Kamis, 27 Juli 2017

‘I Have With the Reg’t Been Through a Terrible Battle’

Major Francis E. Pierce, who took part in the Union’s suicidal attack on Fredericksburg’s Marye’s Heights 150 years ago, wrote a vivid account of his experience in a letter to a friend. FRANCIS E. PIERCE ENROLLED AS A CAPTAIN in Company F of the 108th New York Infantry on August 9, 1862. An 1859 graduate …

The post ‘I Have With the Reg’t Been Through a Terrible Battle’ appeared first on HistoryNet.



Related Posts:

  • What Happened to Island No. 10?In 150 years the Mississippi River, with the aid of man, has pushed and pulled this battlefield into oblivion. Despite its location practically in the middle of the United States, … Read More
  • Was War Inevitable?How six men might have saved the lives of 650,000 Americans. We usually look back on the Civil War an inevitable clash between two cultures. But America’s sectional conflict was ac… Read More
  • Reel Vs. Real: Thaddeus StevensWas Thaddeus Stevens as angry and abrasive as he’s portrayed in Spielberg’s Lincoln? In December 1863, when Maryland Representative Henry Winter Davis arrived in Washington for the… Read More
  • CWT Review: Lincoln as Man, Not IconWhen it comes to Civil War films, viewers crave drama and accuracy. Steven Spielberg’s Lincoln delivers a storytelling feast, but also suffers from a few historical hiccups. The fi… Read More
  • CWT Book Review: Lincoln’s Battle With GodLincoln’s Battle With God: A President’s Struggle With Faith and What It Meant for America  Stephen Mansfield, Thomas Nelson In the introduction to his latest work on the hist… Read More

0 komentar:

Posting Komentar