Veterans of the Civil War identified as having some connection to the Lykens Valley area and included in the Civil War Research Project was updated 19 April 2012. In a series of post beginning today and continuing intermittently for eight posts until concluding at the end of this month, a brief sketch of each of […]
Filed under: Overviews, Queries, Research by Norman Gasbarro | Comments Off on 2012 Additions to Civil War Veterans List – A to C
A listing of the March 2012 posts on The Civil War Blog with direct links: Death of Joel B. Myers The Honorable War Record of John McCarty February 2012 Posts Lykens G.A.R. Monument Update of 1925 The Bloody Dress of Laura Keene Arrives in Baltimore Baltimore to Harrisburg – The Bloody Dress of Laura Keene […]
Filed under: Overviews by Norman Gasbarro | Comments Off on March 2012 Posts
Part 5. The Dauphin County Memorial to the Civil War is currently located in a park at 3rd Street and Division Streets near William Penn High School and near Italian Lake. It is now in the Uptown section of Harrisburg, north of what was once the entrance area to Camp Curtin. The monument stands about […]
Filed under: Memorials, Research, Resources, Stories by Norman Gasbarro | Comments Off on History of the Dauphin County Civil War Monument – Part 5
Part 4. The Dauphin County Memorial to the Civil War is currently located in a park at 3rd Street and Division Streets near William Penn High School and near Italian Lake. It is now in the Uptown section of Harrisburg, north of what was once the entrance area to Camp Curtin. The monument stands about […]
Filed under: Memorials, Research, Resources, Stories by Norman Gasbarro | Comments Off on History of the Dauphin County Civil War Monument – Part 4
Part 3. The Dauphin County Memorial to the Civil War is currently located in a park at 3rd Street and Division Streets near William Penn High School and near Italian Lake. It is now in the Uptown section of Harrisburg, north of what was once the entrance area to Camp Curtin. The monument stands about […]
Filed under: Memorials, Research, Resources, Stories by Norman Gasbarro | 1 Comment »