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List of Civil War Battles - 10/12/2007 8:55:19 PM   
Battleline


Posts: 426
Joined: 10/5/2006
Status: offline
The Grand List of Battles and Campaigns for Bio Writers (Alphabetical)
This list is taken from the Ezra J. Warner “Generals in . . .” books.
I'm still working on the chronological list and will post that as a reply when I finish it. Perhaps after that, I will have a campaign list with battles fought during the campaign.
As Warner's work was published by the Louisiana State University Press, many of the battles were called by their Southern names. I've used the Federal names where I've caught them. Also, if the battle went by multiple names, I have included them in parentheses.
It is possible there are a few typos. I actually corrected a few in Warner's orginial work.

Alphabetically
Abingdon, Virginia, June 20, 1864
Allatoona, Georgia, Oct. 5, 1864
Alleghany Summit, West Virginia, Dec. 13, 1861
Antietam (Sharpsburg), Maryland, Sept. 17, 1862
Appomattox Campaign, Virginia, March 29-April 9, 1865
Appomattox Court House, Army of Northern Virginia Surrender, April 9, 1865
Arkansas Post, Arkansas, Jan. 11, 1863
Atlanta, Georgia, July 22, 1864
Atlanta, Georgia, evacuation by Confederates, Sept. 1, 1864
Atlanta Campaign, May-September 1864
Ball’s Bluff (Leesburg), Virginia, Oct 21-22, 1861
Bath, West Virginia, Jan. 3-4, 1862
Baton Rouge, Louisiana, opearations July 27-Aug. 6, 1862
“Battle Above the Clouds” (Lookout Mountain), Tennessee, Nov. 24, 1863
Bean’s Station, Tennessee, Dec. 14, 1863
Belmont, Missouri, Dec. 7, 1861
Bentonville, North Carolina, March 19-21, 1865
Berryville, Virginia, Sept. 3-4, 1864
Bethel (Bethel Church, Big Bethel, Great Bethel) Virginia, June 10, 1861
Bethesda Church, Virginia, May 30-31, 1864, June 1-3, 1864
Blair’s Landing, Louisiana, April 12-13, 1864
Bluff Spring, Florida, March 25, 1865
Booneville, Mississippi, capture, May 30, 1862
Brandy Station (Beverly Ford, Fleetwood), Virginia, June 9, 1863
Brices Cross Roads, Mississippi, June 10, 1864
Bristoe Station, Virginia, Oct. 14, 1863
Brownsville, Texas (last engagement of the war), May 12, 1865
Buckhead Creek, Georgia, Nov. 28-29, 1864Buckland Mills, Virginia, Oct. 19, 1863
Buffington’s Island, Ohio, July 19, 1863
Camden Expedition, Arkansas, March 23-May 3, 1864
Carolinas Campaign, Jan. 1-April 26, 1865
Carthage, Missouri, July 5, 1861
Cedar Creek (Bell Grove), Virginia, Oct. 19, 1864
Cedar Mountain (Cedar Run Mountain, Slaughter Mountain, Southwest Mountain), Virginia, Aug. 9, 1862
Chambersburg, Pennsylvania, burned July 30, 1864
Champion’s Hill (Baker’s Creek), Mississippi, May 16, 1863
Charleston, South Carolina bombardment, Aug. 21, 1863; Dec. 31, 1863
Charlestown, West Virginia, Oct. 18, 1863
Chattanooga, Tennessee, Nov. 23-25, 1863
Chattanooga Campaign, Tennessee, August-November, 1863
Cheat Mountain Campaign, West Virginia, Sept. 11-17, 1861
Chickamauga, Georgia, Sept. 19-20, 1863
Chickamauga Campaign, Georgia, Aug. 16-Sept. 22, 1863
Chickasaw Bayou, Mississippi, Dec. 27-28, 1862
Chickasaw Bluffs, Mississippi, Dec. 29, 1862
Cloyd’s Mountain, Virginia, May 9, 1864
Cold Harbor, Virginia, June 3, 1864; Operations around, May 31-June 12, 1864
Columbia, Tennessee, Nov. 24-27, 1864
Corinth, Mississippi, Oct. 3-4, 1862
Corrick’s Ford, West Virginia, July 13, 1861
Cosby Creek, Tennessee, Jan. 14, 1864
The Crater, Virginia, July 30, 1864
Cross Keys, Virginia, June 8, 1862
Cumberland Gap, Tennessee, Federal evacuation Sept. 17, 1862
Dalton, Georgia, May 9-13, 1864; surrender Oct. 13, 1864
Devall’s Bluff, Arkansas, July 6, 1862
Dinwiddie Court House, Virginia, March 31, 1865
Dranesville, Virginia, Nov. 26-27, 1861; Dec. 20, 1861
Drewry’s Bluff, Virginia, May 12-16, 1864
Dumfries (Quantico Creek), Virginia, Oct. 11, 1862
Dumfries, Virginia, Dec. 12, 1862; Dec. 27, 1862
Durham Station, North Carolina, surrender of J.E. Johnston, April 26, 1865
Egypt, Mississippi, Dec. 28, 1864
Ezra Church, Georgia, July 28, 1864
Falling Waters, Maryland, July 14, 1863
Farmington, Mississippi, May 9-10, 1862
Farmville, Virginia, April 7, 1865
First Bull Run (First Manassas), Virginia, July 21, 1861
Fisher’s Hill, Virginia, Sept. 22, 1864
Fishing Creek (Mill Springs), Kentucky, Jan. 19, 1862
Five Forks, Virginia, April 1, 1865
Fort Blakely, Alabama, April 2-9, 1865
Fort Donelson, Tennessee, siege and capture Feb. 12-16, 1862
Fort Fisher, North Carolina, bombardment Dec. 24-25, 1864; bombardment and capture Jan. 13-15, 1865
Fort Gregg (Petersburg lines), Virginia, April 2, 1865
Fort Harrison, Virginia, Sept. 29-30, 1864
Fort Hatteras, North Carolina, Aug. 28-29, 1861
Fort Henry, Tennessee, Jan. 17-22, 1862
Fort Hindman (Arkansas Post), Arkansas, Jan. 4-17, 1863
Fort Jackson, Louisiana, bombardment and surrender April 18-28, 1862
Fort McRee (Pensacola Harbor), Florida, Nov. 22, 1861; Jan. 1, 1862
Fort Morgan, Alabama, Aug. 9-23, 1864
Fort Moultrie, South Carolina, occupied by Federals Feb. 18, 1865
Fort Pillow, Tennessee, April 14-June 5, 1862; captured by Confederates April 12, 1864
Fort St. Philip, Louisiana, captured by Federals April 18-28, 1862
Fort Sanders, Tennessee, Nov. 29, 1863
Fort Stedman (Petersburg lines), Virginia, March 25, 1865
Fort Stevens, Maryland, July 11-12, 1864
Fort Sumter, South Carolina, bombardment, April 12-13, 1861
Fort Tyler (near West Point, Georgia), April 16, 1865
Franklin, Tennessee, Nov. 30, 1864
Frayser’s Farm (White Oak Swamp), Virginia, June 30, 1862
Fredericksburg (Marye’s Heights), Virginia, May 3-4, 1862
Fredericksburg, Virginia, Dec. 13, 1862
Front Royal, Virginia, May 23, 30 and 31, 1862
Fussell’s Mill, Virginia, Aug. 13-20, 1864
Gaines’s Mill (Chickahominy, Cold Harbor), Virginia, June 27, 1862
Galveston, Texas, attack on blockade fleet, Jan. 1, 1863
Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, July 1-3, 1863
Glorieta Canyon, New Mexico, March 26-28, 1862
Grand Gulf, Mississippi, Mach 31, 1863
Greensboro, North Carolina, Confederate surrender, April 26, 1865
Groveton (Manassas Plains), Virginia, Aug. 29, 1862
Grubbs Crossroads, Kentucky, Aug. 21, 1864
