;

Civil War Blog

A project of PA Historian

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 […]

Dietrich Family in the Civil War

| January 23, 2011

In yesterday’s post, two immigrant ancestors of Dietrich‘s from the Lykens Valley area were presented.  The information on those immigrant ancestors was printed in Our Dietrich Lines, a genealogy by William Dietrich, a direct descendant of both Dietrich immigrants, Michael Dietrich and Lenhart Dietrich.  It was also pointed out that there was no ancestral connection […]

Election of 1860 – A Second Look

| January 19, 2011

The election of 1860 was held throughout the United States on 6 November 1860.  The result was that Abraham Lincoln won a majority of the electoral votes and thus was elected President of the United States.  His election supposedly was the trigger that brought about the secession crisis.  South Carolina voted to secede from the […]

Pennsylvania Regiments at Gettysburg – Corps & Generals

| January 14, 2011

(Part 2 of an on-going series of posts on the Battle of Gettysburg). In order to identify which of the 2000 Civil War veterans from the Lykens Valley area fought at the Battle of Gettysburg, we must first identify the Pennsylvania regiments that fought at Gettysburg. According to histories of the battle, the Union lineup […]

Pennsylvania Regiments at Gettysburg – The Makeup of an Army

| January 13, 2011

(Part 1 of an on-going series of posts on the Battle of Gettysburg). The Battle of Gettysburg, fought 1 July to 3 July 1863, was considered a major turning point in the Civil War.  It was a major defeat for Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee and a victory for Union Gen. George G. Meade.  While […]