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  • Thumbnail for Confederate States Marine Corps
    The Confederate States Marine Corps (CSMC), also referred to as the Confederate States Marines, was a branch of the Confederate Navy during the American...
    21 KB (2,399 words) - 21:36, 12 March 2024
  • Thumbnail for Removal of Confederate monuments and memorials
    to the Confederate States of America (CSA; the Confederacy) and associated figures have been removed from public spaces in the United States, all but...
    333 KB (31,406 words) - 13:00, 23 April 2024
  • a list of museum ships of the United States military, specifically the United States Navy and the United States Coast Guard. It represents a subset of...
    44 KB (994 words) - 18:43, 25 April 2024
  • Union-Confederate prisoner exchanges
    )
    on both sides then soared. There were 32 major Confederate prisons, 16 of them in the Deep South states of Georgia, Alabama, and South Carolina. Training...
    28 KB (2,565 words) - 00:14, 31 March 2024
  • Dix–Hill Cartel (category 1862 in the United States)
    on parole. The system began to break down when the Congress of the Confederate States of America classified African-American prisoners of war as fugitive...
    23 KB (3,038 words) - 06:11, 18 March 2024
  • Thumbnail for Fort Monroe
    Fort Monroe (category Closed installations of the United States Army)
    U.S. President James Monroe. Although Virginia became part of the Confederate States of America, Fort Monroe remained in Union hands throughout the American...
    76 KB (7,910 words) - 21:52, 17 April 2024
  • English cricketer Algernon Hartridge (1831–1876), cotton merchant and Confederate Army officer Algernon Haskett-Smith (1856–1887), English cricketer and...
    9 KB (1,116 words) - 19:07, 17 January 2024
  • units, see United States Special Operations Forces. Jessie Scouts, Union Army scout unit that operated disguised as Confederate States Army soldiers 1st...
    10 KB (1,088 words) - 17:52, 24 March 2024
  • Pensacola Navy Yard)
    to have IATA code NAS), "The Cradle of Naval Aviation", is a United States Navy base located next to Warrington, Florida, a community southwest of the...
    43 KB (5,134 words) - 18:04, 4 April 2024
  • Thumbnail for William B. Cushing (category United States Navy officers)
    Cushing (4 November 1842 – 17 December 1874) was an officer in the United States Navy, best known for sinking the CSS Albemarle during a daring nighttime raid...
    18 KB (2,125 words) - 03:36, 30 November 2023
  • Anti-British sentiment in the United States
    )
    arms supplies, Confederate Navy commerce raiders built from British shipyards (e.g., CSS Alabama), and British tolerance of Confederate Secret Service...
    42 KB (3,527 words) - 11:10, 19 April 2024
  • of the few workers at Norfolk's Gosport Navy Yard who did not flee when Norfolk was captured by the Confederate Army early in the war, but who was still...
    14 KB (1,955 words) - 21:00, 21 April 2024
  • Thumbnail for Fort Warren (Massachusetts)
    the Civil War, the island fort served as a prison for captured Confederate army and navy personnel, elected civil officials from the state of Maryland...
    20 KB (2,140 words) - 22:41, 9 March 2024
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