Harpers Ferry, West Virginia, Sept. 12-15, 1862
Harrisonburg, Pennsylvania, June 6, 1862
Hatcher’s Run, Virginia, Feb. 5-7, 1865
Helena, Arkansas, Jan. 1, 1863; Feb. 5-7, 1865
High Bridge, Virginia, April 6-7, 1865
Holly Springs, Mississippi, July 1, 1862; Nov. 13, 1862; Nov. 28, 1862; Dec. 20, 1862
Island No. 10, Mississippi River between Missouri and Tennessee, captured April 7-8, 1862
Iuka, Mississippi, Sept. 19, 1862
Jackson, Mississippi, captured by Federals July 10, 1863
Jenkins’ Ferry, Arkansas, April 30, 1864
Jonesboro, Georgia, Aug. 31-Sept. 1, 1864
Kelly’s Ford (Fair Gardens), Tennessee, Jan. 27, 1864
Kelly’s Ford, Virginia, Dec. 20-22, 1862; Nov. 7, 1863
Kennesaw Mountain, Georgia, June 10, 1864; July 3, 1864;
Kentucky Campaign, August-October 1862
Kinston, North Carolina, Jan. 25, 1863; expedition June 20-23, 1864
Knoxville Campaign, Tennessee, Nov. 17-Dec. 4, 1863
Laurel Hill, West Virginia, July 11, 1864
Lexington, Missouri, captured Sept. 20, 1861
Little Rock, Arkansas, captured Sept. 10. 1863
Lynchburg, Virginia, July 17-18, 1864
McDowell, Virginia, May 8, 1862
Malvern Hill, Virginia, July 1, 1862
Manassas Campaign, Virginia, July 16-22, 1861
Manassas Junction, Virginia, Jan. 7, 1862
Mansfield, Louisiana, April 8, 1864
Marks’ Mills, Arkansas, April 25, 1864
Martinsburg, West Virginia, Sept. 18, 1864
Maryland Campaign, Sept 10-19, 1862
Mechanicsville (Meadow Bridge, Beaver Dam Creek), Virginia, June 26, 1862
Meridian Expedition, Mississippi, Feb. 3-March 5, 1864
Milliken’s Bend, Louisiana, June 7, 1863
Mine Creek, Kansas, Oct. 25, 1864
Mine Run Campaign, Virginia, Nov. 26-Dec. 2, 1863
Missionary Ridge, Tennessee, Nov. 25, 1863
Mobile Bay, Alabama, operations Feb. 16-March 27, 1864; May 4, 1865; evacuated April 11, 1865
Monocacy, Maryland, July 9, 1864
Morgan’s Indiana Raid, July 9-13, 1863
Morgan’s Kentucky Raids, July 4-28, 1862; Dec. 22, 1862-Jan. 2, 1863; May 31-June 20, 1863
Morgan’s Ohio Raid, July 13-26, 1863
Nashville, Tennessee, Dec. 15-16, 1864
New Bern, North Carolina, March 14, 1862
New Hope Church, Georgia, May 25-June 5, 1864
New Madrid, Missouri, capture March 3-14, 1862
New Market, Virginia, June 13, 1862
New Orleans, Louisiana, capture April 25, 1862
Newburgh, Indiana, capture July 18, 1862
Newtonia, Missouri, Sept. 30, 1862
Olustee, Florida, Feb. 20, 1864
Overland Campaign, Virginia, Summer of 1864
Paducah, Kentucky, capture May 25, 1864
Payne’s Farm, Virginia, Nov. 27, 1863
Pea Ridge (Elkhorn Tavern), Arkansas, March 6-8, 1862
Peach Orchard, Virginia, June 29, 1862
Peninsular Campaign, Virginia, April-June 1862
Pennsylvania Campaign (Gettysburg Campaign), June-July 1863
Pensacola, Florida, Confederate evacuation May 9-12, 1862; Federal evacuation March 20-24, 1863
Perryville, Kentucky, Oct. 7-8, 1862
Petersburg, Virginia, assault on lines June 15-18, 1864
Petersburg, Virginia, siege June 15, 1864-April 2, 1865
Piedmont, Virginia, June 5, 1864
Pine Mountain, Georgia, June 14, 1864
Pleasant Hill, Louisiana, April 9, 1864
Plymouth, North Carolina, April 17-20, 1864
Port Gibson, Mississippi, May 1, 1863
Port Hudson, Louisiana, siege May 21-July 8, 1863
Port Republic, Virginia, June 8-9, 1862
Port Royal (Port Royal Ferry), South Carolina, Jan. 1, 1862; June 6, 1862; July 4, 1862
Port Royal Bay (Forts Royal and Beauregard), South Carolina, Nov. 7, 1861
Port Walthall Junction, Virginia, May 6-7, 1864
Prairie Grove, Arkansas, Dec. 7, 1862
Princeton, West Virginia, Sept. 16, 1861; May 15-17, 1862
Rappahannock Bridge, Virginia, Oct. 22, 1863
Reams’ Station, Virginia, Aug. 25, 1864
Red River Campaign, Louisiana, March 10-May 22, 1864
Resaca, Georgia, May 14-15, 1864
Rich Mountain, West Virginia, July 11, 1861
Rich Mountain Campain (Western Virginia Campaign), West Virginia, June 25-July 17, 1861
Richmond, Kentucky, Aug. 30, 1862
Richmond, Virginia, siege June 19, 1864-April 3, 1865
Romney, West Virginia, Jan. 10, 1862
Romney Expedition, West Virginia, Dec. 1861-Jan. 1862
Salem Church, Virginia, May 3-4, 1863
Savage’s Station, Virginia, June 29, 1862
Savannah Campaign, Georgia, Nov. 15-Dec. 21, 1864
Sayler’s Creek, Virginia, April 6, 1865
Secessionville, South Carolina, June 16, 1862
Second Bull Run (Second Manassas), Virginia, Aug. 29-30, 1862
Selma, Alabama, April 2, 1865
Seven Days Campaign, Virginia, June 26-July 2, 1862
Seven Pines (Fair Oaks) Virginia, May 31-June 1, 1862
Shenandoah Valley Campaign (Early’s), June-November, 1864
Shenandoah Valley Campaign (Jackson’s), April-June, 1862
Shiloh (Pittsburg Landing), Tennessee, March 16, 1862; April 6-7, 1862 (the big one)
Smithburg, Tennessee, July 4, 1863
South Mountain (Crampton’s Gap, Fox’s Gap, Boonsborough), Maryland, Sept. 14, 1862
Spanish Fort, Alabama, siege and captured March 27-April 8, 1865
Spotsylvania Court House, Virginia, May 8-21, 1865
Spring Hill (Thompson’s Station), Tennessee, Nov. 29, 1864
Stones River (Murfreesboro) Dec. 31, 1862-Jan. 3, 1863
Suffolk Expedition, Virginia, April 11-May 4, 1863
Telford’s Depot, Tennessee, Sept. 8, 1863
Tennessee Campaign (Hood), November-December, 1864
Thoroughfare Gap, Virginia, Aug. 29, 1862; Oct. 17-18, 1862
Tullahoma Campaign, Tennessee, June 23-July 7, 1863
Tupelo, Mississippi, May 5, 1863; July 14-15, 1864
Valverde, New Mexico, Feb. 21, 1862
Vicksburg, Mississippi, bombardment June 28, 1862
Vicksburg Campaign, Mississippi, Dec. 20, 1862-Jan. 3, 1863; siege May 19-July 4, 1863
Waynesboro, Virginia, June 10, 1864; Sept. 29, 1864; March 2, 1865
Weldon Railroad, Virginia, Aug. 18-21, 1864
Western Virginia Campaign, June 25-Juy 17, 1861
Westport, Missouri, Oct. 21-23, 1864
Wilderness, Virginia, May 5-7, 1864
Wilderness Campaign, Virginia, May-June, 1864
Williamsburg, Virginia, May 5, 1862
Williamsport, Maryland, July 6, 1863
Wilson’s Creek (Springfield), Missouri, Aug. 10, 1861; Oct. 25, 1861
Winchester (Kernstown), Virginia, March 22-23, 1862; July 24, 1864
Winchester (Opequon), Virginia, Sept. 19, 1864
Winchester, Virginia, May 25, 1862
Woodstock, Virginia, April 1-2, 1862; Sept. 23, 1864
Yellow Tavern, Virginia, May 11, 1864
Yorktown, Virginia, siege April 5-May 4, 1862

