You searched for City|State: delaplane, va
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historicalmarkerproject/markers/HMRWW_piedmont-station_Delaplane-VA.html
Here at Piedmont Station (now Delaplane) trains were used forthe first time in history to move troops to impending battle.On July 19, 1861 the fields surrounding this stop on theManassas Gap Railroad—which appeared then almost exactly asthey…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM7EG_emmanuel-episcopal-church_Delaplane-VA.html
Some time before 1858, the Methodists and Episcopalians of the Community of Oak Hill, who had shared a church at Cool Spring since 1816, decided to build separate churches. Piedmont Parish raised $1,000; John Thomas Smith and his wife Margaret Lew…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM3TT_death-of-2d-lt-james-big-yankee-ames_Delaplane-VA.html
Sergeant James F. Ames of the 5th New York Cavalry deserted the Union army in Feb. 1863 and joined Lt. Col. John S. Mosby's Partisan Rangers (later 43d Cavalry Battalion). Nicknamed "Big Yankee" Ames rose to the rank of 2d lieutenant. On the night…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM3TL_delaplane_Delaplane-VA.html
On July 19, 1861 Stonewall Jackson's brigade of General Joseph E. Johnston's corps marched to this station from Winchester. They crowded into freight and cattle cars and travelled to the 1st Battle of Manassas. The use of a railroad to carry more …
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM82_oak-hill_Delaplane-VA.html
Thomas Marshall, the father of future Chief Justice John Marshall, built Oak Hill about 1773 and relocated his family there from The Hollow, their former home nearby. John Marshall resided at Oak Hill for two years until he entered the Continental…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM3O_rectortown_Delaplane-VA.html
On November 5, 1862, several weeks after a tainted victory at Antietam, the Army of the Potomac's Commander-in-Chief Gen. George Brinton McClellan established his headquarters here. That same day President Abraham Lincoln wrote the orders relievin…