Episodes Nearest to August 10, 1864: 1 through 25 of 25
- Anti-Confederate Southerners in Tennessee
August 10, 1864
KNOX, Tennessee
WarDespite their geographical locations in the South, many southerners found themselves strongly opposed to the Rebel cause, as indicated by this and several other editorials written in W.G. Brownlow's Knoxville Whig. This particular article is a call to arms, so to speak, against Rebel sympathizers who have been for months, heading guerilla bands, robbing Union families, and burning down...
- General Hood Attempts to Restore Order in the Army of Tennessee
August 12, 1864
FRANKLIN, Tennessee
Crime/Violence, Law, Health/DeathAfter Atlanta had been taken, General John Bell Hood commanded his Army...
- CSS Tennessee, Confederate Ironclad Proves itself at Mobile Bay
August 5, 1864
MOBILE, Alabama
United States Navy, Confederate Navy, War, Civil WarOn the morning of August 5, 1864, Admiral David Farragut led a fleet of eighteen warships into Alabama’s Mobile Bay. Since the fall of New Orleans in April 1862, Mobile had become the major Confederate port in the Gulf of Mexico, responsible for bringing in blockade runners carrying supplies from Havana. The result of Mobile’s rise in importance to Confederacy was a rise in the priority of...
- Henry Nields’ Heroism at the Battle of Mobile Bay
August, 1864 to 1864
MOBILE, Alabama
Navy, Union, VictoryIn early August, 1864, a Union Naval fleet, under the control of Rear Admiral David Farragut commanding the flagship U.S.S. Hartford, neared Mobile Bay, Alabama. The goal was to take over the strategic location which consisted of three confederate forts and a plethora of underwater mines. The two main forts were Forts Morgan and Gaines aided by a few Confederate ships mainly the C.S.S....
- Premature Death of Mary P. Bondurant
August 1, 1864
BEDFORD, Virginia
Health/Death, WomenDeath by disease was a much more present fear then than now. Mrs. Mary B. Bondurant of Bedford County, Virginia, succumbed to consumption at the startlingly young age of thirty-four. She died on August 1st, 1864 in Lynchburg and was survived by her husband, John P. Bondurant. Three of her sisters had already suffered equal fates at the hands of the slow wasting disease.
Her obituary, which...
- City Set Ablaze: The Burning of Chambersburg
July 30, 1864
FRANKLIN, Pennsylvania
War, Civil WarConfederate cavalrymen under the command of General John A. McCausland set the city of Chambersburg, Pennsylvania ablaze on the morning of July 30, 1864. According to a letter sent the following day by D. McConaughy to Pennsylvania Governor Andrew Curtin and Major General Darius N. Couch, the commander of the Susquehanna Military District, the "lowest estimate of loss [from the fire] is 1,500,000."...
- Trench Warfare and Artillery at the Crater
July 30, 1864
DINWIDDIE, Virginia
Battle of the Crater, Civil War, ArtilleryOne of the opening battles of the Petersburg Campaign and one that foreshadowed some of the tactics used in the trench warfare of the First World War was the Battle of the Crater on July 30, 1864. At this point in the war, the armies of Robert E. Lee and Ulysses S. Grant had settled into trench warfare in the area just to the south of Richmond, with the U.S. Army attempting...
- Damage to the Confederate Line at the Battle of the Crater
July 30, 1864
DINWIDDIE, Virginia
Battle Damage, Mine Explosion, Trench Warfare, Civil WarThe Battle of the Crater in the early stages of the Petersburg campaign resulted in a massive amount of damage to the center of the C.S.A. breastwork. In the early stages of the Petersburg campaign, as the battle settled into trench warfare, a Union officer named Henry Pleasants hatched a plan to dig, plant explosives, and explode a mine in the middle of the Confederate breastwork. ...
- The 16th Massachusetts Regiment Disbanded in 1864
July 27, 1864
SUFFOLK, Massachusetts
Infantry, Immigrants, Irish-Americans, Union Army, Civil WarOn July 27, 1864, Private Richard Monnahan was discharged from G Company of the 16th Regiment, Massachusetts Infantry, on the day the entire regiment was mustered out. According to his discharge form from the United States Pension Office, Monnahan was 22 years old, five feet five inches tall, of dark complexion with dark grey eyes.
