http://warmemorialhq.org/om/items/browse?tags=Confederate+States+of+America&sort_field=added&sort_dir=a&output=atom2024-03-28T05:02:18-05:00Omekahttp://warmemorialhq.org/om/items/show/62
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var str = 'This small park landscaped park sits on the location that was the end of the Confederate trenches in the city during the Civil War. The large memorial in the park honors the women of the Confederacy for their service during the war. The monument is an open air temple with the statue of a woman holding a Confederate flag on the top and under the pitched roof sits a large statue of seated woman who has a small boy and girl at her sides and a book on her lap. It was erected by the McNeil Marble Company of Georgia in 1915.';
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]]>2020-10-29T16:57:19-05:00
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Title
Florida Confederate Women's Memorial Jacksonville FL
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]]>http://warmemorialhq.org/om/items/show/69
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var str = 'Camp Chase, which was named for Salmon P. Chase, was established in 1861 and was used to process more than 150,000 Union soldiers on their way to the war and over 25,000 Confederate prisoners passed through its gates. Eventually more than 2,260 Confederate prisoners are buried in the confines of the old fort. The camp was closed in 1865 and dismantled in 1867. In 1902 the memorial arch with the Confederate soldier standing atop it was dedicated. The United Daughters of the Confederacy held annual ceremonies here from 1912-1994. The small cemetery is watched over by the arch and statue which states simply “Americans.”';
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]]>2020-10-29T16:57:19-05:00
]]>http://warmemorialhq.org/om/items/show/71
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var str = 'This simple but elegant memorial has a large concrete base on which is placed a large, weathered bronze plaque listing all of the names of the Confederate veterans from Nashville. On top of the memorial is a weathered bronze Confederate soldier who is sitting in repose on a small rock ledge with his rifle in his right hand and the butt resting on the ground. He appears tired and his gaze is downward.';
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Association of Confederate Veterans CW Nashville TN
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]]>http://warmemorialhq.org/om/items/show/82
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var str = 'On the west lawn facing south, this white marble statue of General Thomas Stonewall Jackson, a native son, honors those from the state who fought for the Confederacy though West Virginia was not part of the Confederacy. The memorial states that he was born in Charleston which now is West Virginia. The statue was carved by Sir Moses Ezekial. The statue was on the original capitol complex and was moved to this new location in 1976.';
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]]>2020-10-29T16:57:18-05:00
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]]>http://warmemorialhq.org/om/items/show/141
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var str = 'Within this public cemetery in the city of Fredericksburg, three thousand and three hundred Confederate War Dead are interred here and cared for by the Ladies Memorial Association of Fredericksburg. There is a large white marble statue of a Confederate officer standing holding his rifle atop a large stone base. A plaque on the base also notes the names of Confederate dead who were buried at another local cemetery at Barton Street but whose remains were lost when the cemetery site was reused in 1920 and the remains were apparently not re-interred.';
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]]>2020-10-29T16:57:18-05:00
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]]>http://warmemorialhq.org/om/items/show/144
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var str = 'The street was the center of the Confederate “Lost Cause” version of the Civil War and consisted of a series of monumental statues of key Confederate figures along a major residential street. The monuments became the center of a movement to remove Confederate monuments in southern US states and most of them have now been removed and await an uncertain future. The equestrian statue of Robert E. Lee is the most prominent along the avenue. This 6- foot statue is a massive equestrian statue representing General Robert E. Lee. Lee sits astride his horse Traveler and faces south. On the sides of the base are simply etched “Lee”. This is the second statue along Monument Avenue as one enters the city from the West. It was sculpted by Jean Antoine Mercie. The equestrian statue of J.E.B. Stuart is the first statue on the drive into Richmond from the west along Monument Avenue is of the J.E.B. Stuart who was considered the “eyes and ears” of the Confederacy. Stuart died from wounds he received at the Battle of Yellow Tavern. He faces north. The Equestrian Statue of Stonewall Jackson depicts him simply sitting astride his horse. He faces north. Sculpted by Edward Valentine. Jefferson Davis, President of the Confederacy, stands in the center of this memorial in front of a very tall column topped by a bronze statue of a woman; it is the last monument along the avenue to the Confederacy. He is backed by a curved stone memorial of 13 columns representing the eleven states that seceded and the two states that sent representatives to the Confederate government. On each end of the colonnade are plaques honoring the Confederate Army and Navy. ';
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]]>2020-10-29T16:57:18-05:00
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]]>http://warmemorialhq.org/om/items/show/153
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var str = 'At the top of the 70 foot Lynchburg Monument Terrace is the city’s memorial to the fallen of the Civil War. A bronze Confederate infantryman stands atop a large gray granite carved base. The memorial faces the Lynchburg Museum. ';
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]]>2020-10-29T16:57:18-05:00
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]]>http://warmemorialhq.org/om/items/show/288
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var str = 'This large equestrian monument on the capitol grounds of Texas honors the Eighth Texas Cavalry which was an independent unit of the Confederate Army during the US Civil War. The unit was known as “Terry’s Texas Rangers” and around the base are plaques with quotes commending the unit.';
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]]>2020-10-29T16:57:18-05:00
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]]>http://warmemorialhq.org/om/items/show/293
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var str = 'This tall monument on the east lawn of the Texas Capitol Grounds honors General Hood’s Texas Brigade that served in the Civil War. From the marble base rises a column topped by a statue of a member of the brigade. Around the base are inscribed quotes commending the brigade by General Robert E. Lee, General Hood’s assessment of his men, and a list of the major battles in which the brigade participated. ';
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]]>2020-10-29T18:13:40-05:00
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]]>http://warmemorialhq.org/om/items/show/294
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var str = 'This large memorial honors those from Texas who died for the Confederacy in the Civil War. Around the large granite base are etched the Texas reasoning for the war as given in 1901 which was state’s rights, the numbers of soldiers on both sides of the war who served and lost their lives, the dates of southern state’s secession, and a chronological list of the major battles of the war. The memorial is topped by a life-size statue of Jefferson Davis, president of the Confederacy and on the four corners are life-size statues of three Confederate soldiers and one sailor. ';
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]]>2020-10-29T18:21:48-05:00