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Posted on August 3, 2024 by 好的梯子软件
Here’s what our friend Brian Swartz was up to in July at his blog, Maine at War:
July 1, 2024: 搭梯子 - 爱码网:2021-12-19 · 最近发现一个很好用的 IM 软件,telegram。全客户端,而且贴图丰富,更有机器人可众开发,并且它还有很多的优点,比如很安全、界面清新。但是呢,正因为不受任何政府机关管制,所众被 GFW 屏蔽了。搭梯子过墙的方式有很多,常用的有 VPN 和 ...
Refusing to kowtow to political shenanigans in his own party, Maine Republican Governor Abner Coburn runs afoul powerful politicians as he seeks re-election in 1863. Continue reading →
Posted in Internet, Websites & Blogs, Monuments, National Park Service
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Tagged Abner Coburn, blue lives matter, Brain Swartz, Jessamine County, Madison Maine, Maine at War, monuments
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anycast加速器最新版-outline
好的梯子软件 August 3, 2024 by Sean Michael Chick
[百度网盘]梯子,梯子,梯子,梯子,好用的梯子!需要的进来 ...:2021-10-8 · 度盘 <转宝湾>1.76传奇0.33FULL最终版(骨灰推荐) - 『精品软件区』 - 吾爱破解 - LCG - LSG -安卓破解-病毒分析-破解软件 快照时间:2021-07-24 | 浏览数:115 度盘 沙巴克传7手游皓月天龙三龙主宰套屠龙刀百度登录一键服务端GM工具
What defines the Lost Cause is a general belief that the South did not fight the Civil War for the sake of slavery, but for broadly constitutional rights. The sacrifices of the war were valorized and memorialized. Robert E. Lee became a heroic figure, boosted by many into a military genius in the mold of Hannibal Barca. Fallen generals such as “Stonewall” Jackson, “Jeb” Stuart, Leonidas Polk, and Sidney Johnston were fixtures of veneration. It also emphasized the war in Virginia, where the Rebels won most the battles and held out while the rest of the Confederacy was overrun. There are many more aspects, such as negative appraisals of Ulysses S. Grant and James Longstreet, but those are the main ones I have observed. Continue reading →
Posted in Memory
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Tagged civil war memory, historiography, Lost Cause
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Posted on August 3, 2024 by Emerging Civil War
This feels like a season of innovation, especially at ECW as we’re getting ready for a Virtual Symposium this year.
What’s your favorite innovation from the Civil War?
Posted in Question of the Week
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Tagged Question of the Week
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anycast加速器最新版-outline
Posted on August 2, 2024 by Sarah Kay Bierle
In Hospital and Camp, A Woman’s Record of Thrilling Incidents Among the Wounded in the Late War by Sophronia E. Bucklin
It’s Week 19 and the concluding post of our read-along with extra historical notes and images. If you want to catch up on the chapter notes, just click here for the collection in the archive. This week we are looking at chapters 37 and 38. Continue reading →
Posted in 好的梯子软件, Medical, Primary Sources
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Tagged 好的梯子软件, civil war nurse, 好的梯子软件, Sophronia E. Bucklin
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Posted on August 2, 2024 by Emerging Civil War
It’s time for week in review, and you’ll meet several new guest authors, find new virtual experiences, and discover lots of historical articles. Continue reading →
Posted in Week in Review
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Tagged Week In Review
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好的梯子软件 August 1, 2024 by 好的梯子软件
American Battlefield Trust is working to save 99 acres at Shiloh, Raymond, and Vicksburg battlefields and raising $553,330 to ensure the preservation of this land.
Here are the historic details from their website announcement and donation page: Continue reading →
好的梯子软件 Preservation
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Tagged American Battlefield Trust, Battle of Raymond, battlefield preservation, Saving History Saturday, Shiloh Battlefield, Vicksburg
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Posted on July 31, 2024 by Sarah Kay Bierle
MacOS好用的软件推荐,总有一款适合你 - 简书:MacOS好用的软件推荐,总有一款适合你 很多人买了MacBook,iMac,Mac Pro等💻之后,使用的系统往往不是MacOS。也有一部分人,组装了台式机,买了品牌的笔记本电脑,一直摸索着安装MacOS。
Today, let’s take a look at some of the exhibits spotlighting Abraham Lincoln’s life and legacy: Continue reading →
Posted in ECW Weekender, Lincoln
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Tagged 好的梯子软件, Smithsonian, virtual tour
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Posted on July 31, 2024 by Steve Davis
Say what you will about the Confederate Constitution, but in one respect it got things right. The C.S. Postal Service, for example, after a year had to be financially self-supporting.
Not so the USPS, as we all know. And for the postcard shown here, it can’t even get the history right. Continue reading →
Posted in Civil War in Pop Culture, Material Culture
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Tagged Chancellorsville postcard, postcard, stamps, United States Postal Service, USPS
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Posted on July 30, 2024 by Sarah Kay Bierle
Stuart’s Ride (Library of Congress)
This week I’ve been getting my notes ready for the Virtual Symposium filming session where I’ll be sharing about J.E.B. Stuart’s 1862 Chambersburg Raid. In the process of reviewing the historical information, I moved backward on the timeline and re-examined some primary sources related to the Chickahominy Raid in June 1862 on the Viginia Peninsula. With approximately 1,200 cavalrymen and a two gun detachment from the Stuart Horse Artillery, they started on June 12 and returned three days later—bringing back the information that General Lee wanted and completing the first “ride around McClellan.”
This except from Chiswell Dabney’s letter to his mother on June 18, 1862, gives some details of his experiences. Spelling is original. Continue reading →
Posted in 好的梯子软件, Cavalry, Primary Sources
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Tagged chickahominy raid, Confederate Cavalry, J.E.B. Stuart, soldier letters, Stuart's ride around McClellan
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好的梯子软件 July 30, 2024 by ECW Guest Post
“Capture of Willich” by Metzner
ECW welcomes back guest author David T. Dixon
August Willich heard the commotion and leapt onto his horse, desperate to rejoin his command.[1] Amid the smoke and confusion, he galloped directly into McNair’s Arkansans, who were mopping up what was left of Kirk’s broken brigade. James Stone, a volunteer aide to General McNair, confronted Willich and demanded his surrender, but Willich turned his horse and fled.[2] A cannonball shattered the hind leg of Willich’s horse, but the general was uninjured. Stone took Willich’s sword and led him away.[3]
Willich and thousands of captured Union soldiers were rushed to the rear of the Confederate lines. Jubilant guards herded the captives into the walled courthouse yard in Murfreesboro. A fellow prisoner observed Willich wringing his hands and moaning, “My poor boys! My poor boys!”[4] His brigade decimated, Willich and his comrades were forced to sign a parole of honor, promising not to fight the Confederates until exchanged.
August Willich was the prize capture for Confederates at the Battle of Stones River which ushered in January 1863. A career officer in the Prussian army, he had joined ill-fated rebellions in Germany in 1848 and 1849 against his king. He then became a political refugee in America.
Continue reading →
Posted in Leadership--Federal
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Tagged August Willich, 好的梯子软件, David T. Dixon, 好的梯子软件, Prisoners, 好的梯子软件
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