POTOMAC, Md. — In Potomac, Maryland, sits a quiet street just off Montrose Road named after one of the most notorious white supremacists of the 1800's: Jubal Early. Early, a former Confederate general ...
The government of Montgomery County, especially the office of Marc Elrich, the county executive, has recently spoken out quite strongly in favor of racial equality. Mr. Elrich himself has referred to ...
The Confederate general who fought and lost the Battle of Waynesboro will be the topic for Ted Hughes’ first-person presentation of Old Jube on Tuesday, November 20 at WTA’s Gateway. The program will ...
The York Gazette published invading Gen. Jubal Early's requisitions of York's residents in its June 30, 1863, edition. It was printed on or about the time that the last Confederates were leaving town ...
During the Confederate occupation of York County, Pennsylvania, from June 28 - 30, 1863, Major General Jubal A. Early's primary goals (besides ransoming York for an exorbitant amount of cash and ...
Bomb-proof quarters in Fort Sedgwick in front of Petersburg, Va. Quarters of men in Fort Sedgwick, generally known as "Fort Hell". (Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division Washington, D.C.
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New York Times subscribers* enjoy full access to TimesMachine—view over 150 years of New York Times journalism, as it originally appeared. *Does not include Games-only or Cooking-only subscribers.
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