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15th Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry
Forged in Worcester County: The Founding of a Regiment A Nation Mobilizes: The Spring and Summer of 1861 When Confederate batteries opened fire on Fort Sumter at 4:30 a.m. on April 12, 1861, the United States possessed a standing army of roughly 16,000 soldiers spread across a continent. President Abraham Lincoln faced an immediate crisis, compounded by a stubborn legal constraint: the Militia Act of 1795 limited any presidential call for state militiamen to a maximum of nine

Thomas Connell II
6 days ago14 min read
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15th MVI at 160th Gettysburg
This narrative of our experience at the 160th Gettysburg reenactment is written in the style of an after action report similar, albeit...

Thomas Connell II
Jul 5, 202317 min read
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Camp Followers, an Overlooked part of the Military Portrayal.
The history of camp followers parallels the history of warfare. A mix of wives, children, displaced and opportunistic civilians both...
Tom Connell
Feb 6, 20223 min read
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A Brief History of the 15th Massachusetts
The 15th Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry Regiment was an infantry regiment that served from the State of Massachusetts during the...

Thomas Connell II
Oct 8, 20213 min read
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