;

Civil War Blog

A project of PA Historian

The Opening Battles

| January 31, 2011

(Part 2 of 12).  Contents of Volume I of The Photographic History of the Civil War:  The Opening Battles The year 1911 was the 50th anniversary of the beginning of the Civil War.  In a memorial to the war, a ten volume set of books was published entitled The Photographic History of the Civil War. […]

Sgt. William Henry – 96th Pennsylvania Infantry

| January 30, 2011

Daniel Henry, whose father and uncles took part in the war for independence, was born in Reading in the last quarter of the18th century.  When Pottsville was laid out, he as a carpenter, moved there, and on 9 January 1825, his son, William Henry was born. William Henry‘s mother died when he was eleven years […]

At Sea: Sailors, Marines, Merchant Seamen, Blockaders, Revenue Service

| January 29, 2011

Nearly all of the men who served in the Civil War from the Lykens Valley area served in military units as soldiers.  But a few did serve as sailors or marines.  Finding information on the sailors and marines is much more difficult than finding information on soldiers who served in Pennsylvania Civil War regiments, because they […]

The Photographic History of the Civil War

| January 28, 2011

(Part 1 of 12).  The year 1911 was the 50th anniversary of the beginning of the Civil War.  As a memorial to the war, a ten volume set of books was published entitled The Photographic History of the Civil War. This series attempted to do what no other books had previously done – to bring […]

Naked Man Visits Rebs on Rapidan

| January 27, 2011

In locating interesting stories about the Civil War, often the best ones are found in obvious places.  The one told below was located in an anthology entitled Civil War Treasury of Tales, Legends & Folklore, edited by B. A. Botkin, and published in 1960.  It comes from a Confederate Gen. John Brown Gordon (1832-1904), and […]