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 <​html><​font size="​+2"><​b><​u><​center>​Military Operations at Laurel, MD, 1861-1865</​center></​u></​b></​font></​html>​ <​html><​font size="​+2"><​b><​u><​center>​Military Operations at Laurel, MD, 1861-1865</​center></​u></​b></​font></​html>​
  
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-{{ +{{:{{ :​martenets_map_of_prince_georges_county_1861.png?​800 |img}}
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 <​caption>​Martenet'​s Map of Prince George'​s County, Maryland, 1861.</​caption>​ <​caption>​Martenet'​s Map of Prince George'​s County, Maryland, 1861.</​caption>​
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 <​caption>​camp_hathaway_141st_regt_nysv_1863_max_rosenthal</​caption>​ <​caption>​camp_hathaway_141st_regt_nysv_1863_max_rosenthal</​caption>​
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 [[https://​laurelhistory.com/​contributors/​jack-bowen/​|Letters and history of Laurel during the Civil War.]] [[https://​laurelhistory.com/​contributors/​jack-bowen/​|Letters and history of Laurel during the Civil War.]]
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 10/30/1862 - **141st New York** - "We have a fair prospect of wintering here, and Paul Wisner'​s ingenuity is brought into constant requisition in building stoves, consisting of a square hole in the ground covered with a piece of sheet iron, with a barrel for a pipe..."​ - //​Hornellsville (NY) Tribune//, 10/30/1862 10/30/1862 - **141st New York** - "We have a fair prospect of wintering here, and Paul Wisner'​s ingenuity is brought into constant requisition in building stoves, consisting of a square hole in the ground covered with a piece of sheet iron, with a barrel for a pipe..."​ - //​Hornellsville (NY) Tribune//, 10/30/1862
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 +11/15/1862 - **141st New York** - "Our Regiment is down at Laurel yet, and is building barracks..."​ - //​Hornellsville (NY) Tribune//, 11/20/1862
  
 11/25/1862 - "THE **ONE HUNDRED AND FORTY-FIRST NEW YORK**, Col. Hathaway, arrived in this city yesterday. The regiment has been in the field two months, doing duty at Laurel Station, guarding the Baltimore and Ohio railroad."​ - //Daily National Republican//,​ 11/25/1862 11/25/1862 - "THE **ONE HUNDRED AND FORTY-FIRST NEW YORK**, Col. Hathaway, arrived in this city yesterday. The regiment has been in the field two months, doing duty at Laurel Station, guarding the Baltimore and Ohio railroad."​ - //Daily National Republican//,​ 11/25/1862
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 +11/29/1862 - **141st New York** - "Our Regiment left Laurel, Md., on Monday the 24th Inst. Our duties at Laurel had been light, our rations good, our quarters (which we had anticipated occupying through the winter) were very comfortable,​ and although anxious to see more of the country and the cause that brought me here, still it was not without feelings of regret that we turned our backs on camp Hathaway..."​ - //​Hornellsville (NY) Tribune//, 11/20/1862
  
 2/25/1863 - **109th New York** - "Camp at Laurell, Md., February, 25th 1863...There are five Companies stationed here under command of Lt. Col. Catlin. We have comfortable quarters constructed of logs and covered with our tents, and the intervening space between the logs is filled with mud...Laurell is a place of about one thousand inhabitants:​ it contains three churches, a large machine shop, and the Laurell Cotton Mills, both of which are now idle, the effects of secession..."​ - //Broome (NY) Republican//,​ 3/18/1863 2/25/1863 - **109th New York** - "Camp at Laurell, Md., February, 25th 1863...There are five Companies stationed here under command of Lt. Col. Catlin. We have comfortable quarters constructed of logs and covered with our tents, and the intervening space between the logs is filled with mud...Laurell is a place of about one thousand inhabitants:​ it contains three churches, a large machine shop, and the Laurell Cotton Mills, both of which are now idle, the effects of secession..."​ - //Broome (NY) Republican//,​ 3/18/1863
laurel.1552322206.txt.gz · Last modified: 2019/05/10 15:14 (external edit)