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Monthly Archives: January 2012

John Hunt Morgan burns Pleasant Hill Baptist Church

Baptists and the American Civil War: January 31, 1862

Pleasant Hill Baptist Church, near Campbellsville, Kentucky in Taylor County, today becomes a victim of the Civil War. The previous September, John Hunt Morgan, attempting to smuggle clothing to the Confederate Army, had been detained in the church building by the Union Taylor County Home Guards. Now a Confederate Cavalryman, today Morgan and a small…

January 31, 2012 in Archive: This Day in Civil War History.
USS Monitor

Baptists and the American Civil War: January 30, 1862

U.S. President Abraham Lincoln, growing impatient with Gen. George McClellan, commander of the Army of the Potomac, orders the general to launch offensive operations no later than February 22. Thus far, McClellan has exercised too much caution, in the estimation of Lincoln and many northerners. Meanwhile, on New York’s East River, the Union ironclad Monitor…

January 30, 2012 in Archive: This Day in Civil War History.
Confederate Fortifications, Manassas Junction, Winter/Spring 1862

Baptists and the American Civil War: January 29, 1862

Today’s North Carolina Biblical Recorder publishes a letter from a North Carolina solider that touches upon many central themes of camp life: distance, death, religion, and vice. “A.H.C.” is stationed at Camp Pickens, Manassas, Virginia, with the 4th Regiment North Carolina State Troops. Bro. Hufham: It has been my privilege to read your paper occasionally,…

January 29, 2012 in Archive: This Day in Civil War History.

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