Edit 1-Warner had the incorrect date for Missionary Ridge
Edit 2-Changed Farmington from Missouri to Mississippi per research on an old bio.

< Message edited by Battleline -- 10/17/2007 1:31:18 AM >
Post #: 1
RE: List of Civil War Battles - 10/12/2007 9:23:21 PM   
Gil R.


Posts: 10821
Joined: 4/1/2005
Status: offline
Excellent, thanks! This should definitely be helpful to all of us.

I'm proud to say that at this point I have quite a few dates memorized, but Dinwiddie Court House and Olustee are not among them.

(in reply to Battleline)
Post #: 2
RE: List of Civil War Battles - 10/12/2007 10:21:07 PM   
wzh55


Posts: 188
Joined: 3/17/2001
From: Sacramento, CA USA
Status: offline
Bill,

Here is another more comprensive listing of battles.

http://www.genealogytrails.com/main/military.html

(Look under Civil War Era Data)

< Message edited by wzh55 -- 10/12/2007 10:25:59 PM >


_____________________________

Bill Hawthorne

(in reply to Battleline)
Post #: 3
RE: List of Civil War Battles - 10/14/2007 9:15:57 AM   
Gil R.


Posts: 10821
Joined: 4/1/2005
Status: offline
This is an excellent help, but a good thing for us to do that would help each other would be to come up with information about the more obscure battles, so that we can note their importance without having to spend lots of time reading up on them. I've added one battle below -- since I was just looking at Floyd's bio -- and would suggest that whenever someone wants to update the list he simply copy it into a new post, and I'll then use my moderator powers to delete the old version of the list, so that this thread doesn't get too long.

Anyone who wants to chime in should feel free to do so -- you don't have to be a card-carrying bio-writer to contribute.


