;

Civil War Blog

A project of PA Historian

History of the Dauphin County Civil War Monument – Part 1

| March 13, 2012

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 110 feet […]

The Emancipation Proclamation

| March 8, 2012

On 1 January 1863, Abraham Lincoln issued the Emancipation Proclamation.   Much has been written about the proclamation and its effect on the war and the policy for the conduct of the war.  On the day after its release, the Philadelphia Inquirer reported the following: The President’s Emancipation Proclamation. The important Proclamation of the President of […]

Slavery and the Civil War – Excerpts from an 1918 Schoolbook

| February 24, 2012

A School History of the United States by Albert Bushnell Hart and published in 1918,  was in widespread use in the one room school houses of the Lykens Valley area after World War I. There are subtle changes in this text from the one used in the latter part of the 19th century (see post […]

Slavery and the Civil War – Excerpts from an 1878 Schoolbook

| February 23, 2012

A Smaller School History of the United States by David Scott was in widespread use in the one room school houses of the Lykens Valley area after the Civil War.  The following excepts are taken from this book, and show how the subject of “slavery as a cause of the Civil War” was taught in […]

Lincoln Memorial, Washington, D.C.

| February 20, 2012

The most impressive shrine to our sixteenth president, Abraham Lincoln, is located in Washington, D.C., at the end of the mall on ground that once was a swamp.  Thousands of tourists stop at the monument each day, climb its steps and take photographs of the large statute of Lincoln, his words from two of his […]