Results for D T
Calhoun Falls World War I and II Veterans Monument
[North]
In Memory of
those who lost the...
Fort Stedman
In the last grand offensive movement of Lee’s Army of Nort...
Confederate Winter Quarters
The Breakthrough Trail
Brigadier General Samuel McGo...
Battle of Griswoldville
On Nov. 22 1864, the Right Wing (15th and 17th Corps) of G...
The Sacred Lake
Lake Tahoe is sacred to the Wa-she-shu or Washoe people.
End of the First Day
July 1, 1863 - First Day
"The enemy gave way on all ...
Cornell Pulpwood Stacker
In 1912, after a permanent dam was built across the Chippe...
Defending Fort Haskell
Daylight on March 25, 1865, brought furious fighting to Fo...
Mound City
Lake Monona: People
More than a thousand mounds once...
Fort Stedman
In the last grand offensive movement of Lee’s Army of Nort...
Results for D T
Calhoun Falls World War I and II Veterans Monument
[North]
In Memory of
those who lost their
lives in World War
I and II
[South]
Burton, Harold A.
Clark, Marshall L.
Clark, Paul
Cox, Clarence W.
Davis, Broadus
Hagood, Martin D.
Hilley, Jack
Hilley, James
McClellan, Sam
McNain, James
Norris, E. Boyce
Tucker, David O.
Taggart, George
Marker is on South Calhoun Street (South Carolina Route 81) near ...
Fort Stedman
In the last grand offensive movement of Lee’s Army of Northern Virginia, Fort Stedman, with adjacent works, was captured at 4:30 A.M., March 25, 1865, by a well selected body of Confederates, under the command of General John B. Gordon.
An ...
Confederate Winter Quarters
The Breakthrough Trail
Brigadier General Samuel McGowan’s South Carolina Brigade spent the winter of 1864-1865 very close to the fortifications they defended. A temporary scarcity of building materials in the early winter compelled many of McGowan’s men to rely on their ...
Battle of Griswoldville
On Nov. 22 1864, the Right Wing (15th and 17th Corps) of Gen. Sherman’s army [US] marched southeast from the vicinity of Gray toward Gordon and Irwinton on its destructive March to the Sea. To protect the right against Wheeler’s ...
The Sacred Lake
Lake Tahoe is sacred to the Wa-she-shu or Washoe people.
Each spring family groups gathered at Da-ow-‘ah-ga or Lake Tahoe’s shore and offered blessings. Countless generations of children were taught by each family’s leader that their responsibilities included attitudes of respect, ...
End of the First Day
July 1, 1863 - First Day
"The enemy gave way on all sides, and was driven through Gettysburg with great loss."
Gen. Robert E. Lee, C.S.A.
Commander, Army of Northern Virginia
Infantry and artillery of the Union Eleventh Corps formed in the valley below ...
Cornell Pulpwood Stacker
In 1912, after a permanent dam was built across the Chippewa River near this location, the Cornell Wood Products Company, a large paper milling operation, began production here. The company manufactured paper products, cardboard and wallboard. The original complex consisted ...
Defending Fort Haskell
Daylight on March 25, 1865, brought furious fighting to Fort Haskell.
“Our thin line mounted the banquette – the wounded and sick loading the muskets, while those with sound hands stood to the parapets and blazed away.”
- George L. Kilmer, ...
Mound City
Lake Monona: People
More than a thousand mounds once dotted the shores of Madison's lakes, so many that archaeologist Charles Brown favored the name Mound City for Madison. In the early 1900s, Brown found 160 mounds in 17 groups around Lake ...
Fort Stedman
In the last grand offensive movement of Lee’s Army of Northern Virginia, Fort Stedman, with adjacent works, was captured at 4:30 A.M., March 25, 1865, by a well selected body of Confederates, under the command of General John B. Gordon.
An ...