The 16th regiment was formed in 1861...
- A Union Account: The Battle of The Wilderness
May 3, 1864 to October 16, 1864
SPOTSYLVANIA, Virginia
"Milliken, Robert", "69th New York Infantry", "Irish Brigade", "Fightin 69th"Hindered by an uneven terrain covered with “tangled thickets of pine, scrub-oak, and cedar,” battle organization and tactics broke down as Captain Robert H. Milliken and other officers struggled to see the enemy and maintain unit cohesion. Consequently, the Battle of the Wilderness represented a definitive moment in the course of the Civil War - providing an insightful perspective to a polysemic...
- Threat of Conscription
February 15, 1864 to 1864
VAN ZANDT, Texas
Government, Law, Politics, WarWhen Lizzie, granddaughter of the Gordon family living in Paris, Texas, wrote to her grandmother, she talked about the war. She said, Pa speaks of going in the army if they raise it to 55 Pa will have to go will not join until he is obliged to. The Gordon family was not unique in deciding the future of their family.
Many families were torn with the heart-breaking decision whether or not...
- Charles William Truehearts Account of the Battle of the Crater: Reconsidering Black and White
August 28, 1864
DINWIDDIE, Virginia
African-Americans, Politics, Race-Relations, Slavery, WarWhen the Civil War broke out, Texan Charles William Trueheart was at the University of Virginia studying medicine. Despite initial reservations about secession, he joined the multitudes of southerners who rushed to enlist. At first an artilleryman, by 1864 Trueheart had finished studying medicine and was an assistant surgeon in the 8th Alabama Infantry of the Army of Northern Virginia....
- Rebecca Wright Spies for Union
August, 1864 to September, 1864
FREDERICK, Virginia
WarDuring Union General Philip Sheridan's destruction of the Shenandoah Valley in the hot month of August 1864, Confederate Jubal Early's army occupied Winchester, Virginia, standing in Sheridan's way.
Sheridan tried to follow Early, and he approached this very carefully. His army sparred with Early's army throughout the month of August and into September, but was not able to...
- Effects of Military Rule in the South
July 19, 1864
WASHINGTON, Virginia
WarWriting based on a report from the Abingdon Virginian, the Charleston Daily Courier gives an account of the imprisonment of about fifty soldiers, some of whom have been confined on charges mostly of a trifling nature, for at least three months, without being brought to trial or having their cases in any way investigated.' The article goes on to proclaim that this is not an isolated incident....
- "Union Soldier Writes to Enslaved Daughters"
September 3, 1864
ST LOUIS, Missouri
Slavery, WarSpotswood Rice was a black Missouri soldier in the Union army in 1864. During the time of Rice's military service, he had two daughters that were still slaves in Glasgow, Missouri. While spending time in Benton Barracks Hospital, which was in St. Louis, Missouri, Rice wrote letters to his daughters, as well as the master of the two girls. In the letter to his daughters, Rice assured them...
- Thomas Nast Draws a Political Statement at the Chicago Convention
September 3, 1864
COOK, Illinois
War, Politics, Arts/LeisureTwenty-four year old Thomas Nast made known his support for incumbent President Lincoln in a work in the September edition of Harper's Weekly. The cartoon entitled "Compromise With the South" was one of his most powerful and effective cartoons, and one of his personal favorites that he dedicated to the Democratic Chicago Convention in particular. Harper's Weekly, the first periodical to...
- The Florida Cuts a Path of Destruction near Cape May
July, 1864 to 1864
CAPE MAY, New Jersey
Civil War, Migration/TransportationIn July of 1864 the privateer Florida captured six Union ships along the Coast below Cape May, New Jersey. Captain Morris was in charge of this black-painted vessel and its 155 man crew. The ship itself mounted eight guns and all of the crew were armed with revolvers and cutlasses. The Florida had three flags, the United States flag, the Confederate flag, and...