Abingdon, Virginia, June 20, 1864
Allatoona, Georgia, Oct. 5, 1864
Alleghany Summit, West Virginia, Dec. 13, 1861
Antietam (Sharpsburg), Maryland, Sept. 17, 1862
Appomattox Campaign, Virginia, March 29-April 9, 1865
Appomattox Court House, Army of Northern Virginia Surrender, April 9, 1865
Arkansas Post, Arkansas, Jan. 11, 1863
Atlanta, Georgia, July 22, 1864
Atlanta, Georgia, evacuation by Confederates, Sept. 1, 1864
Atlanta Campaign, May-September 1864
Ball’s Bluff (Leesburg), Virginia, Oct 21-22, 1861
Bath, West Virginia, Jan. 3-4, 1862
Baton Rouge, Louisiana, opearations July 27-Aug. 6, 1862
“Battle Above the Clouds” (Lookout Mountain), Tennessee, Nov. 24, 1863
Bean’s Station, Tennessee, Dec. 14, 1863
Belmont, Missouri, Dec. 7, 1861
Bentonville, North Carolina, March 19-21, 1865
Berryville, Virginia, Sept. 3-4, 1864
Bethel (Bethel Church, Big Bethel, Great Bethel) Virginia, June 10, 1861
Bethesda Church, Virginia, May 30-31, 1864, June 1-3, 1864
Blair’s Landing, Louisiana, April 12-13, 1864
Bluff Spring, Florida, March 25, 1865
Booneville, Mississippi, capture, May 30, 1862
Brandy Station (Beverly Ford, Fleetwood), Virginia, June 9, 1863
Brices Cross Roads, Mississippi, June 10, 1864
Bristoe Station, Virginia, Oct. 14, 1863
Brownsville, Texas (last engagement of the war), May 12, 1865
Buckhead Creek, Georgia, Nov. 28-29, 1864
Buckland Mills, Virginia, Oct. 19, 1863
Buffington’s Island, Ohio, July 19, 1863
Camden Expedition, Arkansas, March 23-May 3, 1864
Carnifex Ferry, western Virginia, September 10, 1861 (Gen. William S. Rosecrans defeated Gen. John B. Floyd, ensuring that western Virginia would remain Union territory, and setting the stage for it to become a new state)
Carolinas Campaign, Jan. 1-April 26, 1865
Carthage, Missouri, July 5, 1861
Cedar Creek (Bell Grove), Virginia, Oct. 19, 1864
Cedar Mountain (Cedar Run Mountain, Slaughter Mountain, Southwest Mountain), Virginia, Aug. 9, 1862
Chambersburg, Pennsylvania, burned July 30, 1864
Champion’s Hill (Baker’s Creek), Mississippi, May 16, 1863
Charleston, South Carolina bombardment, Aug. 21, 1863; Dec. 31, 1863
Charlestown, West Virginia, Oct. 18, 1863
Chattanooga, Tennessee, Nov. 23-25, 1863
Chattanooga Campaign, Tennessee, August-November, 1863
Cheat Mountain Campaign, West Virginia, Sept. 11-17, 1861
Chickamauga, Georgia, Sept. 19-20, 1863
Chickamauga Campaign, Georgia, Aug. 16-Sept. 22, 1863
Chickasaw Bayou, Mississippi, Dec. 27-28, 1862
Chickasaw Bluffs, Mississippi, Dec. 29, 1862
Cloyd’s Mountain, Virginia, May 9, 1864
Cold Harbor, Virginia, June 3, 1864; Operations around, May 31-June 12, 1864
Columbia, Tennessee, Nov. 24-27, 1864
Corinth, Mississippi, Oct. 3-4, 1862
Corrick’s Ford, West Virginia, July 13, 1861
Cosby Creek, Tennessee, Jan. 14, 1864
The Crater, Virginia, July 30, 1864
Cross Keys, Virginia, June 8, 1862
Cumberland Gap, Tennessee, Federal evacuation Sept. 17, 1862
Dalton, Georgia, May 9-13, 1864; surrender Oct. 13, 1864
Devall’s Bluff, Arkansas, July 6, 1862
Dinwiddie Court House, Virginia, March 31, 1865
Dranesville, Virginia, Nov. 26-27, 1861; Dec. 20, 1861
Drewry’s Bluff, Virginia, May 12-16, 1864
Dumfries (Quantico Creek), Virginia, Oct. 11, 1862
Dumfries, Virginia, Dec. 12, 1862; Dec. 27, 1862
Durham Station, North Carolina, surrender of J.E. Johnston, April 26, 1865
Egypt, Mississippi, Dec. 28, 1864
Ezra Church, Georgia, July 28, 1864
Falling Waters, Maryland, July 14, 1863
Farmington, Missouri, May 9-10, 1862
Farmville, Virginia, April 7, 1865
First Bull Run (First Manassas), Virginia, July 21, 1861
Fisher’s Hill, Virginia, Sept. 22, 1864
Fishing Creek (Mill Springs), Kentucky, Jan. 19, 1862
Five Forks, Virginia, April 1, 1865
Fort Blakely, Alabama, April 2-9, 1865
Fort Donelson, Tennessee, siege and capture Feb. 12-16, 1862
Fort Fisher, North Carolina, bombardment Dec. 24-25, 1864; bombardment and capture Jan. 13-15, 1865
Fort Gregg (Petersburg lines), Virginia, April 2, 1865
Fort Harrison, Virginia, Sept. 29-30, 1864
Fort Hatteras, North Carolina, Aug. 28-29, 1861
Fort Henry, Tennessee, Jan. 17-22, 1862
Fort Hindman (Arkansas Post), Arkansas, Jan. 4-17, 1863
Fort Jackson, Louisiana, bombardment and surrender April 18-28, 1862
Fort McRee (Pensacola Harbor), Florida, Nov. 22, 1861; Jan. 1, 1862
Fort Morgan, Alabama, Aug. 9-23, 1864
Fort Moultrie, South Carolina, occupied by Federals Feb. 18, 1865
Fort Pillow, Tennessee, April 14-June 5, 1862; captured by Confederates April 12, 1864
Fort St. Philip, Louisiana, captured by Federals April 18-28, 1862
Fort Sanders, Tennessee, Nov. 29, 1863
Fort Stedman (Petersburg lines), Virginia, March 25, 1865
Fort Stevens, Maryland, July 11-12, 1864
Fort Sumter, South Carolina, bombardment, April 12-13, 1861
Fort Tyler (near West Point, Georgia), April 16, 1865
Franklin, Tennessee, Nov. 30, 1864
Frayser’s Farm (White Oak Swamp), Virginia, June 30, 1862
Fredericksburg (Marye’s Heights), Virginia, May 3-4, 1862
Fredericksburg, Virginia, Dec. 13, 1862
Front Royal, Virginia, May 23, 30 and 31, 1862
Fussell’s Mill, Virginia, Aug. 13-20, 1864
Gaines’s Mill (Chickahominy, Cold Harbor), Virginia, June 27, 1862
Galveston, Texas, attack on blockade fleet, Jan. 1, 1863
Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, July 1-3, 1863
Glorieta Canyon, New Mexico, March 26-28, 1862
Grand Gulf, Mississippi, Mach 31, 1863
Greensboro, North Carolina, Confederate surrender, April 26, 1865
Groveton (Manassas Plains), Virginia, Aug. 29, 1862
Grubbs Crossroads, Kentucky, Aug. 21, 1864
Harpers Ferry, West Virginia, Sept. 12-15, 1862
Harrisonburg, Pennsylvania, June 6, 1862
Hatcher’s Run, Virginia, Feb. 5-7, 1865
Helena, Arkansas, Jan. 1, 1863; Feb. 5-7, 1865
High Bridge, Virginia, April 6-7, 1865
Holly Springs, Mississippi, July 1, 1862; Nov. 13, 1862; Nov. 28, 1862; Dec. 20, 1862
