Αποτελέσματα Αναζήτησης
Over 1,000 High Resolution Civil War Images, Photographs and Cartes de Visites.
- Military Life
Military Life - Atlanta, GA - Civil War Photos
- Infantry
6. The 26th U.S. Colored Volunteer Infantry on Parade - Camp...
- Casualties
Casualties - Atlanta, GA - Civil War Photos
- Gettysburg
Gettysburg - Atlanta, GA - Civil War Photos
- Industry and Infrastructure
Civil War Photos. Over 1,000 Civil War Images, Photographs...
- Antietam, MD
284. Allan Pinkerton, President Lincoln, and General John A....
- Artillery
61. A Confederate Napoleon Gun used in the Defense of...
- Reference Documents
Civil War Reference Documents. The U.S. Constitution We the...
- Military Life
18 Απρ 2022 · Join us on the campus of Georgia Tech in Atlanta for another one of Garry Adelman's Civil War Photography extravaganzas! This video is part of our Battlefield Tour Series covering Civil...
The Civil War in Four Minutes: Atlanta Campaign. The Union victory in the largest battle of the Atlanta Campaign led to the capture of that critical Confederate city and opened the door for Maj. Gen. William T. Sherman’s most famous operation—the March to the Sea and the capture of Savannah. Union victory.
5,000 American soldiers were surrounded and forced to surrender at Charleston, South Carolina as the British opened their “Southern Campaign” of the Revolutionary War. As British forces moved into the area, civil war between patriots and loyalists spread through the Carolinas.
Map illustrating the siege of Atlanta, Ga. by the U.S. forces, under command of Maj. Gen. ... Relief shown by hachures and spot heights. Main entry from Stephenson's Civil War maps, 1989.
5 Ιουν 2019 · 100 Significant Civil War Photographs: Atlanta Campaign Northern Wagons and a Train–1 Atlanta had scarcely been occupied by Union troops when Sherman began thinking of his next campaign.
Atlanta Campaign | May 7 - September 1, 1864 American Battlefield Trust. In early May of 1864, Federal forces under Maj. Gen. William T. Sherman began battling the Confederate Army of Tennessee. At stake was Atlanta, a major manufacturing center and railroad hub.