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Major General John A. Logan

Logan

Marker is at the intersection of Rhode Island Avenue NW and 13th Street NW, on the right when traveling east on Rhode Island Avenue NW.

Courtesy hmdb.org

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Logan’s 15th A.C. Line

June 25, 26, 1864. These troops being designated to assault Confederate forces on Kennesaw Spur, moved to this sector & were aligned astride the Burnt Hickory rd. at this point.

June 27. Walcutt’s brigade (Harrow’s div.) N. of rd.; G.A. Smith’s ...

Logan's 15th & Blair's 17th A.C. to Decatur

July 19, 1864. Logan's troops, in "light fighting order" left camp at Henderson's mill (0.8 mile N.E.), at 5 A.M. & marched to Decatur. They were joined at this point by Blair's corps which had camped at Blake's Mill, 2 ...

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Logan’s Memorial Day Order

General Orders, No. 11, Headquarters Grand Army of the Republic, Washington D.C. May 5, 1868.

I. The 30th day of May, 1869, is designated for the purpose of strewing with flowers or otherwise decorating the graves of comrades who died in ...

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Logans Town

Talgayeeta, a Cayuga Indian also known as Chief Logan lived here 1772. Logans sister Koonay married trader John Gibson here. Logans family was massacred by renegade whites at Yellow Creek in 1774. He then wreaked terrible vengeance on white settlers ...

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Logan Massacre

One of the events which led up to Dunmore's War was the killing at this point of the family of Chief Logan, eloquent leader of the Mingo Indians, April, 1774, opposite their village at the mouth of Yellow Creek in ...

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The First Settlers of Logan

The first settlers of Logan encamped near this spot on the bank of the Little Logan early in May 1859

Heads of Families: John R Blanchard, Abraham Caldwell, Griffith Charles, Israel J. Clark, Ann Davis, William Dees, James Demino, Sidney Dibble, ...

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Lest We Forget - Chief Logan

"Tah-Gah-Jute"

From near this place in 1774, all the family of Logan was lured across the Ohio River and massacred by Whites thus sending Logan and Ohio Indian nations on a path of war for vengeance now known to history as ...

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Camp Logan

Soon after the United States' entrance into World War I in 1917, the U.S. Army established 34 training camps to prepare troops for warfare. Named for General John A. Logan, Mexican War and Civil War veteran and senator from Illinois, ...

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James Logan Butler

The Silver Baron of Tonopah, Nevada

FEB. 2, 1855

JAN. 22, 1923

His Mizpah Mine Produced

Nearly Half of the

$250,000,000 Gold and Silver

Taken in the Tonopah Rush

of the Early 1900’s.

Marker can be reached from Broadway.

Courtesy hmdb.org

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