Posted on 08/02/2007 9:24:27 PM PDT by bicpen
Hi,
If you could please answer a few quick questions for me, I would be most appreciative. Thanks so much!
If you were looking for information online about President Lincoln what URL would
If you were looking for information online about the Civil War what URL would you type?
If you couldn't find either of these websites by typing in your best guess as the web address, what search terms would you key into an online search engine?
Uncles ashes turned over to Confederate Graves Registration, Richmond, Virginia, 7 days before the end of the War. Claimed by family members about 4 months later. He is probably burries in a family plot somewhere near Trickem On Gooch Creek, Arkansas.
Bwaahahahha...that's funny....
“One was killed during a cavalry skirmish in Tennessee in 1863”
Do you know what battle he was killed in? I live in east Tennessee and know quite a lot about the Civil War in this state.
Lincoln Memorial University in Harrogate Tennessee, might be one place to look, they have extensive research available on President Lincoln and the Civil War.
His name was David Belcher, and he was a private in Company K of the 2nd Georgia Cavalry. He suffered a severe wound to the shoulder during the fight and was captured by the Union garrison when they recaptured the houses they'd abandoned to Forrest's troopers earlier in the fight. Taken to the field hospital at nearby Fort Donelson, David lingered for over a month before dying of an infection on March 10, 1863.
His cousin is my great-great-grandmother, who moved to Texas after the war and married a man who'd served with the 46th Texas Cavalry (McCord's Frontier Cavalry). All four of her brothers fought in the war, with one dying at Crampton's Gap, Maryland and another being captured at Cold Harbor and dying at the POW Camp in Elmira, New York. The two younger brothers didn't join the war until almost the end, thus missing most of the conflict. After the war, they headed to Texas with two of their cousins to find new homes for their families and ended up getting poisoned for the fifty dollars in gold they were carrying. Their cousins survived the poisoning, but they did not.
(he is buried in the National Cemetery there at Elmira and I plan on driving up there next year during my trip to Gettysburg and Antietam).
I just got back from Gettysburg a couple of weeks ago. It was great, even though traffic has gotten much worse over the decade since my last visit.
One of the new monuments is a bronze of James Longstreet, near where his HQ was during the battle. By chance I happend to meet the ‘model’ for the sculpture at Dale Galleon’s (spelling) gallery in Steinwyr (spelling again!) avenue.
His habit of speaking in ‘first person’ while dressed as the late, great CSA General unnerved my wife a bit....(chuckle)
For Lincoln ping Non-Sequitur. He has so much info at his finger tips.
Yep, and some of it is even correct!
(chuckle)
Thanks for the reply. Fort Donelson was a major battle where the Confederates were greatly outnumbered, but fought hard, many also captured by the Union. Huge numbers of confederates were injured (I think about 400) and 100 died.
Just about everywhere you go in Tennessee there are Civil War markers. My ancestors also were in the war, I have a lot of info on their participation. If you ever get a chance to visit Tennessee try to visit some of these battlefields.
Just finished a book recently about the Cumberland Mountain area where I live. Many of the feuds here in the late 1800s were a result of grievances left over from the Civil War. Loyalties here were split and the term “brother against brother” was real here more than anywhere.
LOL!
I just visited Fort Donelson and Dover a few weeks ago. They have really done a nice job restoring the fort to its former glory.
‘I just visited Fort Donelson and Dover a few weeks ago. They have really done a nice job restoring the fort to its former glory.’
Every time I drive down to Texas I go by the exits, and never seem to have the time to stop. I’ll get there eventually.
If you ever have a day to spend in this part of the country, I recommend a stop at Fort Donelson, which should take two hours at the most, and then a visit to Shiloh, which is about three hours away.
Ping for later...
If you ever have a day to spend in this part of the country, I recommend a stop at Fort Donelson, which should take two hours at the most, and then a visit to Shiloh, which is about three hours away.
Shiloh would be ‘the reason’ for the trip, but if you are there, might as well hit Donelson too.
Just got back from Gettysburg a couple of weeks ago, our second visit. We’ve been to almost every ‘eastern theater’ battlefield, time to take a gander at the western end of the conflict.
What parts are wrong? The ones that conflict with Southron mythology?
Yep, and some of it is even correct!
What parts are wrong? The ones that conflict with Southron mythology?
I was kidding NS.
Now...where do we find Mordor down south?
(chuckle)
btw, had a great time up in Gettysburg a couple of weeks ago. Quite a few changes since my last visit in the 1990’s. I was especially impressed with the Longstreet bronze near where his HQ was during the battle. Its magnificent.
Killed in Action
Brigade Commanders, With Rank of Colonel
Colonel Edward D Baker - 71st Pennsylvania - Ball's Bluff
Colonel Julius Raith - 43d Illinois - Shiloh
Colonel Everett Peabody - 25th Missouri - Shiloh
Colonel George Webster - 98th Ohio - Chaplin Hills
Colonel John A Koltes - 73d Pennsylvania - Manassas
Colonel William B Goodrich - 60th New York - Antietam
Colonel George W Roberts - 42d Illinois - Stone's River
Colonel Frederick Schaefer - 2d Missouri - Stone's River
Colonel George C Spear - 61st Pennsylvania - Marye's Heights
Colonel David S Cowles - 128th New York - Port Hudson
Colonel George B Boomer - 26th Missouri - Vicksburg
Colonel Edward E Cross - 5th New Hampshire - Gettysburg
Colonel George L Willard - 125th New York - Gettysburg
Colonel Eliakim Sherrill - 126th New York - Gettysburg
Colonel Haldinand S Putnam - 7th New Hampshire - Fort Wagner
Colonel James E Mallon - 42d New York - Bristoe Station
Colonel Edward A King - 68th Indiana - Chickamauga
Colonel Hans C Heg - 15th Wisconsin - Chickamauga
Colonel Philemon P Baldwin - 6th Indiana - Chickamauga
Colonel William R Creighton - 7th Ohio - Ringgold
Colonel Patrick E Burke - 66th Illinois - Rome Cross Roads
Colonel Orlando H Morris - 66th New York - Cold Harbor
Colonel Lewis O Morris - 7th New York (H A) - Cold Harbor
Colonel Henry Boyd McKeen - 81st Pennsylvania - Cold Harbor
Colonel Frank A Haskell - 36th Wisconsin - Cold Harbor
Colonel Jeremiah C Drake - 112th New York - Cold Harbor
Colonel Richard Byrnes - 28th Massachusetts - Cold Harbor
Colonel Patrick Kelly - 88th New York - Petersburg
Colonel William Blaisdell - 11th Massachusetts - Petersburg
Colonel Simon Mix - 3d New York Cavalry - Petersburg
Colonel Calvin A Craig - 105th Pennsylvania - Deep Bottom
Colonel Nathan T Dushane - 1st Maryland - Weldon Railroad
Colonel Joseph Theburn - 1st West Virginia - Cedar Creek
Colonel Louis Bell - 4th New Hampshire - Fort Fisher
I found the list in Fox's Regimental Losses at http://www.civilwarhome.com/foxspref.htm
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