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Civil War Blog

A project of PA Historian

The War Came By Train – Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Museum

National Train Day was celebrated on 12 May 2012 at Philadelphia’s 30th Street Railroad Station.  There were rail equipment displays, model railroads, and exhibits designed to focus on the importance of railroads past, present and future. One exhibit worth noting that related to the Civil War was presented by the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Museum […]

Halifax Connection at the G.A.R. Encampment in Washington, 1902?

In 1902 when the Annual Encampment of The G.A.R. took place in October 1902 in Washington, D.C., Henry C. Bowman was 66 years old and recently retired from his position of lamplighter of Halifax, Dauphin County, Pennsylvania.  The annual national encampments drew Civil War veterans from all over the country and were usually well-documented in […]

The Death of Capt. William H. Crook

An obituary of William H. Crook, who was born in Clark’s Ferry, appeared in the Harrisburg Telegraph on 17 January 1914: CAPTAIN CROOK, WAR VETERAN AND FORMER CITY OFFICIAL, DIES Taken Ill During Intense Heat of Gettysburg Encampment in July BIRTHDAY EVERY FOUR YEARS Captain William H. Crook, well-known Republican, a prominent Civil War veteran […]

Some Wedding Anniversaries of Veterans in 1919

Two Civil War veterans with connections to the Lykens Valley celebrated long-term marriage anniversaries at the end of 1918 and the end of 1919.  Both anniversaries were reported in the newspapers of 1919. Cloyd C. Bender was born in Perry County, Pennsylvania, but lived most of his life in Halifax where he first worked as […]

The Crook Family of Clark’s Ferry

Four members of the Crook family of Clark’s Ferry, Dauphin County, Pennsylvania served in the Civil War.  Clark’s Ferry is located in the lower part of the triangular area of study of the Civil War Research Project. The 1858 map (above) of Reed Township is from the Pennsylvania Archives.  It shows the location of Clark’s […]