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Category Archives: 150 Years Ago This Week
Nation’s Abundance, Army’s Impedimenta
Don’t be like Mac. A couple weeks after relieving the dilatory George McClellan from command of the Army of the Potomac, President Lincoln advises Nathaniel Banks to stop requisitioning supplies, stop procrastinating, and get his Army of the Gulf sailing … Continue reading
Branded with a ‘D’
From the Richmond Daily Dispatch November 20, 1862: A soldier branded for desertion. –The court-martial now in session recently sentenced Corporal Richard R. Poore, of company A, 15th Virginia cavalry battalion, for desertion, to be reduced to the ranks, forfeit … Continue reading
Posted in 150 Years Ago This Week, Confederate States of America, Southern Society
Tagged desertion
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Little Mac in Big Apple
150 years ago today recently ousted General George McClellan spoke to adoring crowds in New York City. Apparently he held off on dissing the Lincoln administration and seems to be genuinely appreciative of all New Yorkers had contributed to the … Continue reading
Good Fences …
would make good neighbors – if the Yankees hadn’t destroyed them, too. From the Richmond Daily Dispatch November 15, 1862: The fence law. The last Legislature of Virginia, in view of the savages of the enemy rendering it impossible for … Continue reading
Posted in 150 Years Ago This Week, Confederate States of America, Southern Society
Tagged fences, Virginia, Yankees
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Keystone Cops
Provost Guard has its work cut out for it at Camp Curtin. Richmond’s Daily Dispatch says the removal of native Pennsylvanian George McClellan as commander of the Army of the Potomac has caused an increase in the turbulence at Camp … Continue reading
Hyde Parked – for good!
Civil War Interactive used to have a great paragraph about 150 years ago today – the gadget loving President Lincoln visited the Washington Navy Yard with Secretaries Seward and Chase to watch Captain John A.B. Dahlgren test a device called … Continue reading
“more indignation and alarm”
No surprise here. A Seneca County newspaper that was strongly oriented in favor of the Democratic Party is unhappy with President Lincoln and his administration for the removal of George McClellan as commander of the Army of the Potomac. This … Continue reading
Mac Heads North
Seneca County in upstate New York voted mostly for the Democratic party in 1862. In late September a group of men in the town of Seneca Falls named a political club after George B. McClellan, the commander of the Army … Continue reading
Be like Zach
Democrats throughout the North had a good deal of success in the 1862 midterm elections. The Democrats picked up 28 seats in the U.S. House of Representatives (although Republicans were still able to control the House thanks to the support … Continue reading
Smugglers Foiled
Detectives from the Richmond Military District apprehend smugglers trying to get some tobacco North. From the Richmond Daily Dispatch November 11, 1862: Tobacco captured. –On Sunday the detectives of Major Griswold’s office captured 26 boxes of tobacco, while en route, … Continue reading