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Showing posts sorted by date for query battle+of+buchanan. Sort by relevance Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by date for query battle+of+buchanan. Sort by relevance Show all posts

Friday, June 9, 2017

Willy Nilly Friday 5 No. 130

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Back in April we went to Buchanan's Civil War reenactment, The Battle of Buchanan's Main Street Skirmish...
1)
Something is getting started....

2)
I think I've been spotted...

3)
Bang, bang, bang....hey I like the way the Buchanan Theatre sign is lit up!

4)
Darn, they caught Nick!

5)
He looks like a friendly guy!

We've been to a few more of the reenactments in Buchanan over the years and I've shown you HERE

For more info on The Battle of Buchanan Click Here

That's my 5 for the week! I would love if you played along too! Post 5 randoms, link back and visit others!! Have a super weekend :)



Friday, May 5, 2017

Willy Nilly Friday 5 No. 128

click on photos to enlarge




1) Last Friday Nick and I went to Buchanan for the start of their Civil War weekend...I thought this car parked in front of the old theater looked timely...although I don't know if the age of the car is before the theater but to me they went together ;) I've shown you more pictures over the years that we've seen the Battle of Buchanan HERE
2) A West Virginia bear hanging out in a Roanoke, Virginia front yard...this person likes bears :)


3) A Buchanan Kitty Cat



4) These 2, Christian (my son) and his girlfriend Madeline have been together 1 year today...right now they are out celebrating their anniversary with dinner at Billy's

5) As I get this post ready to roll it is Thursday evening. Dalton hurt his back over the weekend at a track meet doing the long jump. I took him to the chiropractor today and it was jammed up pretty good the dr. said so he adjusted it and Dalton is feeling much better...Ashlyn left this morning to go to Harrisonburg to see her best friend graduate from JMU (Ashlyn's alma mater) then they are heading to Hilton Head for a girl's week at the beach!

That's my 5 this week and if you joined in last week and/or this week I want to thank you! I also want to thank you for the visits and comments when my own visits and comments have been slim! I really do appreciate you and thank you for playing along! If you are new, it's easy, post 5 randoms, link back and visit others as time permits! Thanks again and have a wonderful weekend friends!




Thursday, May 15, 2014

Signs, Signs - Sgt. Bob Morgan and a Wrap-Up of the Battle of Buchanan

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The boys are getting a lesson about Sgt. Bob Morgan.

"Mary and Molly Bell were two young women from Pulaski County, Virginia who disguised themselves as men in order to fight with the Confederate Army during the Civil War. It seems their uncle had decided to join the Union Army in 1862, so Mary and her cousin Molly decided to make up for his defection by enlisting on the opposing side under the names of Tom Parker (Mary) and Bob Morgan (Molly). They started out in the cavalry, but were captured after just one month. They were soon rescued, and then joined the 36th Virginia Infantry, with whom they served for the next 2 years.

"Tom" and "Bob" were both good soldiers, described by their fellow infantrymen as "gallant, first-class fighting men." During the course of their service, Tom was promoted to corporal, while Bob, who managed to kill 3 Yankee soldiers one night while on picket duty, made sergeant. Bob also showed "his" mettle when severely wounded in the arm. "He" refused to see a doctor, fearing that "his" secret would be discovered, so he laughed the wound off as "just a scratch." Tom tended the wound, and Bob was able to recover and keep on fighting.

The secret came out after the battle of Cedar Creek on October 19, 1864 when Tom's and Bob's commanding officer was taken captive. They had confided the truth of their gender to this captain, so he could help them avoid physical exams or anything else that might expose them as women. In his absence, they decided they had best confide in their new commander, a recently promoted lieutenant. This proved to be a bad move, as this liuetenant promptly turned them over to General Early, who denounced them as "camp followers" and sent them to the notorious Confederate prison Castle Thunder where they were imprisoned for three weeks. Upon their release they were sent back to the family farm in Pulaski County, and were reported by the Richmond Daily Examiner as being "perfectly disconsolate" at being forced to leave their comrades in the 36th." Found HERE




Linking with Signs, Signs

Wednesday, May 14, 2014

ABC Wednesday - R is for Retro Photographer - Battle of Buchanan VII

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Meet Jeff. He's the proprietor of Black Paw Collodion and specializes in Ferrotype and Ambrotype photography.

A Civil War photobomb?

Jeff was so kind to make our photo and show us step by step how it's done. Interesting and quite impressive! Thanks Jeff, it was nice meeting you!

For more info on Jeff's photography visit his website: Black Paw Studio...plus he has some super images he made from the Battle of Buchanan visible on his site. Awesome work!

