-
Recent Posts
Recent Comments
Daily News - 150 Years Ago
General Civil War Sites
Other Resources
WordPress
Topical Paradise
- 19th NY Volunteer Infantry
- 33rd New York Infantry Regiment
- 50th New York Engineer Regiment
- 1860 Election
- Abraham Lincoln
- Andrew Johnson
- Army of the Potomac
- Battle of Fredericksburg
- Benjamin Franklin Butler
- Charleston
- Conscription
- Copperheads
- draft
- Edwin M. Stanton
- Fort Sumter
- George B. McClellan
- George Gordon Meade
- George Washington
- Gettysburg Campaign
- Horatio Seymour
- inflation
- Jefferson Davis
- New York City
- Overland Campaign
- Peninsula Campaign
- Presidential Reconstruction
- Prisoners of War
- Reconstruction
- recruitment
- Richmond
- Robert E. Lee
- secession
- Seneca Falls NY
- Siege of Petersburg
- Slavery
- South Carolina
- Southern Economy
- southern scarcity
- Thanksgiving
- The election of 1864
- Ulysses S. Grant
- Virginia
- William H. Seward
- William Tecumseh Sherman
- World War I
Categories
- 100 Years Ago
- 150 Years Ago
- 150 Years Ago This Month
- 150 Years Ago This Week
- 160 Years Ago
- 400 Years Ago
- 800 Years Ago
- After Fort Sumter
- Aftermath
- American Culture
- American History
- American Society
- Battle Monuments
- Battle of Fredericksburg
- Battlefields
- Books I've Enjoyed
- Chancellorsville Campaign
- Civil War Cemeteries
- Civil War prisons
- Confederate States of America
- First Manassas – Bull Run
- Foreign Relations
- Gettysburg Campaign
- Impeachment
- Lincoln Administration
- Maryland Campaign 1862
- Military Matters
- Monuments and Statues
- Naval Matters
- Northern Politics During War
- Northern Society
- Overland Campaign
- Peninsula campaign 1862
- Postbellum Politics
- Postbellum Society
- Reconstruction
- Secession and the Interregnum
- Siege of Petersburg
- Slavery
- Southern Society
- Technology
- The election of 1860
- The election of 1864
- The election of 1868
- The Election of 1872
- The election of 1920
- The Grant Administration
- Uncategorized
- Veterans
- Vicksburg Campaign
- War Consequences
- World Culture
- World History
- World War I
Subscribe by Feed
Subscribe by Email
Author Archives: SUMPTER
General Meade, R.I.P.
The day after his Commander in Chief was re-elected United States President, General George Meade died at his Philadelphia home. From The Chicago Daily Tribune November 8, 1872: IN MEMORIAM. Honors to the Late General Meade. Washington, Nov. 7.—General Sherman … Continue reading
Posted in 150 Years Ago This Week, Aftermath, Veterans
Tagged Battle of Gettysburg, George Gordon Meade, Old Baldy
Leave a comment
irrepressible
On October 10, 1872 former U.S. Secretary of State William H. Seward died at his home in Auburn, New York. People in the Midwest could read all about it the next day. From the October 11, 1872 issue of The … Continue reading
three parties … two candidates
1872 was another presidential election year in the United States. Would the Republican incumbent, General Ulysses S. Grant be reelected? President Grant was popular, even though his Administration was involved in several scandals. One possible impediment to Grant’s reelection was … Continue reading
Posted in 150 Years Ago, The Election of 1872
Tagged Benjamin Gratz Brown, Charles Francis Adams Sr, Great Exhibition (Crystal Palace Exhibition), Horace Greeley, Liberal Republican Party (United States), Lyman Trumbull, New Departure strategy, Salmon P. Chase, Swing Around the Circle
Leave a comment
hot time
150 years ago this summer New York City suffered some very hot weather. From the July 27, 1872 issue of Harper’s Weekly: THE HEATED TERM. THE heated term which ended on the 6th inst, was not only the most protracted, … Continue reading
dedicated
The Lincoln Memorial in Washington, D.C. was dedicated on Memorial Day a century ago (five score years). From the May 31, 1922 issue of The New York Times: WASHINGTON, May 30. – The Lincoln Memorial magnificent and compelling in its … Continue reading
Posted in 100 Years Ago, American History, Monuments and Statues
Tagged Abraham Lincoln, Crispus Attucks, Declaration of Independence, Edwin Markham, Lewis S. Pilcher, Lincoln Memorial, Robert Russa Moton, Robert Todd Lincoln, Warren Gamaliel Harding, Washington Monument, William Howard Taft, Woodrow Wilson
Leave a comment
forget the feud
From the June 8, 1872 issue of Harper’s Weekly: DECORATION-DAY. In the beautiful and touching illustration on our first page this week our artist expresses the universal feeling of the country. While the people have no wish to keep alive … Continue reading
preacher woman
From the March 2, 1872 issue of Harper’s Weekly: A WOMAN IN THE PULPIT. THE good Presbytery of Brooklyn have been greatly scandalized of late by the appearance of Miss SARAH F. SMILEY, a Quakeress preacher, in the pulpit of … Continue reading
artifact on parade
From the March 16, 1872 issue of Harper’s Weekly: WASHINGTON’S CARRIAGE. ONE of the most interesting incidents of the grand parade in this city [New York City] on the 22d of February was the appearance in the procession of a … Continue reading
with counsel like that
From the January 27, 1872 issue of Harper’s Weekly: THE KU-KLUX. WE give on this page an illustration, engraved from a photograph from life, showing three members of a band of Mississippi Ku-Klux, who are now under indictment in that … Continue reading
resolutions galore
150 years ago today a Chicago editorial looked at the year just past and saw the terrible destruction of the Great Chicago Fire in October 1871 as a source of hope for the coming year – citizens had a great … Continue reading