Subscribe (RSS)
150 Years Ago Today…
Browse by Category
Browse by Tag
Abraham Lincoln blockade Burnside Expedition camp life Chapel Hill Charleston Confederate States of America diaries Edward Porter Alexander Emmett Cole First Battle of Bull Run First Battle of Manassas Hatteras inlet home front illustrations Kentucky mobilization New Bern newspapers New York North Carolina occupation ordinances Pettigrew family religion Rev. Overton Bernard Richmond Roanoke Island secession Secession Convention slavery slaves soldier conditions South Carolina students Tennessee troops Union occupation Union soldiers United States Navy University of North Carolina Virginia Wilmington Wilmington (N.C.) Daily Journal womenRecent Comments
- Todd Kesselring on 27 April 1862: “Fear of conscription threatens great injury here unless immediately allayed and I therefore urge prompt and earnest attention to the subject.”
- fletches on 27 January 1862: “We must know something more decided as to these marauders before any of us move.”
- ‘Yankee ship… came so close I could see the Captain’ « North Carolina Miscellany on 18 October 1861: “we can see the Yankee ships all the time. the other day one came so close that I could see the Captain…”
- The American Civil War 150th Anniversary – January 15-21, 1862 « BJ Deming's Blog on 16 January 1862: “All is quiet.—We feel anxious about Roanoke Island.”
- The American Civil War 150th Anniversary – January 15-21, 1862 « BJ Deming's Blog on 15 January 1862: “Death of Colonel J. W. Allen, Surgeon Weller and the Second Mate of the Ann E. Thompson, January 15, 1862.”
Blogroll
UNC Libraries
Daily Archives: 23 Feb ’12
23 February 1862: “[the General] issued an order that we should appear today with our hair cut short. we thought if we wanted us to shear our hair short he must set the example, for he is the most frizzly headed old scamp in the whole Brigade.”
Item description: Letter, 23 February 1862, from Emmett Cole to his sister Celestia. Item citation: From folder 2 of the Emmett Cole Letters #5002-z, Southern Historical Collection, Wilson Library, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Item transcription: [Editor’s note: … Continue reading