Linking with ABC Wednesday

Tuesday, May 13, 2014

Battle of Buchanan VI

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And...even more old/new. Ok, this is kind of funny and I didn't realize it till I was posting this photo. See the young girl, second from the back? Well Braden and Dalton had a little crush on her. This is how small Botetourt is... The next weekend they had a baseball game in Fincastle. Saw this same girl there... A boy from their team knows her and was supposedly going to get her number for them lol...kind of forgot about that till now...I'll have to find out how that all went down! Love living in a small town!

Linking with Our World Tuesday, Rubbish Tuesday, and Ruby Tuesday Too!

Monday, May 12, 2014

Battle of Buchanan V

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More old/new. Bringing the cannons in.

It's Monday, and it really feels like it too...blah...more espresso is needed...

Hope all you mamas had a good Mother's Day :)

Friday, May 9, 2014

Random 5 Friday - Battle of Buchanan IV

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Another blending of old and new.

Now randoms:

1) Tonight my oldest, Ashlyn, graduates from Virginia Western, our little community college with her Associate Degree. Those 2 years flew by. Click Here to see my post about her graduation from high school. After the ceremony we're taking her to Ichiban. Her favorite. An identical night as her high school grad night. Then she'll be heading to JMU in the fall. Sigh....

2) We bought Christian (well went halfsies with him) a new car yesterday. It's a white Buick Regal. Used of course, but new to him. He loves it. I hope he gets a lot of safe, happy driving in it!

3) The boys have a doubleheader in the morning then I think we're going to the grand opening of Explore Park. You can read about it HERE. I love that place and happy to see them get it going again. I've done a few posts there over the years HERE

4) 23 days of school left!

5) And a little video of the dance at the reenactment (sorry for the poor quality, I suck!)


Have a super weekend!!

Thursday, May 8, 2014

Signs, Signs - Civil War Laundress - Battle of Buchanan III

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Sorry if it's hard to read the "laundry list" ha...I really had to play with the contrast because it was written so lightly but I found it interesting so I wanted to share. Maybe you knew this already but I didn't. Many women followed the troops as a laundress. In a lot of cases there was nothing left for the women back home so they followed their husbands to do their laundry, and it was quite the coveted position. I am going to copy/paste the following info from About.com rather than give you the link because it's hard to follow with all those pesky ads...so here ya go:

"Laundry During the Civil War - The Civil War Laundress
The Invisible Women Behind the Troops

Unlike the highly organized and efficient Quartermaster Corp of today's Army which handles laundry for our troops, America's Civil War men in blue and grey relied upon the camp laundress. She often became one of the most respected and highest paid members of the camp for her basic, but important, work.

According to the Union Army's 1861 Military Handbook, only women of good character were allowed to be a laundress. Each woman had to obtain a "Certificate of Good Character" from Army headquarters before she was allowed to begin working. The laundress was usually married to or mother of one of the soldiers in the company with which she served. According to records, each Union company was allowed up to four laundresses while Confederate companies had up to seven laundresses. When broken down, this meant each Union laundress was responsible for mending and cleaning the clothes of around 20 men.

The salary of the laundress was paid by the Army by deducting the fees from the soldiers' pay. Each enlisted man had 50 cents withheld monthly, unmarried officers $1.00 to $2.00 monthly and married officers paid $4.00 monthly. If the officer's had family traveling or visiting with the company, additional fees were negotiated. For the men who could not afford to pay the fees, they washed their own clothes or simply wore them unwashed until the clothes fell apart.

The laundress was provided a tent, rations, a hatchet and services of the company surgeon. They were allowed to bring along their children, dogs and household items like beds, cribs and linens. In her "free time" she often assisted the doctor with wounded and sick men. "Suds Row" where the laundresses worked and lived was off-limits to the rest of the camp. The women did not move with the troops during sieges and battles but did move as a new camp was set.

The laundress was required to supply her own equipment and supplies. The basic supplies for each woman were two 25-gallon oak tubs (each weighed about 35 pounds when empty), buckets, iron cauldrons for heating water, fire grates, scrub boards, homemade soap, bluing, ropes for clothes lines, irons and sewing supplies.

These tools were crucial to her livelihood and had to be kept in good shape. The wooden tubs and buckets leaked if they were left to dry for too long, so they had to be soaked to keep them watertight. However, the water had to be changed often because if left too long, the wood became slimy and rotted. Irons had to be stored standing up to keep the bottoms smooth, clean, and free of rust. Wax was placed on the irons to keep them from rusting.

And, the laundress had to make her own soap by rendering animal fat and adding lye. Soap making was a day long process of stirring the soap while it "cooked" over an open fire. A few women did have access to soap from a company called Procter and Gamble. During the Civil War, the Cincinnati company won contracts to supply the Union Army with soap and candles. The military contracts introduced Procter and Gamble products to soldiers from all over the country. Once the war was over and the men returned home, they told their families about the company's products and launched their national, and then global, growth.

Doing laundry for the troops was, at best, a three to four day process for each load of clothes involving ten steps.

