Ghost of Goldsborough Tours | North Carolina Weekend | UNC-TV
Yes, that’s how Goldsboro used to spell her name-back when the town was full of ghosts! Come along for this ghost-friendly tour.
Goldsboro, NC
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Tune into North Carolina Weekend, your guide to the best places to eat, explore & experience each weekend across the state, every Thursday at 9 & Friday at 5 on UNC-TV Public Media North Carolina.
The Historic Brookstown Inn - Winston-Salem Hotels, North Carolina
The Historic Brookstown Inn 3 Stars Hotel in Winston-Salem,North Carolina Within US Travel Directory One of our bestsellers in Winston-Salem! Guests of this North Carolina inn will be greeted by a hot breakfast and evenings with wine and cheese.
The inn is also 9 minutes’ walk from Old Salem Museums and Gardens.
A cable TV, small refrigerator, and microwave are included in all rooms.
Decorations include warm colours and period wood furnishings.
Select rooms at The Historic Brookstown Inn feature hardwood floors and rustic walls of exposed brick.
The Historic Brookstown Inn guests can stay active in the fitness centre and then relax before bed with cookies and milk.
On-site parking is available as well.
Central Winston-Salem is 4 minutes’ walk away.
Guests will be within 8 km from shopping at Hanes Mall or fishing at Salem Lake.
The Historic Brookstown Inn - Winston-Salem Hotels, North Carolina
Location in : 200 Brookstown Avenue ,NC 27101, Winston-Salem, North Carolina
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Woman Killed By Friends While Fleeing Walmart Shoplifting Spree
A woman was run over by a car her friends were driving while they were fleeing from a shoplifting spree this week at a Walmart in Elkton, Md.
Eastern Theater of the American Civil War | Wikipedia audio article
This is an audio version of the Wikipedia Article:
Eastern Theater of the American Civil War
00:02:43 1 Theater of operations
00:04:56 2 Principal commanders of the Eastern Theater
00:05:07 3 Early operations (1861)
00:07:39 3.1 First Bull Run (First Manassas)
00:10:23 4 North Carolina coast (1861–65)
00:11:56 5 The Valley (1862)
00:19:22 6 Peninsula Campaign (1862)
00:22:19 6.1 Up the Peninsula
00:26:13 6.2 Seven Days
00:30:14 7 Northern Virginia and Maryland (1862)
00:30:41 7.1 Army of Virginia
00:34:43 7.2 Second Bull Run
00:36:27 7.3 Invasion of Maryland
00:39:38 7.4 Antietam
00:41:29 8 Fredericksburg and Chancellorsville (1862–63)
00:45:55 9 Gettysburg and fall maneuvering (1863)
00:50:39 10 Grant versus Lee (1864–65)
00:52:29 10.1 Overland Campaign
00:55:29 10.2 Petersburg
00:57:05 11 Shenandoah Valley (1864–65)
01:01:03 12 Appomattox (1865)
01:04:18 13 Major land battles
01:04:35 14 See also
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- Socrates
SUMMARY
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The Eastern Theater of the American Civil War consists of the major military and naval operations in the states of Virginia, West Virginia, Maryland, and Pennsylvania, the District of Columbia, and the coastal fortifications and seaports of North Carolina. (Operations in the interior of the Carolinas in 1865 are considered part of the Western Theater, while the other coastal areas along the Atlantic Ocean are included in the Lower Seaboard Theater.)
The Eastern Theater was the venue for several major campaigns launched by the Union Army of the Potomac to capture the Confederate capital of Richmond, Virginia; many of these were frustrated by the Confederate Army of Northern Virginia, commanded by General Robert E. Lee. President Abraham Lincoln sought a general to match Lee's boldness, appointing in turn Maj. Gens. Irvin McDowell, George B. McClellan, John Pope, Ambrose Burnside, Joseph Hooker, and George G. Meade to command his principal Eastern armies. While Meade gained a decisive victory over Lee at the Battle of Gettysburg in July 1863, it was not until newly appointed general-in-chief Ulysses S. Grant arrived from the Western Theater in 1864 to take personal control of operations in Virginia that Union forces were able to capture Richmond, but only after several bloody battles of the Overland Campaign and a nine-month siege near the cities of Petersburg and Richmond. The surrender of Lee's army at Appomattox Court House in April 1865 brought major operations in the area to a close.
While many of the campaigns and battles were fought in the region of Virginia between Washington, D.C., and Richmond, there were other major campaigns fought nearby. The Western Virginia Campaign of 1861 secured Union control over the western counties of Virginia, which would be formed into the new state of West Virginia. Confederate coastal areas and ports were seized in southeastern Virginia and North Carolina. The Shenandoah Valley was marked by frequent clashes in 1862, 1863, and 1864. Lee launched two unsuccessful invasions of Union territory in hopes of influencing Northern opinion to end the war. In the fall of 1862, Lee followed his successful Northern Virginia Campaign with his first invasion, the Maryland Campaign, which culminated in his strategic defeat in the Battle of Antietam. In the summer of 1863, Lee's second invasion, the Gettysburg Campaign, reached into Pennsylvania, farther north than any other major Confederate army. Following a Confederate attack on Washington, D.C., itself in 1864, Union forces commanded by Philip H. Sheridan launched a campaign in the Shenandoah Valley, which cost the Confederacy control over a major food supply for Lee's army.