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Tag Archives: wilmington

Baptists and the American Civil War: July 6, 1865

Following a number of letters written on his behalf to U.S. president Andrew Johnson, including one by Richard Fuller, Baltimore pastor and former president of the Southern Baptist Convention, Baptist minster and editor J. R. Graves is granted amnesty. The former resident of Nashville, Tennessee returns to the state and settles in Memphis, where for…

July 6, 2015 in Archive: This Day in Civil War History.
Kentucky Tennessee Map

Baptists and the American Civil War: March 12, 1865

Today Union General William T. Sherman writes General Ulysses S. Grant. Sherman’s men are, for their hundreds of miles of marching the past four months, in good shape. Knowing of Grant’s difficulty in maneuvering past Lee to get at Richmond, Sherman declares his intention to come to his aid soon if no serious Confederate resistance…

March 12, 2015 in Archive: This Day in Civil War History.
Scenes from Savannah 1862

Baptists and the American Civil War: February 28, 1865

The month of February draws to a close with four major, strategic cities of the Deep South under Union control: Atlanta, Savannah, Columbia and Charleston. In addition, the port city of Wilmington, North Carolina is also occupied, leaving the Confederacy with no ports from which to sail naval vessels. With the Union coastal blockade now…

February 28, 2015 in Archive: This Day in Civil War History.

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