Island No. 10, Mississippi River between Missouri and Tennessee, captured April 7-8, 1862
Iuka, Mississippi, Sept. 19, 1862
Jackson, Mississippi, captured by Federals July 10, 1863
Jenkins’ Ferry, Arkansas, April 30, 1864
Jonesboro, Georgia, Aug. 31-Sept. 1, 1864
Kelly’s Ford (Fair Gardens), Tennessee, Jan. 27, 1864
Kelly’s Ford, Virginia, Dec. 20-22, 1862; Nov. 7, 1863
Kennesaw Mountain, Georgia, June 10, 1864; July 3, 1864;
Kentucky Campaign, August-October 1862
Kinston, North Carolina, Jan. 25, 1863; expedition June 20-23, 1864
Knoxville Campaign, Tennessee, Nov. 17-Dec. 4, 1863
Laurel Hill, West Virginia, July 11, 1864
Lexington, Missouri, captured Sept. 20, 1861
Little Rock, Arkansas, captured Sept. 10. 1863
Lynchburg, Virginia, July 17-18, 1864
McDowell, Virginia, May 8, 1862
Malvern Hill, Virginia, July 1, 1862
Manassas Campaign, Virginia, July 16-22, 1861
Manassas Junction, Virginia, Jan. 7, 1862
Mansfield, Louisiana, April 8, 1864
Marks’ Mills, Arkansas, April 25, 1864
Martinsburg, West Virginia, Sept. 18, 1864
Maryland Campaign, Sept 10-19, 1862
Mechanicsville (Meadow Bridge, Beaver Dam Creek), Virginia, June 26, 1862
Meridian Expedition, Mississippi, Feb. 3-March 5, 1864
Milliken’s Bend, Louisiana, June 7, 1863
Mine Creek, Kansas, Oct. 25, 1864
Mine Run Campaign, Virginia, Nov. 26-Dec. 2, 1863
Missionary Ridge, Tennessee, Nov. 25, 1863
Mobile Bay, Alabama, operations Feb. 16-March 27, 1864; May 4, 1865; evacuated April 11, 1865
Monocacy, Maryland, July 9, 1864
Morgan’s Indiana Raid, July 9-13, 1863
Morgan’s Kentucky Raids, July 4-28, 1862; Dec. 22, 1862-Jan. 2, 1863; May 31-June 20, 1863
Morgan’s Ohio Raid, July 13-26, 1863
Nashville, Tennessee, Dec. 15-16, 1864
New Bern, North Carolina, March 14, 1862
New Hope Church, Georgia, May 25-June 5, 1864
New Madrid, Missouri, capture March 3-14, 1862
New Market, Virginia, June 13, 1862
New Orleans, Louisiana, capture April 25, 1862
Newburgh, Indiana, capture July 18, 1862
Newtonia, Missouri, Sept. 30, 1862
Olustee, Florida, Feb. 20, 1864
Overland Campaign, Virginia, Summer of 1864
Paducah, Kentucky, capture May 25, 1864
Payne’s Farm, Virginia, Nov. 27, 1863
Pea Ridge (Elkhorn Tavern), Arkansas, March 6-8, 1862
Peach Orchard, Virginia, June 29, 1862
Peninsular Campaign, Virginia, April-June 1862
Pennsylvania Campaign (Gettysburg Campaign), June-July 1863
Pensacola, Florida, Confederate evacuation May 9-12, 1862; Federal evacuation March 20-24, 1863
Perryville, Kentucky, Oct. 7-8, 1862
Petersburg, Virginia, assault on lines June 15-18, 1864
Petersburg, Virginia, siege June 15, 1864-April 2, 1865
Piedmont, Virginia, June 5, 1864
Pine Mountain, Georgia, June 14, 1864
Pleasant Hill, Louisiana, April 9, 1864
Plymouth, North Carolina, April 17-20, 1864
Port Gibson, Mississippi, May 1, 1863
Port Hudson, Louisiana, siege May 21-July 8, 1863
Port Republic, Virginia, June 8-9, 1862
Port Royal (Port Royal Ferry), South Carolina, Jan. 1, 1862; June 6, 1862; July 4, 1862
Port Royal Bay (Forts Royal and Beauregard), South Carolina, Nov. 7, 1861
Port Walthall Junction, Virginia, May 6-7, 1864
Prairie Grove, Arkansas, Dec. 7, 1862
Princeton, West Virginia, Sept. 16, 1861; May 15-17, 1862
Rappahannock Bridge, Virginia, Oct. 22, 1863
Reams’ Station, Virginia, Aug. 25, 1864
Red River Campaign, Louisiana, March 10-May 22, 1864
Resaca, Georgia, May 14-15, 1864
Rich Mountain, West Virginia, July 11, 1861
Rich Mountain Campain (Western Virginia Campaign), West Virginia, June 25-July 17, 1861
Richmond, Kentucky, Aug. 30, 1862
Richmond, Virginia, siege June 19, 1864-April 3, 1865
Romney, West Virginia, Jan. 10, 1862
Romney Expedition, West Virginia, Dec. 1861-Jan. 1862
Salem Church, Virginia, May 3-4, 1863
Savage’s Station, Virginia, June 29, 1862
Savannah Campaign, Georgia, Nov. 15-Dec. 21, 1864
Sayler’s Creek, Virginia, April 6, 1865
Secessionville, South Carolina, June 16, 1862
Second Bull Run (Second Manassas), Virginia, Aug. 29-30, 1862
Selma, Alabama, April 2, 1865
Seven Days Campaign, Virginia, June 26-July 2, 1862
Seven Pines (Fair Oaks) Virginia, May 31-June 1, 1862
Shenandoah Valley Campaign (Early’s), June-November, 1864
Shenandoah Valley Campaign (Jackson’s), April-June, 1862
Shiloh (Pittsburg Landing), Tennessee, March 16, 1862; April 6-7, 1862 (the big one)
Smithburg, Tennessee, July 4, 1863
South Mountain (Crampton’s Gap, Fox’s Gap, Boonsborough), Maryland, Sept. 14, 1862
Spanish Fort, Alabama, siege and captured March 27-April 8, 1865
Spotsylvania Court House, Virginia, May 8-21, 1865
Spring Hill (Thompson’s Station), Tennessee, Nov. 29, 1864
Stones River (Murfreesboro) Dec. 31, 1862-Jan. 3, 1863
Suffolk Expedition, Virginia, April 11-May 4, 1863
Telford’s Depot, Tennessee, Sept. 8, 1863
Tennessee Campaign (Hood), November-December, 1864
Thoroughfare Gap, Virginia, Aug. 29, 1862; Oct. 17-18, 1862
Tullahoma Campaign, Tennessee, June 23-July 7, 1863
Tupelo, Mississippi, May 5, 1863; July 14-15, 1864
Valverde, New Mexico, Feb. 21, 1862
Vicksburg, Mississippi, bombardment June 28, 1862
Vicksburg Campaign, Mississippi, Dec. 20, 1862-Jan. 3, 1863; siege May 19-July 4, 1863
Waynesboro, Virginia, June 10, 1864; Sept. 29, 1864; March 2, 1865
Weldon Railroad, Virginia, Aug. 18-21, 1864
Western Virginia Campaign, June 25-Juy 17, 1861
Westport, Missouri, Oct. 21-23, 1864
Wilderness, Virginia, May 5-7, 1864
Wilderness Campaign, Virginia, May-June, 1864
Williamsburg, Virginia, May 5, 1862
Williamsport, Maryland, July 6, 1863
Wilson’s Creek (Springfield), Missouri, Aug. 10, 1861; Oct. 25, 1861
Winchester (Kernstown), Virginia, March 22-23, 1862; July 24, 1864
Winchester (Opequon), Virginia, Sept. 19, 1864
Winchester, Virginia, May 25, 1862
Woodstock, Virginia, April 1-2, 1862; Sept. 23, 1864
Yellow Tavern, Virginia, May 11, 1864
Yorktown, Virginia, siege April 5-May 4, 1862


