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Flags of the Civil War - The Irish Regiments. The Irish-Americans are perhaps the most closely associated ethnic group to serve during the American Civil War. Over 150,000 of them joined the Union army and many more also joined the Confederate army.
- American Civil War Flags
The Irish Brigade. The 28th Massachusetts, designated the...
- World War II Flags
The Spanish Civil War started as an attempted coup d'état by...
- American Revolution Flags
It wasn't until after the Civil War that flying the flag at...
- World War I Flags
Flags of the World War I Era | Earlier Wars | Flags of the...
- Old Glory
The Great Star Design of 1837, was depicted in the US Flag...
- Flags of The Early Colonies
The Swedish Naval Ensign: Colony of New Sweden 1638-1655. In...
- A-M
O'Duffy later led Irish volunteers to aid the Nationalists...
- Historical Flags of Our Ancestors
"Historical Flags of Our Ancestors" contains pictures, brief...
- American Civil War Flags
The Irish Civil War (Irish: Cogadh Cathartha na hÉireann; 28 June 1922 – 24 May 1923) [3] was a conflict that followed the Irish War of Independence and accompanied the establishment of the Irish Free State, an entity independent from the United Kingdom but within the British Empire.
A variety of flags were flown in Dublin during Easter week, 1916, including the ‘Irish Republic’ flag, the Green Flag, which consisted of a gold harp on a green background and the starry plough, which was used by the Irish Citizen Army.
Civil War flags embodied the spirit of the units they led, and few units of the Union Army displayed such spirit as the famed Irish Brigade. From 1862 to 1865 the brigade built and confirmed its reputation on battlefields with names like Antietam, Fredericksburg, and Gettysburg.
11 Δεκ 2012 · When the Civil War broke out, thousands of Irish-born men in both the North and the South volunteered for military service. Some 140,000 served in the Union Army, and they dominated at least...
A few examples of unusual flags of the Civil War include: Army of the Potomac Headquarters flag: a swallow-tailed guidon of purple with a golden eagle sitting on a silver wreath; The Irish Brigade, Union: Among the most famous Civil War flags, it is a field of green with a gold harp at center above shamrocks and below a sun peeking out from a ...
The United Irishmen used it throughout the 1798 and 1803 rebellions, but it wouldn’t been seen again until the American Civil War. However, in the 1830s, a new flag was rising. The flag featured at the Battle at Vinegar Hill.