Results for Confederate Camp
Camp Ford Confederate Guards
The initial guards at the camp were local militia comma...
Confederate Camp Milner
Most Georgia troops for the Confederate Army were mobilize...
Confederate Camp
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Confederate Infantry Camp Stephens, named...
Confederate Camp
Confederate Infantry Camp Stephens was named for Alexander...
Confederate Winter Camps
Fighting Boredom and Disease
After the Confederate v...
Confederate Hospital Camp
100 yards southeast is the location of a Confederate Hospi...
N. B. Forrest Camp 215 Sons of Confederate Veterans
On June 28, 1900, a group of over 100 sons and grandsons o...
Confederate Camp & Freedman's Farm Trail
After Dolley Madison sold Montpelier in 1844, the estate w...
Confederate Prison Camp
Here stood a Confederate prison camp for Union prisoners o...
Sandy Springs Camp Ground / Confederate Muster Ground
Sandy Springs Camp Ground: This Methodist camp grou...
Results for Confederate Camp
Camp Ford Confederate Guards
The initial guards at the camp were local militia commanded by a regular officer, Captain S.M. Warner. With the
arrival of the Fordoche prisoners in October 1863, their numbers were inadequate, and an independent Cavalry
company, the Walter P. ...
Confederate Camp Milner
Most Georgia troops for the Confederate Army were mobilized in Griffin. Camp Milner, the Cavalry Camp, was named for Ben Milner, prominent Spalding County man who gave financial aid in equipping companies from his county. Camp Stephens, the Infantry Camp, ...
Confederate Camp
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Confederate Infantry Camp Stephens, named for Alexander H. Stephens, vice-president of Confederacy, was about ½ mile from here on McIntosh Road. Nearly all troops in the Confederate Army from Georgia were mobilized here and at the Cavalry Camp Milner, located ...
Confederate Camp
Confederate Infantry Camp Stephens was named for Alexander H. Stephens, vice-president of the Confederacy. Nearly all troops in the Confederate Army from Georgia were mobilized here and at Cavalry Camp Milner, located at the present Griffin Municipal Park. Spalding County ...
Confederate Winter Camps
Fighting Boredom and Disease
After the Confederate victory at Ball’s Bluff in October 1861, the Union and Confederate armies settled into winter camps between Washington and Richmond. Confederate forces withdrew from Fairfax County to Prince William County and defended a line ...
Confederate Hospital Camp
100 yards southeast is the location of a Confederate Hospital Camp established in the summer of 1864. Soldiers wounded in battles around Atlanta were brought by train to Forsyth. The buildings at the college and other buildings in Forsyth were ...
N. B. Forrest Camp 215 Sons of Confederate Veterans
On June 28, 1900, a group of over 100 sons and grandsons of Confederate veterans met in Memphis to organize a local chapter, or "camp" of the United Sons of Confederate Veterans, later known as the Sons of Confederate Veterans ...
Confederate Camp & Freedman's Farm Trail
After Dolley Madison sold Montpelier in 1844, the estate witnessed many important historic events, few more significant than those of the 1860s. Throughout the winter of 1863 and 1864, as many as 4,500 Confederate troops camped here, part of a ...
Confederate Prison Camp
Here stood a Confederate prison camp for Union prisoners of war. Established about November 18, 1864, the camp held more than five thousand prisoners until the first week of January, 1865. These prisoners were brought here from camps at Millen ...
Sandy Springs Camp Ground / Confederate Muster Ground
Sandy Springs Camp Ground: This Methodist camp ground named for the large spring nearby, dates to 1828, when a fifteen-acre site was purchased from Sampson Pope for $45. Early meetings were under a brush arbor until a central wooden shelter ...