(in reply to Battleline)
Post #: 4
RE: List of Civil War Battles - 10/29/2007 6:30:42 PM   
jkBluesman


Posts: 797
Joined: 2/12/2007
Status: offline


quote:

This is an excellent help, but a good thing for us to do that would help each other would be to come up with information about the more obscure battles, so that we can note their importance without having to spend lots of time reading up on them. I've added one battle below -- since I was just looking at Floyd's bio -- and would suggest that whenever someone wants to update the list he simply copy it into a new post, and I'll then use my moderator powers to delete the old version of the list, so that this thread doesn't get too long.

Anyone who wants to chime in should feel free to do so -- you don't have to be a card-carrying bio-writer to contribute.


Abingdon, Virginia, June 20, 1864
Allatoona, Georgia, Oct. 5, 1864
Alleghany Summit, West Virginia, Dec. 13, 1861
Antietam (Sharpsburg), Maryland, Sept. 17, 1862
Appomattox Campaign, Virginia, March 29-April 9, 1865
Appomattox Court House, Army of Northern Virginia Surrender, April 9, 1865
Arkansas Post, Arkansas, Jan. 11, 1863
Atlanta, Georgia, July 22, 1864
Atlanta, Georgia, evacuation by Confederates, Sept. 1, 1864
Atlanta Campaign, May-September 1864
Ball’s Bluff (Leesburg), Virginia, Oct 21-22, 1861
Bath, West Virginia, Jan. 3-4, 1862
Baton Rouge, Louisiana, opearations July 27-Aug. 6, 1862
“Battle Above the Clouds” (Lookout Mountain), Tennessee, Nov. 24, 1863
Bean’s Station, Tennessee, Dec. 14, 1863
Belmont, Missouri, Dec. 7, 1861
Bentonville, North Carolina, March 19-21, 1865
Berryville, Virginia, Sept. 3-4, 1864
Bethel (Bethel Church, Big Bethel, Great Bethel) Virginia, June 10, 1861
Bethesda Church, Virginia, May 30-31, 1864, June 1-3, 1864
Blair’s Landing, Louisiana, April 12-13, 1864
Bluff Spring, Florida, March 25, 1865
Booneville, Mississippi, capture, May 30, 1862
Brandy Station (Beverly Ford, Fleetwood), Virginia, June 9, 1863
Brices Cross Roads, Mississippi, June 10, 1864
Bristoe Station, Virginia, Oct. 14, 1863
Brownsville, Texas (last engagement of the war), May 12, 1865
Buckhead Creek, Georgia, Nov. 28-29, 1864
Buckland Mills, Virginia, Oct. 19, 1863
Buffington’s Island, Ohio, July 19, 1863
Camden Expedition, Arkansas, March 23-May 3, 1864
Carnifex Ferry, western Virginia, September 10, 1861 (Gen. William S. Rosecrans defeated Gen. John B. Floyd, ensuring that western Virginia would remain Union territory, and setting the stage for it to become a new state)
Carolinas Campaign, Jan. 1-April 26, 1865
Carthage, Missouri, July 5, 1861
Cedar Creek (Bell Grove), Virginia, Oct. 19, 1864
Cedar Mountain (Cedar Run Mountain, Slaughter Mountain, Southwest Mountain), Virginia, Aug. 9, 1862
Chambersburg, Pennsylvania, burned July 30, 1864
Champion’s Hill (Baker’s Creek), Mississippi, May 16, 1863
Charleston, South Carolina bombardment, Aug. 21, 1863; Dec. 31, 1863
Charlestown, West Virginia, Oct. 18, 1863
Chattanooga, Tennessee, Nov. 23-25, 1863
Chattanooga Campaign, Tennessee, August-November, 1863
Cheat Mountain Campaign, West Virginia, Sept. 11-17, 1861
Chickamauga, Georgia, Sept. 19-20, 1863
Chickamauga Campaign, Georgia, Aug. 16-Sept. 22, 1863
Chickasaw Bayou, Mississippi, Dec. 27-28, 1862
Chickasaw Bluffs, Mississippi, Dec. 29, 1862
Cloyd’s Mountain, Virginia, May 9, 1864
Cold Harbor, Virginia, June 3, 1864; Operations around, May 31-June 12, 1864
Columbia, Tennessee, Nov. 24-27, 1864
Corinth, Mississippi, Oct. 3-4, 1862
Corrick’s Ford, West Virginia, July 13, 1861
Cosby Creek, Tennessee, Jan. 14, 1864
The Crater, Virginia, July 30, 1864
Cross Keys, Virginia, June 8, 1862
Cumberland Gap, Tennessee, Federal evacuation Sept. 17, 1862
Dalton, Georgia, May 9-13, 1864; surrender Oct. 13, 1864
Devall’s Bluff, Arkansas, July 6, 1862
Dinwiddie Court House, Virginia, March 31, 1865
Dranesville, Virginia, Nov. 26-27, 1861; Dec. 20, 1861
Drewry’s Bluff, Virginia, May 12-16, 1864
Dumfries (Quantico Creek), Virginia, Oct. 11, 1862
Dumfries, Virginia, Dec. 12, 1862; Dec. 27, 1862
Durham Station, North Carolina, surrender of J.E. Johnston, April 26, 1865
Egypt, Mississippi, Dec. 28, 1864
Ezra Church, Georgia, July 28, 1864
Falling Waters, Maryland, July 14, 1863
Farmington, Missouri, May 9-10, 1862
Farmville, Virginia, April 7, 1865
First Bull Run (First Manassas), Virginia, July 21, 1861
Fisher’s Hill, Virginia, Sept. 22, 1864
Fishing Creek (Mill Springs), Kentucky, Jan. 19, 1862
Five Forks, Virginia, April 1, 1865
Fort Blakely, Alabama, April 2-9, 1865
Fort Donelson, Tennessee, siege and capture Feb. 12-16, 1862
Fort Fisher, North Carolina, bombardment Dec. 24-25, 1864; bombardment and capture Jan. 13-15, 1865
Fort Gregg (Petersburg lines), Virginia, April 2, 1865
Fort Harrison, Virginia, Sept. 29-30, 1864
Fort Hatteras, North Carolina, Aug. 28-29, 1861
Fort Henry, Tennessee, Jan. 17-22, 1862
Fort Hindman (Arkansas Post), Arkansas, Jan. 4-17, 1863
Fort Jackson, Louisiana, bombardment and surrender April 18-28, 1862
Fort McRee (Pensacola Harbor), Florida, Nov. 22, 1861; Jan. 1, 1862
Fort Morgan, Alabama, Aug. 9-23, 1864
Fort Moultrie, South Carolina, occupied by Federals Feb. 18, 1865
Fort Pillow, Tennessee, April 14-June 5, 1862; captured by Confederates April 12, 1864
Fort St. Philip, Louisiana, captured by Federals April 18-28, 1862
Fort Sanders, Tennessee, Nov. 29, 1863
Fort Stedman (Petersburg lines), Virginia, March 25, 1865
Fort Stevens, Maryland, July 11-12, 1864
Fort Sumter, South Carolina, bombardment, April 12-13, 1861
Fort Tyler (near West Point, Georgia), April 16, 1865
Franklin, Tennessee, Nov. 30, 1864
Frayser’s Farm (White Oak Swamp), Virginia, June 30, 1862
Fredericksburg (Marye’s Heights), Virginia, May 3-4, 1862
Fredericksburg, Virginia, Dec. 13, 1862
Front Royal, Virginia, May 23, 30 and 31, 1862
Fussell’s Mill, Virginia, Aug. 13-20, 1864
Gaines’s Mill (Chickahominy, Cold Harbor), Virginia, June 27, 1862
Galveston, Texas, attack on blockade fleet, Jan. 1, 1863
Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, July 1-3, 1863
Glorieta Canyon, New Mexico, March 26-28, 1862
Grand Gulf, Mississippi, Mach 31, 1863
Greensboro, North Carolina, Confederate surrender, April 26, 1865
Groveton (Manassas Plains or Brawner Farm), Virginia, Aug. 28, 1862, which set the stage for Second Manassas as Pope concentrated on Jackson after the latter had attacked the Federals
