February 23, 2012 | 0 Comments
North Carolina Civil War 150
Tags: Burnside Expedition, North Carolina Civil War 150
Categories: Onslow County
Author:Richard
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"They were most efficient defenders of the Republic whose loyalty was almost martyrdom. History will do them justice, when it shall come to be fairly and fully written."
-Charles H. Foster
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The family of Elijah A. Smith
August 29, 2011
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Purnell Smith
August 6, 2010
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Kinston Hangings
December 18, 2010
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Ford Howell
January 2, 2011
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Biography of Jesse James Summerlin
July 6, 2010
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Stephen A. Styron
May 19, 2013
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John W. Hill
May 19, 2013
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Zachary F. Styron
May 16, 2013
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William Suggs
May 14, 2013
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Charles Sutton
May 13, 2013
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Richard: Reblogged this on Confederate Soldiers of Onslow C...
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Richard: Thanks. Sherman destroyed the railroad facilities...
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Andy Hall: Great photos....
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Richard: Thank you for remembering these men and presenting...
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Mike Marcela: I am a Civil War Reenactor with the 38th NCT. I j...
"Little Souled Mercenaries”? The Buffaloes of Eastern North Carolina during the Civil War
1st Alabama Cavalry
101st Pennsylvania Infantry
Abraham Lincoln
Ambrose Everett Burnside
Bradford's Battalion
Burnside Expedition
Castle Thunder
Charles Henry Foster
Confederate Veteran Magazine
CSS Albemarle
Edward N. Boots
Edward Nash Phillips
Edward Stanley
Edward Stanly
Elijah A. Smith
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Fort Pillow
General Edward E Potter
Gettysburg
Grand Army of the Republic
Hammond Hospital Beaufort NC
Hardy H. Murphy
Harpers Weekly
James Bryant Riggs
James Phelps
John Gray Foster
Knoxville National Cemetery
Lake Phelps NC
Mansfield General hospital in Beaufort
Marble Nash Taylor
Nathan Bedford Forrest
NC Highway Historical Marker Program
Partisan Rangers
Pension Index
Sisters of Mercy
Southern Unionist
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Tennessee Unionists
The North Carolina Standard
Wilder Monument
William H. Cole
William Haddock
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They have been forgotten, those white Southerners who fought on the Union side. They are the unknown soldiers of the Civil War. In the vast and growing literature of that conflict they remain practically unmentioned. There are historic reasons why this has been so, but it has not been because the men are historically unimportant or undeserving of remembrance. Not at all. They made a difference in the outcome of the war: without them, it would not have ended when and as it did. - Lincoln’s Loyalists
They accused me of being a Buffalo, that is what all loyal men were called, and harboring Buffaloes in the woods. They did arrest me and imprisioned me and made other threats which I do not remember. - John H. Haddock
State Archives of North Carolina
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