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Islands on MSNMaryland's Tasty Wine Trail Weaves Through Gorgeous Rural Vineyards And Civil War Sites Near Washington, D.C.This wine trail in Maryland offers exquisite vineyard views, a tasty array of wines, and some historical charm.
The fields along Fox’s Gap in central Maryland are mostly forest now, grown over since the day in September 1862 when thousands of men fought here. The former Wise Farm, where Union and ...
History Seekers on MSN10h
160-Year-Old Map Leads Us to Civil War Artifacts!Join the History Seekers Team as we follow a 160-year-old Civil War map into the heart of forgotten battlegrounds. Using our metal detectors, we uncover relics buried for generations—each one a silent ...
Maryland Home To A Number Of Civil War Scholars July 18, 2011 / 1:25 PM / CBS Baltimore OCEAN CITY, Md. (AP) -- Mary DeCredico has a thing for lost causes.
A newly discovered 150-year-old map of the Civil War’s Battle of Antietam shows thousands of graves of Union and Confederate soldiers killed near Sharpsburg, Md., in 1862.
The map-guides chart nearly 200 Civil War sites throughout the state and serve as a tool to reach and inspire users ... second only to Virginia in Civil War sites, joins North Carolina, Maryland, ...
Editor Charles Mitchell discussed the role of Maryland during the Civil War and Reconstruction, challenging claims that the state leaned heavily toward the Confederacy. The National Civil War ...
A long-forgotten Civil War map has recently been rediscovered, shedding new light on the bloody aftermath of the battle of Antietam. Some 23,000 soldiers were killed, wounded or missing following ...
SHARPSBURG, Md. (AP) -- Two Civil War battlefields in Maryland are ringing bells to mark the 150th anniversary of Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee's surrender. The Antietam National Battlefield near ...
While the first shots of the Civil War were fired on Fort Sumter in Charleston Harbor in South Carolina, the first blood spilled in fighting occurred in Baltimore on April 19, 1861, when a mob of ...
Above the Potomac River and below the Mason Dixon Line, a visit to mid-Maryland’s Heart of the Civil War Heritage Area may tick off a few items on your must-do life list.
Most of the millions of visitors who stroll around Baltimore’s Inner Harbor each year have no idea the first soldiers killed in the Civil War died on Pratt Street, in front of the National ...
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