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Results for Headquarters Site

Site of Jose Antonio Navarro Ranch Headquarters

(2.3 Mi. SSE)

This land had once been allocated in the 1700s as a ranch for Mission San Jose in San Antonio (20 mi. N), but in the 1820s was left unsettled. In 1828 prominent San Antonio resident Jose Antonio Navarro ...

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National Historic Landmark - Washington's Headquarters State Historic Site

National Historic Landmark - Washington's Headquarters

This Dutch Colonial fieldstone residence was used by Washington from April 1, 1782, to August 19, 1783, during the closing days of the Revolution.

Here he drafted crucial documents that laid the foundation for the new ...

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Site: Hardy Pace’s Res. Howard’s Headquarters

Hardy Pace (1785-1864), operated the Chattahoochee River ferry at site of bridge where Pace’s Ferry rd. crosses. Federal forces occupied Vining’s Station, July 5-17, 1864, while preparing to cross at Pace’s & Power’s for the move on Atlanta. Gen. O. ...

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Headquarters Site

Headquarters Site

Nearby stood the home of Col.

Thomas Ellison, used by Gen.

Washington as his Hqts. from

June-July 1779 & Dec. 1780 to

June 1781, here the attack on

Stony Point was planned.

New Windsor

Town Historian

Marker is at the intersection ...

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Site of the Headquarters of the United States Army for 5th Milit

Established in 1868 in an area of five acres. Abandoned in 1870 when headquarters were removed to San Antonio.

Marker can be reached from Trinty St..

Courtesy hmdb.org

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Headquarters Site Gen. R.E. Lee

C.S.A.

On this site

in an oak grove

from Sept. 15 to

Sept. 18, 1862, stood

the headquarters

tent of

General

Robert E. Lee

commanding the

Confederate

forces.

Purchased, restored and marked by the

West Virginia Division, United

Daughters of the Confederacy

Unveiled Sept. 17, 1936.

Marker is on Shepherdstown Pike (State Highway 34), on ...

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Site of House Occupied as Headquarters

Site of house occupied as headquarters of

Colonel George Rogers Clark before capturing

Fort Sackville from the British February 25, 1779.

It was a private house facing the Fort.

Later Colonel Henry Hamilton, British Commander

of the Garrison, was housed here after the surrender

and ...

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Headquarters Site of the Quartermaster General

Supplying the American Army was always critical. At Yorktown Colonel Timothy Pickering of Massachusetts, seconded by a man of his own choice, Lieutenant Colonel Henry Dearborn of New Hampshire, held the responsibility for Washington’s Quartermaster Department.

Marker is on Historical Tour ...

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Headquarters Site of Henry Knox

Knox’s able direction of the assembly and deployment of artillery in the Siege was a key element in the success of the Allied armies. He saw resulting victory, as he related in a note to his wife, as “A great ...

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