• A Bloody Reckoning: The Legacy of the Battle of Shiloh

    Virtual Presentation

    In April 1862, Confederate forces surprised Union forces at Pittsburg Landing, a small steamboat docking on the Tennessee River. The two armies faced off for control of the all-important Mississippi Valley knowing that victory could determine the outcome of the Civil War. The violent clash, which came to be known as the Battle of Shiloh, ended with 23,746 dead or wounded, forcing the citizens of a divided nation to reckon with the prospect of a war that was longer and bloodier than they had ever imagined. Ellen Snyder-Grenier, principal of REW & Co, is currently working for the National Park Service’s Shiloh National Military Park, and will guide us through this moment in American history.

    To register and receive the link, please click: Battle of Shiloh

     

  • When the war came. Three households on the Palisades face the Civil War

    Virtual Presentation
    While no battles were fought in Hudson Valley, the effects of the Civil War were felt throughout the region. In the tiny riverfront settlement of Closter Landing on the NJ Palisades around a dozen men volunteered for the Union. Historical Interpreter Eric Nelsen investigates three of these households, each headed by a widow whose sons went off to fight.
     
    Register by emailing PeggyM@wlsmail.org or call 914-693-6636 to register