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The continuing effect of the American Revolution : an address, on the occasion of the celebration of the Prelude to Independence, June 10, 1961 at the eighteenth-century capitol, Williamsburg, Virginia. Opening remarks by Winthrop Rockefeller

https://collections.lancasterhistory.org/en/permalink/lhdo22219
Author
Toynbee, Arnold,
Date of Publication
1961.
Call Number
973.3 T756
Author
Toynbee, Arnold,
Place of Publication
Williamsburg
Publisher
Colonial Williamsburg
Date of Publication
1961.
Physical Description
24 pages 25 cm
Subjects
United States - History - Revolution, 1775-1783.
History.
Location
Lancaster History Library - Book
Call Number
973.3 T756
Less detail

Just south of Gettysburg, Carroll County, Maryland in the Civil War. : Personal accounts and descriptions of a Maryland border county, 1861-1865

https://collections.lancasterhistory.org/en/permalink/lhdo19166
Author
Klein, Frederic Shriver,
Date of Publication
1963.
Call Number
975.27 K64
Responsibility
edited by Frederic Shriver Klein ... with the collaboration of W. Harold Redcatm [and] G. Thomas LeGore.
Author
Klein, Frederic Shriver,
Place of Publication
Westminister, Md
Publisher
Newman Press,
Date of Publication
1963.
Physical Description
xix, 247 p. : ill. ; 23 cm.
Notes
Includes insert map "The Civil War in Carroll County Maryland, the Gettsyburg Campaign".
Contents
North and South -- The first invasion, 1862 -- The cavalry battle, June 29, 1863 -- After the battle -- Troops at Westminster, 1863 -- Transportation, supply and communications -- Sending the news -- Troop movements in 1863 -- Plans for a battle along Pipe Creek -- North and South at Union Mills -- The last invasion, 1864 -- Carroll County towns in the Civil War.
Summary
"These are the accounts of citizens and soldiers who described Civil War events in Carroll County, Md., as they saw them during the war years a century ago. They are eye-witness accounts for the most part, by people who were there at the time and who were the very first to begin recording the history of the war. No other event in American history produced so much documentary material from so many individual sources as did the Civil War. The tremendous emotional impact of this gigantic conflict between Americans, who had lived in a state of comparatively peaceful and romantic isolation from anything so incomprehensible as an ideological war, inspired tens of thousands of both literate and illiterate soldiers and civilians to record the most minute details of their daily experiences, as though they thought posterity would never believe that mankind could produce such vast and terrible chaos"--Preface.
Subjects
Carroll County (Md.) - History - Civil War, 1861-1865.
Maryland - Carroll County.
History.
Location
Lancaster History Library - Book
Call Number
975.27 K64
Less detail