Mending by hand
Presoaking and stain removal
Washing in hot water
Scrubbing on the wash board
Boiling in hot water to kill insects
Rinsing three times in cool water
Bluing of white items
Drying
Ironing
Folding
Ironing was not included in the usual price. Each ironed shirt costs and extra three cents. Most of the troops saved their money for other things, but officers did pay for ironed shirts.

The job of laundress was hard labor under the conditions of weather and war. But the incentives that drew draw women to it were the pay and the opportunity to stay with her husband or son rather than endure a long or probable permanent separation."

Copied from HERE

Linking with Signs, Signs



Wednesday, May 7, 2014

ABC Wednesday - Q is for Quartet - Battle of Buchanan II

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These pretty little antebellum ladies got tired of all the warring going on across the street and made their way over to the Copper Top for an adult libation, or 2! I thought it was kind of neat seeing them all dressed up like that and drinking a beer!

Linking with ABC Wednesday

Tuesday, May 6, 2014

Battle of Buchanan I

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The cannon is fired at Union Troops as General Lee watches. Here's how it went down:

"Confederate General McCausland and his confederate troops fighting to delay Union General Hunters fiery Raid of the Valley. As Hunter’s troops ford the river upstream, McCausland troops hold their ground. As the Buchanan Turnpike Bridge burns destroying approximately thirty homes and businesses, troops blast the mountainside blocking passage along the ridge road leading from Buchanan to Liberty."

For more info on the battle, Click Here

Linking with Rubbish Tuesday and Our World Tuesday

Saturday, May 16, 2009

Battle Of Buchanan VI




Ashlyn gets a "hands on" lesson while Christian listens. They were both surprised at how heavy that gun is!

Friday, May 15, 2009

Battle Of Buchanan V



Sorry I missed yesterday's post. We were busy most of the day getting the pool ready for summer. It's been sitting for 2 years and needed ALOT of work! We're almost there though, hopefully we'll be swimming by the end of the month :)

Have a great weekend!

Wednesday, May 13, 2009

Battle Of Buchanan IV



Back at camp. We spoke with one of the reenactors and he told us that the younger participants camp out all weekend, in character, cooking food from the time period, over a camp fire, etc... The man we spoke with was older and admitted to going to a hotel with a comfy bed lol.

For information on upcoming reenactments, visit
24thVA

Tuesday, May 12, 2009

Battle Of Buchanan III




During the Civil War Buchanan served as an important Confederate supply depot for shipment of agricultural produce and pig iron to Richmond via the James River and Kanawha Canal. Federal General David Hunter marched through Pattonsburg and Buchanan on June 13, 1864 on his ill-fated raid of Lynchburg. After the Civil War commerce and manufacturing declined in Buchanan and Pattonsburg.

Monday, May 11, 2009

Battle of Buchanan II




During the Civil War Buchanan served as an important Confederate supply depot for shipment of agricultural produce and pig iron to Richmond via the James River and Kanawha Canal. Federal General David Hunter marched through Pattonsburg and Buchanan on June 13, 1864 on his ill-fated raid of Lynchburg. After the Civil War commerce and manufacturing declined in Buchanan and Pattonsburg.

(scroll down to Saturday's photo for the first in the series)

Saturday, May 9, 2009

Battle Of Buchanan I



My first in the Battle of Buchanan photo series.

During the Civil War Buchanan served as an important Confederate supply depot for shipment of agricultural produce and pig iron to Richmond via the James River and Kanawha Canal. Federal General David Hunter marched through Pattonsburg and Buchanan on June 13, 1864 on his ill-fated raid of Lynchburg. After the Civil War commerce and manufacturing declined in Buchanan and Pattonsburg.

We had a great time, it was hotter than heck and when I would think of how hot it was, I would think about the real soldiers who actually had to endure the heat and freezing cold during the war, then that put me back in my place,lol.

The location of the reenactment is the exact location of the original battle.

Nick has several ancestors who fought in the Civil War. He had 2 great, great grandfathers who did, one was a Federal Soldier and the other a Confederate, and their children married. One of them (the Union Soldier, Watson Clark Breese) was shot in the neck with a musket ball and survived but always spoke in a whisper after. We have pictures of them in their uniforms.

For another glimpse of the reenactment, visit Erin at The Good Life in Virginia
She was also there and I love the tones she used in her photos, makes them look so authentic!

Tomorrow is Mother's Day, don't forget to call your moms!

Friday, May 1, 2009

May Theme Day-Shadows



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Today is Theme Day for the City Daily Photo group and the theme is shadows. I could have found a more interesting shadow but was wanting to start my series on the Battle of Buchanan, a Civil War reinactment we went to over the weekend. I'll share more photos for you of the event over the next week :)


Buchanan

Click here to view thumbnails for all participants