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Averell, William W.

William Averell Paves the Way to the White House, Literally

April 8, 2013 Mathew W. Lively 3

I recently had the pleasure of attending a superb lecture by author and fellow blogger Eric Wittenberg on the Battle of White Sulphur Springs. At the conclusion of the talk, he mentioned that Brig. Gen. William W. […]

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Devil Anse Hatfield Fights His First Border War

March 25, 2013 Mathew W. Lively 16

William Anderson “Devil Anse” Hatfield is best known for being the patriarch of the family involved in the famous Hatfield and McCoy Feud. Nearly twenty years prior to the start of hostilities with the McCoy […]

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J. E. Hanger Lost His Leg But Not His Ingenuity

March 16, 2013 Mathew W. Lively 6

James Hanger wanted to be a cavalry soldier like his two older brothers. In the spring of 1861, the 18-year-old engineering student at Washington College in Lexington, Virginia left school and travelled to Philippi, (West) […]

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Dan Sickles Makes History – Before the Civil War

March 2, 2013 Mathew W. Lively 1

On February 27, 1859, U.S. Congressman Daniel E. Sickles (D- NY) approached the Washington D.C. district attorney, P. Barton Key, in Lafayette Square and shot him three times. Then, walking to the house of Attorney […]

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Stonewall Jackson and the “Old Man’s Friend”

February 24, 2013 Mathew W. Lively 3

When Stonewall Jackson died on May 10, 1863, his attending physicians attributed the death to a pneumonia Jackson had developed four days after amputation of his arm. The infection was believed to be secondary to […]

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Did Stonewall Jackson “cross” or “pass” over the river?

February 17, 2013 Mathew W. Lively 10

The story is familiar to many. Thomas J. “Stonewall” Jackson lies dying in an outbuilding near Guiney Station, Virginia. After being wounded in a friendly fire accident at the battle of Chancellorsville on May 2,1863, […]

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