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安裝中文字典英文字典辭典工具!
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- Beef - To Hash Beef | Receipts of the Blue Gray
(from The Virginia Housewife by Mary Randolph, 1860) Ingredients: sliced raw beef a clove of garlic pepper and salt butter brown flour Instructions: Cut slices of raw beef, put them in a stew pan with a little water, some catsup, a clove of garlic, pepper and salt, stew them until done
- Rutabagas Part I | Foods Recipes | American Civil War Forums
Rutabagas were introduced to America in the early 19th century with reports of rutabaga crops in Illinois in 1817 In the United States, rutabagas are eaten as part of stews or casseroles, served with mashed carrots or potatoes They are frequently found in the New England boiled dinner which
- Female Soldiers, More Names For THE LIST | Ladies Tea - War from a . . .
Bumping, @Tumbleweed , one of the articles clipped from a Fulton Postcards search
- God bless the Women of the South. | Civil War Potpourri
"One long night and the following day in December, 1863, a boy picket stood out in the bitter cold watching Jacob's ford on the Rapidan There was near to his right a home on the overlooking hill, evidently once a prosperous, happy home, but now a very 'bleak house,' all desolate and shorn by
- Lee - Robert E. Lees Favorite Hymn | Famous People of the Late . . .
I was checking our Robert E Lee's favorite foods when came across several articles on his favorite hymn It was "How Firm A Foundation" This hymn was
- James Monroe Anderson: Bloody Bills Brother
Tumbleweed, the story that Jim Anderson brought his surviving sisters to Texas is true Marriage and census records provide conclusive proof The story that Jim Anderson married Bloody Bill's widow may be true The 1866 Grayson County marriage license of J M Anderson and Malinda Anderson raises that possibility, but is definitely not proof
- Men of the Missouri Brigade - American Civil War Forums
Having previously posted my Men of Hood's Texas Brigade thread, I thought I ought to do one on the 1st Missouri Brigade (CS) As with the Texas Brigade, the Missouri Brigade was filled with incredibly brave and daring men, each with their own story When these Missourians were first swept up in
- The Collapse of Prices Raid: The Beginning of the End in Civil War . . .
Mark A Lause (Author) University of Missouri (September 29, 2014) As the Civil War was drawing to a close, former Missouri governor Sterling Price led his army on one last desperate campaign to retake his home state for the Confederacy, part of a broader effort to tilt the upcoming 1864 Union
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