April 16, 1861, after the fall of Fort Sumter, Governor Oliver P. Morton issued this proclamation to the citizens of Indiana asking for loyal and patriotic men to volunteer to form six military regiments
Photocopy of a proclamation by John Hunt Morgan addressed to his soldiers after the battles at Saund...
Chart lists the approximate number of volunteers per state that joined the Union Army in 1861 and 18...
This proclamation from Governor Mark Sanford proclaims February 22, 2007 as Washington Light Infantr...
Governor Morton pleads with all the able bodied men of Indiana to join the army and defend the Union...
Letter from Indiana Governor Morton to Lincoln. Morton informs Lincoln that Indiana will soon have 3...
After the fall of Fort Sumter in April, 1861, the President called for volunteers. Companies were fo...
The Governor's message to the state concerns Morgan's raid into southern Indiana. Having learned tha...
Governor Morton is depicted wearing a three-quarter length coat over his suit. His right hand is ext...
Oliver P. Morton was Governor of Indiana from 1861-1867. He was a native of Wayne County, Indiana.Th...
Morton's staunch support of the Lincoln administration coupled with his belief that the Union should...
Indiana’s Civil War governor, the thirty-seven-year-old Morton was the first native-born Hoosier to ...
Whether viewed as an effective leader that kept Indiana in the Union or as an autocrat that subverte...
Proclamation of Governor John Evans directing non-hostile Native Americans to approach U.S. Military...
Clapper has just been mustered in and is waiting to draw his uniform and gun. He writes that Govern...
Indiana's Governor Morton, with Secretary of State Peelle and Adjutant General Noble, appoints and c...
Photocopy of a proclamation by John Hunt Morgan addressed to his soldiers after the battles at Saund...
Chart lists the approximate number of volunteers per state that joined the Union Army in 1861 and 18...
This proclamation from Governor Mark Sanford proclaims February 22, 2007 as Washington Light Infantr...
Governor Morton pleads with all the able bodied men of Indiana to join the army and defend the Union...
Letter from Indiana Governor Morton to Lincoln. Morton informs Lincoln that Indiana will soon have 3...
After the fall of Fort Sumter in April, 1861, the President called for volunteers. Companies were fo...
The Governor's message to the state concerns Morgan's raid into southern Indiana. Having learned tha...
Governor Morton is depicted wearing a three-quarter length coat over his suit. His right hand is ext...
Oliver P. Morton was Governor of Indiana from 1861-1867. He was a native of Wayne County, Indiana.Th...
Morton's staunch support of the Lincoln administration coupled with his belief that the Union should...
Indiana’s Civil War governor, the thirty-seven-year-old Morton was the first native-born Hoosier to ...
Whether viewed as an effective leader that kept Indiana in the Union or as an autocrat that subverte...
Proclamation of Governor John Evans directing non-hostile Native Americans to approach U.S. Military...
Clapper has just been mustered in and is waiting to draw his uniform and gun. He writes that Govern...
Indiana's Governor Morton, with Secretary of State Peelle and Adjutant General Noble, appoints and c...
Photocopy of a proclamation by John Hunt Morgan addressed to his soldiers after the battles at Saund...
Chart lists the approximate number of volunteers per state that joined the Union Army in 1861 and 18...
This proclamation from Governor Mark Sanford proclaims February 22, 2007 as Washington Light Infantr...