irishbrigadecamp.com
Links | Irish Brigade Camp No. 4 | Michael Beard
http://www.irishbrigadecamp.com/links.html
Irish Brigade Camp No. 4. Daughters of Union Veterans of the Civil War. Elizabeth Van Lew Tent, Daughters of Union Veterans of the Civil War (Virginia). Rappahannock Valley Civil War Roundtable. Central Virginia Battlefields Trust. Valley of the Shadow. Fredericksburg Order of Battle. Fredericksburg and Spotsylvania National Military Park. Virginia Sesquicentennial Commemoration Commission for the American Civil War. The Civil War Preservation Trust. National Memorial Day Parade.
bullruncwrt.org
Other Round Tables
http://bullruncwrt.org/BRCWRT/OtherRTs.html
OTHER CIVIL WAR ROUND TABLES. Manassas Battlefield Trust Facebook. Here is a list of other Civil War Round Tables - some close, some not-so-close. Like just about every other page on this site, this is a work in progress. Where the Round Table website address was available, it has been included. If anyone has updated information or new information on these or other sites, please send it to me at WebMaster. So that I can keep this info current. As always, THANKS! Blue Ridge Civil War Round Table. Greater ...
npsfrsp.wordpress.com
Providing a More Personalized Portrayal of the Great Conflicts – Living History Moves Out of the Camp | Mysteries & Conundrums
https://npsfrsp.wordpress.com/2011/06/17/providing-a-more-personalized-portrayal-of-the-great-conflicts-living-history-moves-out-of-the-camp
Exploring the Civil War-era landscape in the Fredericksburg and Spotsylvania region. Providing a More Personalized Portrayal of the Great Conflicts – Living History Moves Out of the Camp. June 17, 2011. June 15, 2011. Previous posts in this series can be found here. Terry Winschel as a member of the 116th Pennsylvania Infantry on the front lawn of Chatham - 1978. John Heiser as a Confederate soldier at Prospect Hill - 1978. Keith Bohannon as a Confederate soldier at Chancellorsville – 1989. Those living ...
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William T. Sherman at Spotsylvania, Chancellorsville, and Fredericksburg, May 1865 | Mysteries & Conundrums
https://npsfrsp.wordpress.com/2015/05/04/william-t-sherman-at-spotsylvania-chancellorsville-and-fredericksburg-may-1865
Exploring the Civil War-era landscape in the Fredericksburg and Spotsylvania region. William T. Sherman at Spotsylvania, Chancellorsville, and Fredericksburg, May 1865. May 4, 2015. June 23, 2015. Submitted by civilians before and after 1865; soldiers’ pension- and service affidavits. United States Army staff rides beginning locally around 1911; federal legislative action beginning in 1898 towards creation of the park in 1927; and NPS living history. Programs of the 1970s’ and 1980’s. This month brings t...
npsfrsp.wordpress.com
The soldiers’ faith….in us | Mysteries & Conundrums
https://npsfrsp.wordpress.com/2015/05/26/the-soldiers-faith-in-us
Exploring the Civil War-era landscape in the Fredericksburg and Spotsylvania region. The soldiers’ faith….in us. May 26, 2015. From John Hennessy. [This is derived from the speech given in the Fredericksburg National Cemetery yesterday, Memorial Day, 2015.]. We take for granted that men and women are willing to die for their country when called upon to do so. We presume their trust in what Democracy and freedom are and what they mean to the world are inspiration enough. We. When that faith is threatened ...
roanokecwrt.com
Roanoke Civil War Round Table Links
http://roanokecwrt.com/roundlinks.html
Roanoke Civil War Round Table Links. Other Civil War Round Tables:. Rappahannock Valley Civil War Round Table. Kanawha Valley Civil War Roundtable. Raleigh Civil War Roundtable. Baltimore Civil War Roundtable. Civil War Round Table of the District of Columbia. Bull Run Civil War Round Table. Brunswick Civil War Round Table. Outer Banks Civil War Roundtable. Surry County Civil War Roundtable. Meets in Mt. Airy, N.C. Local / Regional Websites:. Southwest Virginia's Civil War Sesquicentennial.
npsfrsp.wordpress.com
Mysteries&Conundrums | Mysteries & Conundrums
https://npsfrsp.wordpress.com/author/npsfrsp
Exploring the Civil War-era landscape in the Fredericksburg and Spotsylvania region. A cemeterial conundrum: the case of Charles Fuchs (and others like him). July 1, 2016. July 1, 2016. From John Hennessy: We repost this (originally from 2010) in advance of our walk through the National Cemetery tonight, for History at Sunset. It is a vivid example of the conundrums we often face. The annual illumination of the National Cemetery–one candle for each of the 15,000 men buried there. March 27, 2016. 1983) wo...
npsfrsp.wordpress.com
Forgotten in Plain Sight: The City Cemetery at the Head of Amelia Street | Mysteries & Conundrums
https://npsfrsp.wordpress.com/2015/07/01/forgotten-in-plain-sight-the-city-cemetery-at-the-head-of-amelia-street
Exploring the Civil War-era landscape in the Fredericksburg and Spotsylvania region. Forgotten in Plain Sight: The City Cemetery at the Head of Amelia Street. July 1, 2015. July 2, 2015. From John Hennessy [We offer this up in advance of Friday night’s History at Sunset program in the city and Confederate cemeteries in Fredericksburg. This post originally appeared in the Free Lance-Star in 2010.]. The headstone of Evy and George Doswell, young victims of the 1861 Scarlet Fever epidemic in Fredericksburg.