Four forgotten Civil War battlefields
source: http://www.gadling.com/2009/11/19/four-forgotten-civil-war-battlefields/
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- JackHerer
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September 1861 was a hopeful time for the Confederacy. General Sterling Price had defeated a large Union force at Wilson's Creek in southwest Missouri and now marched through central Missouri gathering recruits. At the river town of Lexington he found a Union force under Col. James Mulligan defending the stone building of the Masonic College on a hill overlooking town. Mulligan had built earthworks all around the hill. Price's inexperienced troops had trouble taking this tough position until they hit on the idea of lining up bales of hemp, the local cash crop, and rolling them uphill as a mobile wall. Bales of weed are apparently bulletproof and as the fort became hemmed in Mulligan had no choice but to surrender. This early rebel victory proved short lived, and soon Price had to retreat to Arkansas in the face of superior forces.
http://www.gadling.com/2009/11/19/four-forgotten-civil-war-battlefields/
http://www.gadling.com/2009/11/19/four-forgotten-civil-war-battlefields/
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pjacobs51
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Interesting, I've been to Wilson's Creek a few times as it's only a few miles away, and I never saw anything about hemp on display.
- 2 years ago
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pjacobs51
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samthesixth
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Very interesting read. Thank you.
- 2 years ago
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samthesixth