Grubbs Crossroads, Kentucky, Aug. 21, 1864
Harpers Ferry, West Virginia, Sept. 12-15, 1862
Harrisonburg, Pennsylvania, June 6, 1862
Hatcher’s Run, Virginia, Feb. 5-7, 1865
Helena, Arkansas, Jan. 1, 1863; Feb. 5-7, 1865
High Bridge, Virginia, April 6-7, 1865
Holly Springs, Mississippi, July 1, 1862; Nov. 13, 1862; Nov. 28, 1862; Dec. 20, 1862
Island No. 10, Mississippi River between Missouri and Tennessee, captured April 7-8, 1862
Iuka, Mississippi, Sept. 19, 1862
Jackson, Mississippi, captured by Federals July 10, 1863
Jenkins’ Ferry, Arkansas, April 30, 1864
Jonesboro, Georgia, Aug. 31-Sept. 1, 1864
Kelly’s Ford (Fair Gardens), Tennessee, Jan. 27, 1864
Kelly’s Ford, Virginia, Dec. 20-22, 1862; Nov. 7, 1863
Kennesaw Mountain, Georgia, June 10, 1864; July 3, 1864;
Kentucky Campaign, August-October 1862
Kinston, North Carolina, Jan. 25, 1863; expedition June 20-23, 1864
Knoxville Campaign, Tennessee, Nov. 17-Dec. 4, 1863
Laurel Hill, West Virginia, July 11, 1864
Lexington, Missouri, captured Sept. 20, 1861
Little Rock, Arkansas, captured Sept. 10. 1863
Lynchburg, Virginia, July 17-18, 1864
McDowell, Virginia, May 8, 1862
Malvern Hill, Virginia, July 1, 1862
Manassas Campaign, Virginia, July 16-22, 1861
Manassas Junction, Virginia, Jan. 7, 1862
Mansfield, Louisiana, April 8, 1864
Marks’ Mills, Arkansas, April 25, 1864
Martinsburg, West Virginia, Sept. 18, 1864
Maryland Campaign, Sept 10-19, 1862
Mechanicsville (Meadow Bridge, Beaver Dam Creek), Virginia, June 26, 1862
Meridian Expedition, Mississippi, Feb. 3-March 5, 1864
Milliken’s Bend, Louisiana, June 7, 1863
Mill Springs, Kentucky, Jan. 19, 1862: First significant Union victory of the war, opening East Tennessee for the Union, but George Thomas' advance was recalled
Mine Creek, Kansas, Oct. 25, 1864
Mine Run Campaign, Virginia, Nov. 26-Dec. 2, 1863
Missionary Ridge, Tennessee, Nov. 25, 1863
Mobile Bay, Alabama, operations Feb. 16-March 27, 1864; May 4, 1865; evacuated April 11, 1865
Monocacy, Maryland, July 9, 1864
Morgan’s Indiana Raid, July 9-13, 1863
Morgan’s Kentucky Raids, July 4-28, 1862; Dec. 22, 1862-Jan. 2, 1863; May 31-June 20, 1863
Morgan’s Ohio Raid, July 13-26, 1863
Nashville, Tennessee, Dec. 15-16, 1864
New Bern, North Carolina, March 14, 1862
New Hope Church, Georgia, May 25-June 5, 1864
New Madrid, Missouri, capture March 3-14, 1862
New Market, Virginia, June 13, 1862
New Orleans, Louisiana, capture April 25, 1862
Newburgh, Indiana, capture July 18, 1862
Newtonia, Missouri, Sept. 30, 1862
Olustee, Florida, Feb. 20, 1864
Overland Campaign, Virginia, Summer of 1864
Paducah, Kentucky, capture May 25, 1864
Payne’s Farm, Virginia, Nov. 27, 1863
Pea Ridge (Elkhorn Tavern), Arkansas, March 6-8, 1862
Peach Orchard, Virginia, June 29, 1862
Peninsular Campaign, Virginia, April-June 1862
Pennsylvania Campaign (Gettysburg Campaign), June-July 1863
Pensacola, Florida, Confederate evacuation May 9-12, 1862; Federal evacuation March 20-24, 1863
Perryville, Kentucky, Oct. 7-8, 1862
Petersburg, Virginia, assault on lines June 15-18, 1864
Petersburg, Virginia, siege June 15, 1864-April 2, 1865
Piedmont, Virginia, June 5, 1864
Pine Mountain, Georgia, June 14, 1864
Pleasant Hill, Louisiana, April 9, 1864
Plymouth, North Carolina, April 17-20, 1864
Port Gibson, Mississippi, May 1, 1863
Port Hudson, Louisiana, siege May 21-July 8, 1863
Port Republic, Virginia, June 8-9, 1862
Port Royal (Port Royal Ferry), South Carolina, Jan. 1, 1862; June 6, 1862; July 4, 1862
Port Royal Bay (Forts Royal and Beauregard), South Carolina, Nov. 7, 1861
Port Walthall Junction, Virginia, May 6-7, 1864
Prairie Grove, Arkansas, Dec. 7, 1862
Princeton, West Virginia, Sept. 16, 1861; May 15-17, 1862
Rappahannock Bridge, Virginia, Oct. 22, 1863
Reams’ Station, Virginia, Aug. 25, 1864
Red River Campaign, Louisiana, March 10-May 22, 1864
Resaca, Georgia, May 14-15, 1864
Rich Mountain, West Virginia, July 11, 1861
Rich Mountain Campain (Western Virginia Campaign), West Virginia, June 25-July 17, 1861
Richmond, Kentucky, Aug. 30, 1862
Richmond, Virginia, siege June 19, 1864-April 3, 1865
Romney, West Virginia, Jan. 10, 1862
Romney Expedition, West Virginia, Dec. 1861-Jan. 1862
Salem Church, Virginia, May 3-4, 1863
Savage’s Station, Virginia, June 29, 1862
Savannah Campaign, Georgia, Nov. 15-Dec. 21, 1864
Sayler’s Creek, Virginia, April 6, 1865
Secessionville, South Carolina, June 16, 1862
Second Bull Run (Second Manassas), Virginia, Aug. 29-30, 1862
Selma, Alabama, April 2, 1865
Seven Days Campaign, Virginia, June 26-July 2, 1862
Seven Pines (Fair Oaks) Virginia, May 31-June 1, 1862
Shenandoah Valley Campaign (Early’s), June-November, 1864
Shenandoah Valley Campaign (Jackson’s), April-June, 1862
Shiloh (Pittsburg Landing), Tennessee, March 16, 1862; April 6-7, 1862 (the big one)
Smithburg, Tennessee, July 4, 1863
South Mountain (Crampton’s Gap, Fox’s Gap, Boonsborough), Maryland, Sept. 14, 1862
Spanish Fort, Alabama, siege and captured March 27-April 8, 1865
Spotsylvania Court House, Virginia, May 8-21, 1865
Spring Hill (Thompson’s Station), Tennessee, Nov. 29, 1864
Stones River (Murfreesboro) Dec. 31, 1862-Jan. 3, 1863
Suffolk Expedition, Virginia, April 11-May 4, 1863
Telford’s Depot, Tennessee, Sept. 8, 1863
Tennessee Campaign (Hood), November-December, 1864
Thoroughfare Gap, Virginia, Aug. 29, 1862; Oct. 17-18, 1862
Tullahoma Campaign, Tennessee, June 23-July 7, 1863
Tupelo, Mississippi, May 5, 1863; July 14-15, 1864
Valverde, New Mexico, Feb. 21, 1862
Vicksburg, Mississippi, bombardment June 28, 1862
Vicksburg Campaign, Mississippi, Dec. 20, 1862-Jan. 3, 1863; siege May 19-July 4, 1863
Waynesboro, Virginia, June 10, 1864; Sept. 29, 1864; March 2, 1865
Weldon Railroad, Virginia, Aug. 18-21, 1864
Western Virginia Campaign, June 25-Juy 17, 1861
Westport, Missouri, Oct. 21-23, 1864
Wilderness, Virginia, May 5-7, 1864
Wilderness Campaign, Virginia, May-June, 1864
Williamsburg, Virginia, May 5, 1862
Williamsport, Maryland, July 6, 1863
Wilson’s Creek (Springfield), Missouri, Aug. 10, 1861; Oct. 25, 1861
Winchester (Kernstown), Virginia, March 22-23, 1862; July 24, 1864
Winchester (Opequon), Virginia, Sept. 19, 1864
Winchester, Virginia, May 25, 1862
Woodstock, Virginia, April 1-2, 1862; Sept. 23, 1864
Yellow Tavern, Virginia, May 11, 1864
Yorktown, Virginia, siege April 5-May 4, 1862





