-
Recent Posts
Recent Comments
General Civil War Sites
- Civil War 150th Anniversary
- Civil War History
- Civil War Talk
- Crossroads of War
- Daily Observations from The Civil War
- Emerging Civil War
- House Divided
- Mr. Lincoln and New York
- Son of the South
- Southern Unionists Chronicles
- The Civil War Months
- The Lincoln Log
- The South's Defender
- TOCWOC – A Civil War Blog
Other Resources
WordPress
Topical Paradise
- 19th NY Volunteer Infantry
- 33rd New York Infantry Regiment
- 50th New York Engineer Regiment
- 1860 Election
- Abraham Lincoln
- Andrew Johnson
- Army of the Potomac
- Battle of Fredericksburg
- Benjamin Franklin Butler
- Charleston
- Conscription
- Copperheads
- draft
- Edwin M. Stanton
- Fort Sumter
- George B. McClellan
- George Gordon Meade
- George Washington
- Gettysburg Campaign
- Horatio Seymour
- inflation
- Jefferson Davis
- New York City
- Overland Campaign
- Peninsula Campaign
- Presidential Reconstruction
- Prisoners of War
- Reconstruction
- recruitment
- Richmond
- Robert E. Lee
- secession
- Seneca Falls NY
- Siege of Petersburg
- Slavery
- South Carolina
- Southern Economy
- southern scarcity
- Thanksgiving
- The election of 1864
- Ulysses S. Grant
- Virginia
- William H. Seward
- William Tecumseh Sherman
- World War I
Categories
- 100 Years Ago
- 150 Years Ago
- 150 Years Ago This Month
- 150 Years Ago This Week
- 160 Years Ago
- 200 Years Ago
- 250 years ago
- 400 Years Ago
- 800 Years Ago
- After Fort Sumter
- Aftermath
- American Culture
- American History
- American Society
- Battle Monuments
- Battle of Fredericksburg
- Battlefields
- Books I've Enjoyed
- Chancellorsville Campaign
- Civil War Cemeteries
- Civil War prisons
- Confederate States of America
- First Manassas – Bull Run
- Foreign Relations
- Gettysburg Campaign
- Impeachment
- Lincoln Administration
- Maryland Campaign 1862
- Military Matters
- Monuments and Statues
- Naval Matters
- Northern Politics During War
- Northern Society
- Overland Campaign
- Peninsula campaign 1862
- Postbellum Politics
- Postbellum Society
- Reconstruction
- Secession and the Interregnum
- Siege of Petersburg
- Slavery
- Southern Society
- Sports
- Technology
- The election of 1860
- The election of 1864
- The election of 1868
- The Election of 1872
- The election of 1920
- The Grant Administration
- Uncategorized
- United States Centennial
- Veterans
- Vicksburg Campaign
- War Consequences
- World Culture
- World History
- World War I
Subscribe by Feed
Subscribe by Email
Category Archives: 150 Years Ago This Week
All Quiet
“all is quiet” on the Fredericksburg Front From the Richmond Daily Dispatch December 8, 1862: From Fredericksburg. The regular train on the Fredericksburg road was greatly delayed beyond its usual time of arrival last night. Advices from that quarter, how … Continue reading
Uncompromising
From The New-York Times December 8, 1862: TO THE ASSOCIATED PRESS. … MR. STEVENS’ RESOLUTION. NAVAL ORDERS. WASHINGTON, Sunday, Dec. 7 … The resolution of Representative STEVENS, denouncing as guilty of a high crime any person in the Executive or … Continue reading
Vulture
Vilifying the ‘virtual’ northern president, who’s actions are a stimulant to ‘determined resistance’ From the Richmond Daily Dispatch December 5, 1862: The next Yankee President. Of course-Wm. H. Seward has not sold himself to the Devil for nothing. The Presidency … Continue reading
ready for “curly-head”
From the Richmond Daily Dispatch December 3, 1862: From Fredericksburg. [Correspondence of the Richmond Dispatch.] Camp near Fredericksburg, Nov. 29. We came here last Saturday, and the indications were that we would have a fight next day. Reveille was ordered … Continue reading
We support the troops
From the Richmond Daily Dispatch December 3, 1862: Negro Patriotism. –Benj. Marable, Esq., of Halifax county, Va. has four negro men who, for some time, have been engaged working on the fortifications at Richmond. A few days ago they came … Continue reading
Cavalry Along the Rappahannock
150 years ago today there was a lot of information in The New-York Times about the situation near Fredericksburg, Virginia, where the Confederates under General Lee and General Burnside’s Union army faced each other on either side of the Rappahannock … Continue reading
the greenbacks are in the mail
What do you tell the “butcher and baker, and kerosene seller”? It is said that pay in the Union army was usually behind schedule. Here a soldier’s wife explains the issue on the home-front and shows that the army would … Continue reading
Thanksgiving near Portsmouth
Last week The Civil War 150th Blog compared the official Union and Confederate Thanksgivings in 1862. Presidents Lincoln and Davis were thankful for military victories and proclaimed days of Thanksgiving in April and September respectively. Thanksgiving days were pretty fluid … Continue reading
Enemy Campfires Increasing
From a Seneca County, New York newspaper in 1862: From Gen. Burnside’s Army. FALMOUTH, Va. Nov. 26. It is expected the railroad will be finished to-morrow from Acquia Creek to the Rappahannock, opposite Fredericksburg. The bridge over Potomac Creek was … Continue reading
“visited by this fiendish invasion”
150 years ago today the Richmond Daily Dispatch reported on Union General Burnside’s demand that Fredericksburg, Virginia surrender or else risk being bombed. The Dispatch report stated that the Yankees lobbed a few shells toward the railroad depot where a … Continue reading