Battle of Fort Pillow

From Warlike

Revision as of 21:50, 1 September 2024 by John (talk | contribs) (Bot: Automated import of articles)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)

Q1821843

1864 battle of the American Civil War

WikimediaWikidata

battleAmerican Civil WarUnited States of America

Battle of Fort Pillow.png

Location: 35.6324, -89.8487, ///totally.interaction.armband, Google, Bing, Aerial View, OldMapsOnline, ESRI Imagery, Historic Markers, KML

Loading map...
Battle of Fort PillowBattle of Fort Pillow
Fort Pillow Battlefield TennesseeFort Pillow Battlefield Tennessee
Fort Pillow Massacre, Kurz and Allison, Chicago, 1885Fort Pillow Massacre, Kurz and Allison, Chicago, 1885
Harpers Weekly Rebel Attrocities Cartoon May 21 1864Harpers Weekly Rebel Attrocities Cartoon May 21 1864
Map of the Mississippi River Counties Situated in Tennessee and Adjoining Fort PillowMap of the Mississippi River Counties Situated in Tennessee and Adjoining Fort Pillow
Redeeming the republic - the third period of the war of the rebellion, in the year 1864 (1889) (14772788622)Redeeming the republic - the third period of the war of the rebellion, in the year 1864 (1889) (14772788622)
The Massacre at Fort Pillow - unsigned - Harper`s Weekly - issue of April 30, 1864 - page 284The Massacre at Fort Pillow - unsigned - Harper's Weekly - issue of April 30, 1864 - page 284
The war in Louisiana - view of Natchitoches The war in Tennessee - rebel massacre of the Union troops after the surrender at Fort Pillow, April 12. - From a sketch by our special artist, LCCN2015648987The war in Louisiana - view of Natchitoches The war in Tennessee - rebel massacre of the Union troops after the surrender at Fort Pillow, April 12. - From a sketch by our special artist, LCCN2015648987
Two letters from Lewis G. DeRussy, Fort Pillow, Tennessee, to Brigadier General Leonidas Polk, commanding Army Corps, New Madrid, Missouri, August 17, 1861Two letters from Lewis G. DeRussy, Fort Pillow, Tennessee, to Brigadier General Leonidas Polk, commanding Army Corps, New Madrid, Missouri, August 17, 1861