- A Negro Killed
January 28, 1864 to 1864
BROOKE, Virginia
African-Americans, Arts/Leisure, Crime/Violence, Law, Race-Relations, Urban-Life/BoosterismThe crime was reported in the newspaper with a bit of contempt, as if it was a mildly amusing diversion in the late days of the Civil War. According to the Wellsburg Herald, the black population of Wellsburg had been meeting nightly at societies or parties at the residences of other free blacks. But on this particular night something went wrong, or as the local white-owned newspaper mused, [the...
- University of Virginia Session Information for 1864-65 Semester
September 8, 1864
ALBEMARLE, Virginia
Education, WarWritten prior to the opening of the 1864-65 session at the University of Virginia, this letter from Chairman of the Faculty, Socrates Maupin, outlines the costs for matriculation, tuition, rent, and board at the southern institution. While the matriculation, tuition, and rent fees remained at pre-Civil War levels, one should not be surprised to find that board has regularly advanced in price...
- Mine their Line: Pennsylvania Coal Miners Created the Crater
June 24, 1864 to July 30, 1864
DINWIDDIE, Virginia, SCHUYLKILL, Pennsylvania
War, Civil WarIn his official report, Lieutenant-Colonel Henry Pleasants of the 48th Pennsylvania Veteran Volunteers wrote that the mine dug under the Confederate trenches outside Petersburg exploded at sixteen minutes to five, on the morning of July 30, 1864. The Quartermaster sergeant of the 48th Pennsylvania, Joseph Gould, wrote his history of the regiment, "It [the explosion] was a magnificent...
- The Union’s Last Resort: A Mining Operation
June 20, 1864 to July 26, 1864
DINWIDDIE, Virginia
Civil War, Battle of Petersburg, Battle of the Crater, Mining Operation, Mining, MineBoth Union and Confederate leaders knew that a decisive battle at Petersburg could mean a decisive battle of the war; but, it is unlikely that Union leaders would have guessed that their best chance for victory would depend on constructing a mineshaft. There was a lot riding on the outcome of Petersburg, Virginia. Bryce Suderow, a Civil War historian, explains the Union’s...
- Leading up to the Battle of Petersburg: The Mining Operation
June 20, 1864 to July 26, 1864
DINWIDDIE, Virginia
Mine, Mining, Battle of the Crater, Battle of Petersburg, Civil WarThe battle of Petersburg, Virginia was crucial in the minds of both Union and Confederate leaders. A leading Civil War historian Bryce A. Suderow explains the Union Army’s thinking: Grant believed that if Union forces could overpower the Confederate lines and crush the Southern stronghold the Southern capital would inevitably fall, ending the American Civil War in the Union’s...
- The Mishaps of Being in a Halfhearted Assault
June 15, 1864 to July 30, 1864
DINWIDDIE, Virginia
Civil War, PetersburgThe battle of Petersburg is remembered as one of the most destructive of the war.
Petersburg can be considered the last stand of the Army of Northern Virginia. After months of maneuvering and fighting, Grant had finally forced Lee into defending Richmond itself. Before this the campaign had consisted of Lee moving to block Grant’s advances, trading ground for time. Now there was no more... - Confederate Victory in Stony Creek Depot
July 5, 1864 to July 6, 1864
SURRY, Virginia
African-Americans, Race-Relations, WarUnder the leadership of Confederate General Wade Hampton, who weeks earlier had driven General George Sheridan's Union forces from the James River, Confederate troops encountered a considerably-sized, well-reinforced Yankee brigade near Sappony Church. Fighting continued throughout the evening and night of July 5th, and having received reinforcements, General Hampton's army repulsed and...
- Joshua Frier's Salt Solution
1864
DUVAL, Florida
Agriculture, Economy, Politics, WarOn his seventeenth birthday, Joshua Frier enrolled in a branch of the Florida Confederate militia which was eventually called the First Florida Reserves, Company B. The unit remained in northern Florida throughout its service, where the Union naval blockade intentionally caused serious import shortages on goods like coffee, tea, and salt. Salt was a commodity that was vitally necessary to preserve...