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Milliken's Bend

A Civil War Battle in History and Memory

The Civil War battle of Milliken's Bend, showing African-American soldiers holding their ground against a Confederate attack, as imagined by an artist from Harper's Weekly, published July 4, 1863.
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Category Archives: Civil War

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Regimental Name Game

Milliken's Bend Posted on February 9, 2015 by Milliken's BendFebruary 9, 2015

Researching early regiments of the U.S. Colored Troops (USCT) can sometimes be difficult. Unit names may have changed several times throughout their service. The earliest regiments, organized between the fall of 1862 and the creation of the Bureau of Colored … Continue reading →

Posted in African Americans, Black history, Black History Month, Civil War, Union | Tagged 5th U.S. Colored Heavy Artillery, 9th Louisiana Infantry, black troops, Louisiana, USCT | Leave a reply

Tim O’Brien & Milliken’s Bend

Milliken's Bend Posted on January 24, 2015 by Milliken's BendJanuary 24, 2015

A line from Tim O’Brien’s The Things They Carried is the very first sentence in my book: “‘The only certainty is overwhelming ambiguity,’ writes Tim O’Brien in his Vietnam War classic, The Things They Carried. He could have been writing … Continue reading →

Posted in Civil War, Milliken's Bend | Tagged ambiguity, authors, battles, books, combat, narrative, Tim O'Brien, writing | Leave a reply

Book Review: Tainted Breeze

Milliken's Bend Posted on January 8, 2015 by Milliken's BendJanuary 8, 2015

Tainted Breeze: The Great Hanging at Gainesville, Texas, 1862 by Richard B. McCaslin remains one of the most thorough treatments of this violent effort to bring in and subdue draft dodgers and perceived Unionists in an area of Texas that … Continue reading →

Posted in Book Reviews, Civil War, Civilians, Confederate, Related works | Tagged executions, Gainesville, Great Hanging, Henry McCulloch, Paul Octave Hebert, Texas | Leave a reply

Lone Freedom Fighter

Milliken's Bend Posted on December 16, 2014 by Milliken's BendDecember 16, 2014

It wasn’t until I was reviewing a document featured in my “Chaos of Emancipation” post at the National Archives blog, “Rediscovering Black History” that I rediscovered the story of a lone freedom fighter in northeast Louisiana early in 1863. In … Continue reading →

Posted in African Americans, Black history, Civil War, Civilians, Emancipation, Primary sources, Related works, Slavery | Tagged contrabands, George B. Field, guerrilla warfare, Lake Providence, Lark Livermore, Louisiana, plantations | Leave a reply

Chaos of Emancipation

Milliken's Bend Posted on December 2, 2014 by Milliken's BendDecember 2, 2014

Special guest post today at National Archives blog, “Rediscovering Black History” about the Chaos of Emancipation in northeast Louisiana, 1863. Much thanks to Tina Ligon and others for making this possible!

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Posted in African Americans, Black history, Civil War, Civilians, Emancipation, Milliken's Bend, Slavery, Union, Websites | Tagged archives, black troops, emancipation proclamation, Louisiana, plantation lessees, plantations, Trans-Mississippi, USCT | Leave a reply

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