Showing results for "tombstone"

A Surprising Friendship Formed at Lone Jack: Union Major Emory Foster and Bushwhacker/Bank Robber Cole Younger

Emerging Civil War welcomes back guest author Tonya McQuade… By spring of 1862, after the Confederate defeat at the battle of Pea Ridge gave the Union control of Missouri and pushed Confederate forces into northern Arkansas, the state’s biggest problem was not the Confederate army. It was all the Missouri secessionists who decided to join […]

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The Fight at Picacho Peak

ECW is pleased to welcome back Gregory L. Wade. Tourists often visit the Phoenix area for its near-perfect winter climate, the incredible desert scenery, or to learn about Mexican or Native American history. Not many people realize that the Civil War touched this scorched ground just a few miles north of Tucson in a fight […]

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A Revenge Killing on Sherman’s March

ECW welcomes guest author Brian Krasielwicz Five Forks Cemetery is situated about six miles south of the North Carolina state line, surrounded by a patch-work of farmland and crisscrossed by a tiny stream known locally as Little Fork Creek. The weathered headstones of the cemetery lack uniformity and the graves are seemingly placed at random […]

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The Last Casualty of Second Manassas: The Court Martial of Fitz John Porter

ECW welcomes back guest author Kevin C. Donovan  Abraham Lincoln laid down his pen. It was January 21, 1863. The President had just signed a document destroying the U.S. Army career and reputation of Major General Fitz John Porter. Specifically, Lincoln approved the findings and sentence of a court-martial, whose members had found Porter guilty […]

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Year in Review 2022: Social Media

Is 2022 already almost over?! Wow this year has gone by fast! All throughout the year, your ECW social media team has been working hard to bring you content from the Emerging Civil War blog and we love seeing all your engagement online. One of the biggest things that we’ve noticed over the year is […]

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New Hope Church: Historic Place of Worship and Battlefield

Charlie Appleton Longfellow, son of acclaimed poet Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, fell wounded at a place called New Hope Church during the Mine Run Campaign in November 1863. The story of his injury and return home created the backdrop for senior Longfellow to pen a beloved Christmas poem/song, “I Heard The Bells on Christmas Day.” Over […]

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What do Ukraine and the Union Army Have in Common?

We’ve all seen them–the images pouring out of our TVs and computers of the Ukrainian refugees heading toward who-knows-where, carrying armfuls of cats. It seems as if Ukraine is an entire country of cat people! And well-behaved felines, too. I know my own wouldn’t stay in my arms for longer than four seconds, no matter […]

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“They Will Charge to the Cannon’s Mouth:” A Story of the 3rd United States Colored Cavalry

ECW welcomes back guest author Jeff T. Giambrone (Editor’s Note: the primary source contains the historic use of a racial slur.) I have been reading the wartime issues of the Vicksburg Daily Herald for years, but despite all the time I have spent on this task, I still manage to find new and interesting information […]

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ECW Weekender: Texas Civil War Museum – The Largest Civil War Museum West of the Mississippi

“Everything is bigger in Texas,” so the saying goes. In terms of history, that holds true in some respects. Though there were few engagements on Texan soil during the Civil War, many soldiers traveled far from home to serve in the Confederacy. The veterans who returned didn’t find their homes ravaged as Georgia, Tennessee, or […]

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