Historical Marker Search

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historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1N1I_confederate-withdrawal_Cartersville-GA.html
"A shout trying to roll over those fields ... men grasp hands and shouted ... and embraced each other. The wounded joined in the delirium of rejoice. The dying looked to the flag, still proudly floating above the hills..." History the 93rd Illinoi…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1N0I_confederate-memorial-cassville-cemetery_Cartersville-GA.html
Front: Dedicated to the memory of our Southern heroes by the Ladies Memorial Association of Cassville AD 1878. Right: Is it death to fall for Freedom's Cause. Left: Rest in peace our own Southern braves, you loved liberty more t…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1N0G_wartime-allatoona_Cartersville-GA.html
In 1866, George N. Bernard photographed Allatoona looking north from approximately the same location is this marker. The Western & Atlantic Railroad from Atlanta to Chattanooga penetrated the Allatoona Mountain range at this point through a 175 fo…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1N0F_welcome-to-allatoona-pass-battlefield_Cartersville-GA.html
The Georgia State Parks and Historic Sites, Redtop Mountain State Park, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, the Friends of Georgia State Parks and Historic Sites, and the Etowah Valley Historic Society welcome you to Allatoona Pass Battlefield. We h…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1N0E_the-battle-of-allatoona-pass_Cartersville-GA.html
Allatoona Pass is the site of significant and bloody Civil War battles that took place after the fall of Atlanta in September 1864. With no city to defend, the Confederate Army treated from Atlanta in 1864. With no city to defend, the Confederate …
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1N0D_demand-for-surrender_Cartersville-GA.html
On the morning of October 5, 1864, following a two hour bombardment from Major John D. Myrick´s Confederate artillery on Moore´s he´ll located 1,200 yards to the south, Confederate Major General Samuel G. French sent his adjutant, Major David W…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1N0C_the-railroad_Cartersville-GA.html
Chartered by the state of Georgia in 1837, workmen completed the Western & Atlantic Railroad in 1850 over a winding 137-mile route from Atlanta, Georgia, to Chattanooga, Tennessee. At Allatoona, massive quantities of earth and stone were removed t…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1N0A_the-memorial-field_Cartersville-GA.html
This battlefield, along with its memorial ground, is dedicated to the Union and Confederate forces that fought her on October 5, 1864. During the battle, units representing five Union states and six Confederate states were present. Most of the Con…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1HC3_rowetts-redoubt_Cartersville-GA.html
Some 200 yards behind this marker was an earthen redoubt that protected the Federal defenses and the Star Fort. The redoubt was commanded by Colonel Richard Rowett and manned by the 39th Iowa, 7th Illinois, five companies of the 93rd Illinois Regi…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1H8C_inside-the-star-fort_Cartersville-GA.html
The "Star Fort" was constructed of 6-foot high earthworks or parapets, with a 6-foot deep trench completely surrounding the fort. The earthen walls were topped with interlacing railroad ties forming a multi-pointed star, giving the fort its design…
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