search

Results for B

Battery C, 1st New York Light Artillery

(Barnes')

(Front):Battery C.

(Barnes')

1st New York

Light Artillery.

5th Corps.

(Left):Held this position

from about

4.30. p.m. July 2d,

to 4. a.m.

July 3d, 1863.

(Back):Engagements.

Antietam

to

Appomattox.

(Right):On the morning

of July 3d,

transferred to

the left flank

of Big Round Top.

Marker is on Sedgwick Avenue, on the left when traveling north.

Courtesy hmdb.org

photo_library
These Citizens by Subscribing for the Park Stock in 1860

Enabled the city to purchase

Druid Hill

Thomas Swann, Mayor

George S. Brown, Chauncey Brooks, Benjamin Deford, John S. Gittings, William E. Hooper, John H. B. Latrobe, Columbus O'Donnell, John M. Orem, Enoch Pratt, Thomas Winans

Park Commission

1860Thomas Swann, ...

photo_library
Dabbs House

Lee’s First Headquarters

In May 1862, Gen. George McClellan’s Union army was poised on the outskirts of Richmond threatening the Confederate capital. Here, in the Dabbs House, Robert E. Lee, as new commander of the Army of Northern Virginia, opened his ...

photo_library
The Dabb House

General Lee's Headquarters.

In the residence at the end of this lane, General R.E. Lee had headquarters from June 1 to June 26, 1862. Hither for conference came “Stonewall” Jackson, Longstreet, Stuart, A.P. Hill, D.H. Hill and other of his lieutenants. ...

photo_library
The Woman's Club of DeLand

Established 1906

The Woman's Club of DeLand was organized in March 1906, and was incorporated on July 26 of that year with ninety-two charter members. Nearly from its inception club members wanted to have their own clubhouse. The organization purchased a ...

photo_library
In Memory of Harvey J. Burns, Jr.

1923-1988

A Black pioneer in Baltimore tennis.

Teacher - promoter - mentor

of youth seeking entry

into the tennis circuit.

Marker is on Hanlon Drive, on the right when traveling north.

Courtesy hmdb.org

photo_library
A Battle That Could Not Be Won

“With the cinders and ashes falling all around him, and so dark that he could not see his horse’s head at three o’clock in the afternoon, [Barringer] rode up to the face of the fire…[and] collected his scattered crews….” - ...

photo_library
Round Hill Redoubt

Fort Montgomery’s “Round Hill” redoubt was built to protect a piece of high ground that commanded the rest of the fort. It was one of three redoubts that the Americans built as they realized their gun batteries, which faced the ...

photo_library
Battle of Springfield

This point marks the farthest advance of the Confederates into the city. After finally routing the 72nd Enrolled Missouri Militia, Confederates were forming along Walnut Street for the final assault into the city when drums along Jordan Creek to the ...

photo_library
Williamsburg Road

During the Civil War, Union and Confederate armies engaged in battles along major transportation corridors. Union Maj. Gen. George B. McClellan's defensive earthworks blocked Williamsburg Road east of here, for example, during the 1862 Peninsula Campaign. On 31 May, Maj. ...

photo_library
menu
more_vert