< Message edited by jkBluesman -- 10/29/2007 6:47:38 PM >

(in reply to Gil R.)
Post #: 5
RE: List of Civil War Battles - 10/30/2007 4:35:59 AM   
wzh55


Posts: 188
Joined: 3/17/2001
From: Sacramento, CA USA
Status: offline
Here is another online source of battles that seems to have some of the more obscure battles listed with their details.

Link: http://www.nps.gov/history/hps/abpp/battles/bystate.htm

Example:

Battle of Utoy Creek, Fulton County, Georgia: Atlanta Campaign (1864) Date(s): August 5-7, 1864
Forces Engaged: Army of the Ohio [US] Maj. Gen. John M. Schofield; Army of Tennessee [CS] Gen. John B. Hood
Estimated Casualties: Unknown

Description: After failing to envelop Hood’s left flank at Ezra Church, Sherman still wanted to extend his right flank to hit the railroad between East Point and Atlanta. He transferred John M. Schofield’ s Army of the Ohio from his left to his right flank and sent him to the north bank of Utoy Creek. Although Schofield’s troops were at Utoy Creek on August 2, they, along with the XIV Corps, Army of the Cumberland, did not cross until the 4th. Schofield’s force began its movement to exploit this situation on the morning of the 5th, which was initially successful. Schofield then had to regroup his forces, which took the rest of the day. The delay allowed the Rebels to strengthen their defenses with abatis, which slowed the Union attack when it restarted on the morning of the 6th. The Federals were repulsed with heavy losses by Bate’s Division and failed in an attempt to break the railroad. On the 7th, the Union troops moved toward the Confederate main line and entrenched. Here they remained until late August.

Result(s): Inconclusive

_____________________________

Bill Hawthorne

(in reply to jkBluesman)
Post #: 6
RE: List of Civil War Battles - 11/7/2007 12:43:29 AM   
Battleline


Posts: 426
Joined: 10/5/2006
Status: offline
Bill,
Great find!
That's a good reference. I like it and recommend it as a place to look up extra information about campaigns and battles. There are some battles listed with a firm outcome that were claimed as a victory by both sides, though. For those, a secondary source, such as Heidler's, would be a good backup.
Battleline

(in reply to wzh55)
Post #: 7
RE: List of Civil War Battles - 11/7/2007 3:19:04 AM   
wzh55


Posts: 188
Joined: 3/17/2001
From: Sacramento, CA USA
Status: offline
Thanks, Bill. I always try to check several sources to find the consensus of agreement, otherwise it can come back to bite you in a sensitive area. I am still trying to arrange my monentary affairs for the procurment of Heidler's. In other words, it is expensive for a po' feller down on his luck.




Attachment (1)

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Bill Hawthorne

(in reply to Battleline)
Post #: 8
RE: List of Civil War Battles - 11/8/2007 12:18:52 PM   
jkBluesman


Posts: 797
Joined: 2/12/2007
Status: offline
The outcome of battles often was that both sides claimed victory and even historians today differ on some results. Antietam is a good example. There are people out there saying that the battle was a tactical victory for the South, others say it was a Northern victory as the Confederates had to withdraw from Maryland. Then there are those who combine the two and call it a draw as the Confederates held their line on September 17, stayed on the 18th but had to withdraw the next day. That is why one sentence describing the results is so important in the bios.

_____________________________

"War is the field of chance."
Carl von Clausewitz

(in reply to Battleline)
Post #: 9
RE: List of Civil War Battles - 4/19/2012 3:25:58 PM   
pandafulo


Posts: 7
Joined: 4/19/2012
Status: offline
making your own health and wellness products you are in the driving seat not only do you have a full awareness of exactlywhat the ingredients are and the true quantities but with theappropriate level ofguidance from a reputable practitioner you re more conversant with any healthimplications if any with the right know how you too can draw on the old fashioned yet effectivesources to greatly

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(in reply to jkBluesman)
Post #: 10
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