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21 paź 2008 · Near this site, the Union army established two camps on either side of the Olentangy River during the Civil War. Both were known as Camp Delaware. (A historical marker located in Delaware in Delaware County, Ohio.)
Camp Delaware. With the Civil War’s outbreak, both the North and the South were ill prepared for the conflict. Ohio Governor William Dennison hoped to utilize the state’s militia forces to assist President Abraham Lincoln in reuniting the nation.
6 wrz 2024 · The Civil War Pension Index and further Civil War information can be accessed by using Ancestry and Fold3 which are available via computers in the Library. You can browse all Civil War era newspapers, library, archives, and museum records using our Online Collections Catalog.
2-21 Camp Delaware 1862-1864. Side A: Near this site, the Union army established two camps on either side of the Olentangy River during the Civil War. Both were known as Camp Delaware.
About U.S., Registers of Deaths of Volunteers, 1861-1865. This database contains registers listing volunteer Union soldiers who died during the Civil War. (Volunteers were typically recruited for a specific conflict, while “Regulars” were professional soldiers who served in the standing army.)
11 wrz 2024 · Both were known as Camp Delaware. The first camp, situated on the west side of the river in the summer of 1862, was where the white recruits of the 96th and 121st regiments of Ohio Volunteer Infantry were mustered into service.
Harvey was a Bull Terrier that traveled with the 104 th Ohio Volunteer Infantry–known as the Barking Dog Regiment because they had several dogs attached. Harvey, mostly white with some black markings, became part of the unit in 1862 when his owner, Daniel M. Stearns of Wellsville, Ohio, joined the regiment.