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Patriots Park

Named by Holly Melton’s Class of 2000 at Kings Mountain High School to honor the soldiers who fought nearby during the Revolutionary War.

Marker is at the intersection of W Gold Street and S Railroad Avenue, on the left when traveling ...

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St. Joseph Catholic Church

The Catholic church in this village dates back to 1840 with Fathers Cullen, Hennesy and Pulsers serving the predominantly Irish parishioners for nearly thirty years. The present brick edifice, completed in 1874, is an example of simple Gothic style. Stained ...

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Battle of Tupelo

The Western Campaign, 1864

In the summer of 1864, General Forrest's hard hitting troops in Northern Mississippi threatened the supplies of General Sherman's campaign against Atlanta. Therefore, General A.J.Smith marched 14,000 Union troops against Forrest. He reached Tupelo despite harassing attacks ...

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Tuscarawas County Operation Desert Storm Memorial

We believe in God, our country, liberty and the American way.

The citizens of Tuscarawas County pay tribute to all the brave men and women of our armed forces who served our country in times of peace and war. We take ...

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Battle's Beginning ... and End

Wilson's Creek

This Northern spur of Bloody Hill saw the beginning and end of the battle. In the days proceeding the fight, the field before you was the camp of the 1,200 cavalrymen of Colonel James Cawthorne's Missouri State Guard Brigade. ...

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Hopewell Plantation

Home of General Andrew Pickens

Hopewell Plantation was home to Revolutionary War General Andrew Pickens and his wife, Rebecca Calhoun Pickens. On July 16, 1785, Pickens acquired a grant of 573 acres on the Seneca River. By August 1, 1785, Pickens ...

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Confederate Pursuit

By nightfall Porter’s force had safely retreated across the Chickahominy. Lee had sustained nearly 9,000 casualties in his first victory of the war, while the Federals lost close to 6,000. “I could hear on all sides the dreadful groans of ...

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Seven Days Battles

Gaines’s Mill

On this hill, facing north, Sykes’s division was posted in the afternoon of June 27, 1862, holding the eastern end of the Union line. Here Jackson attacked, while to the west A. P. Hill and Longstreet renewed their assaults. ...

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Horse Watering Trough

Located at the center of

Laffayette & Orange Avenue in the

Late 1800’s. Built at the

Hillburn Granite Quarry, by

James Rice Sr., father of

James Rice Mayor of Suffern for

16 years.

Donated by:

The Mayor and the Zeck Family

Suffern Chamber Restoration Program

Marker is at the intersection ...

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Florence's Early Water Tower 1890

Listed on the National Register of Historic Places, this tower of native stone was completed in 1890 as the foundation for a wrought- iron tank with a capacity of 280,000 gallons of water. It is 70 feet high and is ...

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