Only on tuesdays from 4-6pm
All except the ones with light sabers
All i know so far isstone wall Jackson is Thomas Johnathan Jackson
There were many different Generals in the Civil War, but Lincoln hired all of the generals for the North who was the Union and the South who was the Confederates was mostly general Robert E. Lee. Douglas was the president of the South since the south wanted to break away from the union.
They were all senior Union Generals. Apart from that, nothing much. Scott, Halleck and Grant all occupied the post of General-in-Chief. McClellan and Burnside both commanded the Army of the Potomac.
Russia was not involved in the US Civil War. A civil war is defined as a war fought between groups which are all from one country.
One third of all civil war generals went to Fort Sumner to attend military academy. It helped them greatly in the war.
All except the ones with light sabers
Casualty rates among Confederate generals during the US Civil War were high. In the war, 55% of all Rebel generals were either killed or wounded . This amounted to 235 of the 435 generals. Most of the Confederate losses among generals occurred as they led their troops into battle.
All i know so far isstone wall Jackson is Thomas Johnathan Jackson
There were many different Generals in the Civil War, but Lincoln hired all of the generals for the North who was the Union and the South who was the Confederates was mostly general Robert E. Lee. Douglas was the president of the South since the south wanted to break away from the union.
There were more than six hundred Yankee generals, and about 425 Confederates - too many to try to list here. There is a book, Ezra Warner's "Generals in Gray" which has a short biography of each of the 425 Confederate generals. I think somebody since has done the same for the Union generals.
Because they were all constipated and their wives were pregnant from the neighbors and they were all fighting about who got to keep the baby.
They were all senior Union Generals. Apart from that, nothing much. Scott, Halleck and Grant all occupied the post of General-in-Chief. McClellan and Burnside both commanded the Army of the Potomac.
No, neither the field, battle, nor the generals shown are real - it is all a fiction...
As the US Civil War unfolded, the US army was small and did not have many generals. In order to command all the Union recruits, new generals had to be appointed. In 1861, Lincoln appointed one hundred and twenty six generals.
So far, all the professional generals who became president won major victories and became national heroes before they were elected President. Taylor won the Mexican War, Grant won the Civil War and Eisenhower won WW II in Europe.
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