Though Tubman is most famous for her successes along the Underground Railroad, her activities as a Civil War spy are less well known.
A park that was the site of fierce fighting during the Battle of Hanover has a new name, in honor of the Union soldiers that pushed back Confederates.
Penn Township resident Bill Bray has made it his mission to ensure the Civil War veterans buried in Westmoreland County are not forgotten. An Army veteran who served from 1984 to 1993, Bray has worked ...
With the Combahee River Raid of 1863, Harriet Tubman earned her nickname "Moses" all over again—and became the first woman in ...
Saturday will mark 160 years since more than 20 Black Civil War soldiers fighting for the Union were massacred in ...
Thousands of newly freed slaves followed the Union Army’s “March to the Sea” in the hopes of protection as they left bondage ...
Military Road in Worcester, off Salisbury Street, not far from Park Avenue, takes its name from the school created by ...
Gen. Rufus Saxton wrote that he bore “witness to the value of her services… She was employed in the Hospitals and as a spy [and] made many a raid inside the enemy’s lines displaying remarkable courage ...
By Jim Beaugez Under cover of darkness during the early hours of June 7, 1863, an army of 1,500 Confederate troops approached ...
President Donald Trump is targeting federal employees who focus on diversity, equity and inclusion and career policy staffers ...
The Soldier's Body Recovered in Yard is believed to be the last confederate lost in battle. This is about the recovery of Lt.
Army National Guard Lt. Col. John Harder of Nassau, an Iraq War veteran, has assumed command of the Recruiting and Retention ...