Results for Battle Field
Chippawa Battlefield Panel 1
Background to a Battle
On these fields and the surro...
Revolutionary Battlefields
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Revolutionary
Ba...
Battle of Moorefield
Where the Fighting Started
The Confederate cavalry b...
Battlefield Historic Restoration Project
In 2004, Ball's Bluff Battlefield Regional Park began a re...
Battlefield Burials
The depressions to the right of the trail probably represe...
Camden Battlefield
Camden Battlefield has been designated a National Historic...
Pursued Beyond the Battlefield
After the battle, Cornwallis’s exhausted infantry held the...
Byram's Ford Battlefield
At 8 A. M. on October 23, 1864, Federal cavalry under Gene...
The Battlefield In 1862
Command and Communications at Lee's Headquarters - Signali...
Gettysburg Battlefield Preservation Association
This land and other portions of this battleground, fought ...
Results for Battle Field
Chippawa Battlefield Panel 1
Background to a Battle
On these fields and the surrounding woods 4,000 American, British, Canadian and Native forces fought the first major battle of the Niagara campaign of 1814. When the last shots died away on Samuel Street's farm, more than ...
Revolutionary Battlefields
<———
Revolutionary
Battlefields
and
Colonial
Fort Sites
NY State
Historical
Marker
Marker is at the intersection of East Dominick Street and Bouck Street, on the right when traveling east on East Dominick Street.
Courtesy hmdb.org
Battle of Moorefield
Where the Fighting Started
The Confederate cavalry brigade of Gen. Bradley
T. Johnson bivouacked in the fields to your left
on August 7, 1864. Willow Wall (built ca. 1830), visible to your left down the road, was Johnson’s headquarters. Johnson’s brigade and that ...
Battlefield Historic Restoration Project
In 2004, Ball's Bluff Battlefield Regional Park began a restoration project on the battlefield where you stand today. The objective of the effort is to return about 12 acres of the battlefield to its approximate appearance in 1861.
First hand ...
Battlefield Burials
The depressions to the right of the trail probably represent former graves of Confederate soldiers. The dead of both armies received hasty battlefield burials. Most were disinterred after the war, with the Union dead going to Glendale National Cemetery and ...
Camden Battlefield
Camden Battlefield has been designated a National Historic Landmark This site possesses national significance in commemorating the history of the United States of America
1961
National Park Service
United States Department of the Interior
Marker is on Flat Rock Road (South Carolina Route 58), ...
Pursued Beyond the Battlefield
After the battle, Cornwallis’s exhausted infantry held the field while Tarleton and his cavalry chased the Americans, capturing hundreds and killing untold others. Loyalists living north of Camden rounded up more patriot prisoners, turning them over to the British. Tarleton’s ...
Byram's Ford Battlefield
At 8 A. M. on October 23, 1864, Federal cavalry under General Alfred E. Pleasonton forced a crossing of the Blue River at Byram’s Ford and attacked the stone ridge, which was defended by Confederate troops under John S. Marmaduke. ...
The Battlefield In 1862
Command and Communications at Lee's Headquarters - Signaling At Stuart's Hill
(Left Panel):
The Battlefield in 1862
At the time of the Civil War, the area of the Battlefield was largely agricultural. Fields and pastures alternated with woods, while modest farmsteads and middling ...
Gettysburg Battlefield Preservation Association
This land and other portions of this battleground, fought over by brave men of a nation divided, is now part of Gettysburg National Military Park, through the agency of the Gettysburg Battlefield Preservation Association and the collective generosity of patriotic ...