Results for Battlefield
Battlefield of Seven Pines
The Federal first line, against which the right wave of th...
Battlefield of Seven Pines
In their Eastward attack of May 31, 1862 on Federal troops...
Battlefield of Seven Pines
Nearby stood "The Twin Houses" from the vicinity of which ...
Battlefield of Malvern Hill
Against the Federals holding this eminence, the Confederat...
Bentonville Battlefield Driving Tour
In the forests and fields around the North Carolina villag...
Bentonville Battlefield
has been designated a
National
Historic Landma...
Battlefield Landmarks - South and West
"Being satisfied from the reports received from the field ...
Battlefield Landmarks - North and West
"It had not been intended to deliver a general battle so f...
Corricks Ford Battlefield
First to Fall
"How gallantly he died in the discharg...
Corricks Ford Battlefield
Tale of the Monuments
"No shaft of shining marble, n...
Results for Battlefield
Battlefield of Seven Pines
The Federal first line, against which the right wave of the Confederate Army directed the main assault of May 31, 1862, crossed the Williamsburg Road near this spot. Casey’s Redoubt, the centre of Federal resistance on this line, was 200 ...
Battlefield of Seven Pines
In their Eastward attack of May 31, 1862 on Federal troops holding Seven Pines, Rodes' Brigade to the South of this highway and Garland’s Brigade to the North, supported respectively by Rains and G.B. Anderson, came under heavy fire approximately ...
Battlefield of Seven Pines
Nearby stood "The Twin Houses" from the vicinity of which Confederate Troops moving eastward, charged the Federal Second Line near Seven Pines after they had stormed Casey's Redoubt and the rest of the Federal First Line on May 31, 1862.
Marker ...
Battlefield of Malvern Hill
Against the Federals holding this eminence, the Confederates delivered repeated assaults from the North on July 1, 1862 and lost about 5,000 men in the final, indecisive Battle of the Seven Days’ Campaign. That night McClellan withdrew to Harrison's Landing, ...
Bentonville Battlefield Driving Tour
In the forests and fields around the North Carolina village of Bentonville, the armies of Confederate Gen. Joseph E. Johnston and Union Gen. William T. Sherman fought their last major engagement of the Civil War on March 19-21, 1865. Sherman ...
Bentonville Battlefield
has been designated a
National
Historic Landmark
This site possesses national significance
in commemorating the history of the
United States of America
1996
National Park Service
United States Department of the Interior
Marker is on Harper House Road, on the left when traveling north.
Courtesy hmdb.org
Battlefield Landmarks - South and West
"Being satisfied from the reports received from the field that it was the intention of the enemy to support with his whole army the attack already made, and the reports of Major-Generals Hancock and Howard on the character of the ...
Battlefield Landmarks - North and West
"It had not been intended to deliver a general battle so far from our base unless attacked, but coming unexpectedly upon the whole Federal Army, to withdraw through the mountains with our extensive trains would have been difficult and dangerous."
Gen. ...
Corricks Ford Battlefield
First to Fall
"How gallantly he died in the discharge of his duty."
President Jefferson Davis CSA
On July 13, 1861, some 3,500 Confederate soldiers under Gen. Robert S. Garnett crossed Shavers Fork here while chased by Union forces in a desperate bid ...
Corricks Ford Battlefield
Tale of the Monuments
"No shaft of shining marble, new
From the sculptor's hand we raise for you
No, here we lay
A boulder drawn from the river-side
Where brave men battled and bled and died."
Karl Myers, Ode to the
Battle of Corricks Ford, 1926
On US ...