User:Donner60/ACW References

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Citations and quotes and general facts for American Civil War articles. I have started this type of list several times and have not decided how best to organize it or how to complete it usefully and in a reasonable time. I usually have abandoned the effort and this one has stalled for a long time. It seems to become a daunting task, like writing one or several books. I still think it would be helpful in the long run for producing new and improved content in articles.

The main purpose of the page is to have readily available some basic facts along with the references or citations to support them, not necessarily to build up numerous facts for any single article.

The best way to create this compilation may be to add information as I come across it in reading or research, if I can remember to do so. I might also spend a few hours now and then finding and adding information that I think I might find useful. Of course, I do not want to spend much time recording information on topics that can be easily found in my library. I am trying ultimately to save some time and repetitive research so some balance and discretion on what to add here will be needed

Occasionally, a large separate section on a topic being researched which may come up again may be useful and added.

I have alphabetical lists below, currently divided into the following topics topics (1) People; (2) Battles, Campaigns; (3) States, Places; (4) Governments, Politics; (5) Logistics, Railroads, Transportation; (6) Statistics and (7) Other topics, perhaps to be divided further in the future. I will try to limit multiple entries although some incidents or facts relate to more than one general topic. In that case, more that one heading or identifying phrase may be shown in bold font.

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Battles, Campaigns

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  • Fairfax Court House: "On the last day in May in 1861, slightly more than 200 men, consisting of two virtually unarmed Virginia cavalry companies and an infantry company, occupied the town as a Confederate outpost."[1]
  • Fairfax Court House: "Press accounts were as unreliable."[2]
  • Fairfax Court House: Significance: "The significance of this skirmish at Fairfax Court House is not reflected in the immediate sensation it made in the press or the subsequent postwar claims of the uniqueness of the conflict.... Instead, the significance of the encounter around a small country courthouse is that it is typical of what would become the wars most frequent form of combat: the skirmish."[3]

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  • Movement of Union troops into Northern Virginia: "Lincoln waited until the people of Virginia voted on the referendum on secession before moving Federal troops into northern Virginia."[4]

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States, Places

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  • Alexandria, Virginia: First, or early, casualties: "Ellsworth and Jackson died over the Confederate banner, while a Union sailor from the USS Pawnee lost his life while attempting to fix a halyard on the Alexandria city-hall flagpole."[5]

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  • Vienna, Virginia Railroad: "This concluded the action near Vienna, which has been cited as the first time the railroad was used in warfare."[6]
  • Virginia: "Lincoln waited until the people of Virginia voted on the referendum on secession before moving Federal troops into northern Virginia."[7]
  • Virginia: "While stories of Ellsworth and Jackson dominated the news, Union regiments were digging in and starting fortifications from south of Georgetown to Alexandria."[8]
  • Virginia: "Extensive earthworks fortifications were constructed on the eminences on the south side of the Potomac, opposite Washington and Georgetown, and beyond Alexandria. The troops were advanced a short distance into Virginia, but with the exception of the capture of a few rebel soldiers and disloyal residents, and some picket firing and skirmishing, little of importance transpired."[9]

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Governments, Politics

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Logistics, Railroads, Transportation

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  • Railroads: "This concluded the action near Vienna, which has been cited as the first time the railroad was used in warfare."[10]

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Statistics

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  • Casualties: First, or early, casualties: "Ellsworth and Jackson died over the Confederate banner, while a Union sailor from the USS Pawnee lost his life while attempting to fix a halyard on the Alexandria city-hall flagpole."[11]
  • Combat: Typical Type; Fairfax Court House: Significance: "The significance of this skirmish at Fairfax Court House is not reflected in the immediate sensation it made in the press or the subsequent postwar claims of the uniqueness of the conflict.... Instead, the significance of the encounter around a small country courthouse is that it is typical of what would become the wars most frequent form of combat: the skirmish."[12]

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  • "Press coverage of the first year of the war, of even the smallest skirmishes, was extensive, and at times, events were hyperbolically depicted as heroic."[13]
  • Press coverage: "All encounters, regardless of how minor, received major attention because of the newness of the war."[1]

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Notes

References

Last Battle of the American Civil War: Palmito Ranch

Some general Wikipedia articles on the American Civil War

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