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Civil War Blog

A project of PA Historian

A Visit to Winchester, VA

Few towns are as full of Civil War history as the small, but memorable Winchester, Virginia. Today, the county seat of Frederick County sits at the confluence of several major roads, just as the town did during its Civil War years. War came to Winchester in 1862, 1863, and 1864. The historic courthouse in the […]

“Danger is Imminent:” The Beginning of the Gettysburg Campaign

As General Robert E. Lee’s Army of Northern Virginia began its trek up the Shenandoah Valley in early June 1863, the objective mystified many in the North. Some thought he had aims on Washington or Baltimore, while others thought he was taking his army further north, into the Union’s second most populous state. Pennsylvania looked […]

The Civil War: A Collection of U.S. Commemorative Stamps

A book entitled, The Civil War:  A Collection of U.S. Commemorative Stamps, was published in 1995 in cooperation with the U. S. Postal Service, as a companion to the issuance of a sheetlet of 20 stamps recognizing sixteen individuals and four events of the Civil War. The Civil War sheetlet was designed by Mark Hess.   […]

Abraham Lincoln on Stamps – Commemorative Issues, 1909-1958

Between 1909 and 1959, there were very few commemorative stamp issues of the United States that honored Abraham Lincoln.  The issue of 1909, for the Centenary of Lincoln’s birth (pictured below) was mentioned here in a blog post in late January. For those readers new to this series of posts on Abraham Lincoln on Stamps, […]

Touring the Petersburg National Battlefield – The Visitor Center

Today’s blog post begins a multi-part series on the Petersburg National Battlefield – that portion of the battlefield which made up the Eastern Front, where the opening assaults and the Battles of the Crater and Fort Stedman occurred.  Recent photographs taken at the battlefield are interspersed with the official, interpretative statements made at the various […]