Mount Olivet Cemetery, Frederick, Maryland, Since 1852
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Total Pages | : 14 |
Release | : 19?? |
Genre | : Cemeteries |
ISBN | : |
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Author | : |
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Total Pages | : 14 |
Release | : 19?? |
Genre | : Cemeteries |
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Author | : Joseph F. III (compiler) Eisenhauer |
Publisher | : |
Total Pages | : 1 |
Release | : 1961 |
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Author | : MariLee Beatty Hageness |
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Total Pages | : 24 |
Release | : 1997 |
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Total Pages | : |
Release | : 2009 |
Genre | : Cemeteries |
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Author | : John J. Winterbottom |
Publisher | : |
Total Pages | : 308 |
Release | : 2013-02-01 |
Genre | : History |
ISBN | : 9781585495993 |
Mount Olivet Cemetery, located at 2930 Frederick Road, Baltimore, Maryland, was founded in 1845 and dedicated on 16 July 1849. It replaced an earlier cemetery located at Lombard and Paca Streets in downtown Baltimore. No records have survived from the old address, and no information about the original cemetery is known to exist. The records herein are not tombstone inscriptions, but rather the cemetery management records which have been transcribed and indexed by the author. These records give various data, including dates of death, burial, plot owners, dates of disinterment, sometimes dates of birth, parents, cause of death, and other data. A full-name index completes this work.
Author | : Mount Olivet Cemetery (Frederick, Md.) |
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Total Pages | : |
Release | : 1995 |
Genre | : Cemeteries |
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Author | : Peter Burchard |
Publisher | : |
Total Pages | : 206 |
Release | : 1965 |
Genre | : African American soldiers |
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Story of Shaw's life and his heroic command of the 54th Massachusetts Regiment, the first Negro unit raised in the North in the Civil War.
Author | : Gary L. Dyson |
Publisher | : |
Total Pages | : 242 |
Release | : 2020-11-19 |
Genre | : Young Adult Nonfiction |
ISBN | : 9781716415418 |
This book provides biographies of all of the known Confederate dead buried at Mount Olivet Cemetery in Frederick, Maryland. Also included are narratives of how and where each soldier received the wounds or developed the sickness that eventually took their lives. Appendices show a roster of the dead along Confederate Row and a list of the regiments they served.
Author | : Robert Gould Shaw |
Publisher | : University of Georgia Press |
Total Pages | : 481 |
Release | : 2011-08-15 |
Genre | : History |
ISBN | : 0820342777 |
On the Boston Common stands one of the great Civil War memorials, a magnificent bronze sculpture by Augustus Saint-Gaudens. It depicts the black soldiers of the Fifty-fourth Massachusetts Infantry marching alongside their young white commander, Colonel Robert Gould Shaw. When the philosopher William James dedicated the memorial in May 1897, he stirred the assembled crowd with these words: "There they march, warm-blooded champions of a better day for man. There on horseback among them, in the very habit as he lived, sits the blue-eyed child of fortune." In this book Shaw speaks for himself with equal eloquence through nearly two hundred letters he wrote to his family and friends during the Civil War. The portrait that emerges is of a man more divided and complex--though no less heroic--than the Shaw depicted in the celebrated film Glory. The pampered son of wealthy Boston abolitionists, Shaw was no abolitionist himself, but he was among the first patriots to respond to Lincoln's call for troops after the attack on Fort Sumter. After Cedar Mountain and Antietam, Shaw knew the carnage of war firsthand. Describing nightfall on the Antietam battlefield, he wrote, "the crickets chirped, and the frogs croaked, just as if nothing unusual had happened all day long, and presently the stars came out bright, and we lay down among the dead, and slept soundly until daylight. There were twenty dead bodies within a rod of me." When Federal war aims shifted from an emphasis on restoring the Union to the higher goal of emancipation for four million slaves, Shaw's mother pressured her son into accepting the command of the North's vanguard black regiment, the Fifty-fourth Massachusetts. A paternalist who never fully reconciled his own prejudices about black inferiority, Shaw assumed the command with great reluctance. Yet, as he trained his recruits in Readville, Massachusetts, during the early months of 1963, he came to respect their pluck and dedication. "There is not the least doubt," he wrote his mother, "that we shall leave the state, with as good a regiment, as any that has marched." Despite such expressions of confidence, Shaw in fact continued to worry about how well his troops would perform under fire. The ultimate test came in South Carolina in July 1863, when the Fifty-fourth led a brave but ill-fated charge on Fort Wagner, at the approach to Charleston Harbor. As Shaw waved his sword and urged his men forward, an enemy bullet felled him on the fort's parapet. A few hours later the Confederates dumped his body into a mass grave with the bodies of twenty of his men. Although the assault was a failure from a military standpoint, it proved the proposition to which Shaw had reluctantly dedicated himself when he took command of the Fifty-fourth: that black soldiers could indeed be fighting men. By year's end, sixty new black regiments were being organized. A previous selection of Shaw's correspondence was privately published by his family in 1864. For this volume, Russell Duncan has restored many passages omitted from the earlier edition and has provided detailed explanatory notes to the letters. In addition he has written a lengthy biographical essay that places the young colonel and his regiment in historical context.
Author | : United Daughters of the Confederacy. Maryland Division. Fitzhugh Lee Chapter, Frederick |
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Total Pages | : 8 |
Release | : 19?? |
Genre | : United States |
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