, Edwin Stanton, Falmouth, ferrymen, foundries, Fredericksburg, George B. McClellan, government officials, Henry W. Halleck, hospital employees, iron mines, Irvin McDowell, Jefferson Davis, Joseph E. Johnston, Louisiana, ministers, Minnesota Civil War Commemoration Task Force, Mississippi, Mississippi River, New Orleans, North Carolina, Pittsburg Landing, Pocahontas, printers, riverboat pilots, Salmon Chase, Ship Island, Slavery, South Carolina, South Mills, Talbot's Ferry, telegraph operators, Tennessee, Texas, This Week in the Civil War, Trent Road, U.S.S. Itasca, U.S.S. Pinola, Virginia, Washington DC, Yorktown
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This Week in the American Civil War – March 26- April 1, 1862
Information courtesy of the Minnesota Civil War Commemoration Task Force Major Highlights for the week Wednesday March 26, 1862 The Confederate campaign in New Mexico was nearing its climax. A Confederate column marched out on the Santa Fe Trail and … Continue reading
Posted in 1862, This Week in the Civil War
Tagged Abraham Lincoln, Alabama, Albert Sidney Johnston, Alexandria, Apache Canyon, Army of Central Kentucky, Brackett's Battalion, Braxton Bragg, Chickasaw, Clinton, Dakota Territory, David Hunter, Department of the South, Eastport, Edenburg, Fort Abercrombie, Fort Henry, Fort Monroe, Fort Ridgely, Fort Ripley, Fort Snelling, George B. McClellan, George Bibb Crittenden, George W. Morgan, Georgia, Glorieta Pass, Henry Hopkins Sibley, Hilton Head, Hiram Berdan, Island No. 10, J.M. Chivington, John B. Magruder, John C. Fremont, John P. Slough, John Porter McCown, Johnson's Ranch, Joseph E. Johnston, Kentucky, Leonidas Polk, Louis Blenker, Minnesota, Minnesota Civil War Commemoration Task Force, Missouri, Mountain Department, Nashville, New Madrid, New Mexico Territory, P.G.T. Beauregard, Peninsula Campaign, Pigeon's Ranch, Pittsburg Landing, Richmond, Santa Fe, Savannah, Second Baptist Church Battery, Shenandoah Valley, South Carolina, St. Louis, Strausburg, Tennessee, Thomas J. Jackson, Union City, Virginia, W.R. Scurry, Washington DC, Whitemarsh Island, William J. Hardee, William Rosecrans, William W. Mackall, Wilmington Island, Woodstock
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This Week in the American Civil War – March 19-25, 1862 (150 years ago)
Courtesy of the Minnesota Civil War Commemoration Task Force Major Highlights for the week Wednesday March 19, 1862 It was a light day today. The only action was a skirmish at Elk Mountain, in western Virginia, and Strasburg, Va. The … Continue reading
Posted in 1862, This Week in the Civil War
Tagged 1862, 1st United States Sharpshooters Company I, 2nd Independent Battery of Minnesota Light Artillery, 2nd Minnesota Volunteer Infantry, 5th Minnesota Infantry, Agnew's Ferry, Albert Sidney Johnston, Alexandria, Battle of Kernstown, Beaufort, Benjamin Butler, Bolivar Heights, Brackett's Battalion, Brigadier General James Shields, cavalry, Colonel Ashby Turner, compensated emancipation, Confederate, Corinth, Dakota Territory, Day-Book, Department of the Gulf, Federal, Fort Abercrombie, Fort Henry, Fort Macon, Fort Ridgely, Fort Ripley, John G. Parke, Little Santa Fe, Louisville & Nashville Railroad, Major General John Dix, Manchester, McMinnville, Middle Military Department, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Moniteau County, Mount Jackson, Murfreesboro, Norfolk, North Carolina, Pittsburg Landing, Post Oak Creek, Savannah, Senator James Shields, Shelbyville, Ship Island, St. Paul, Tennessee, Thomas J. Jackson, Tullahoma, Virginia, Washington DC, Winchester
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On this date in Civil War history - April 24, 1865 - Hancock issues proclamation
On this date, 146 years ago - Maj. Gen. Winfield Scott Hancock ordered the following handbills printed and distributed to free blacks in the communities of Virginia and Maryland along the Potomac River. John Wilkes Booth, President Lincoln’s assassin, and … Continue reading
Posted in 1865, African-American, Assassination, Booth, Lincoln, Maryland, Surratt
Tagged 1865, Abraham Lincoln, Alexandria, April, David Herold, District of Columbia, Frederick Aiken, Free Blacks, handbills, John Wilkes Booth, Judge Holt, Lincoln Assassination, Mary Surratt, Maryland, Middle Military Division, Murder of President Lincoln, Potomac River, Virginia, Washington DC, Winfield Scott Hancock
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