Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Jenks' Independent Cavalry Company was organized at Aurora, Illinois as Cavalry Company A of the 36th Illinois Infantry, mustering into service on September 23, 1861. It participated in the Battles of Pea Ridge, Iuka, and Corinth. The company was assigned to the 15th Regiment Illinois Volunteer Cavalry as Company I on December 25, 1862.
This category is for business people who place tenders to obtain civil engineering contracts and then organise and complete the work. The engineers who do the design and survey work, draw up the plans and manage the contracts for the clients should be placed in Category:Civil engineers.
The 71st Illinois Infantry was organized at Camp Douglas at Chicago, Illinois and mustered into Federal service on July 26, 1862, for a term of three months. It served garrisons in scattered garrisons in southern Illinois and western Kentucky. Company K unanimously elected James Creed as captain, which was responsible for protecting two bridges ...
The hall was built for a cost of in $22,000 in 1909, which included the cost of the land. [5] It served as a meeting place for veterans of the Civil War. [5] Greenhut personally donated $15,000, approximately two-thirds of the building's cost, allowing the hall to open without debt.
Wagoner John M. Moore of Co. K, 4th Illinois Cavalry Regiment. From the Liljenquist Family Collection of Civil War Photographs, Prints and Photographs Division, Library of Congress. The 4th Illinois Cavalry Regiment was a cavalry regiment that served in the Union Army during the American Civil War.
This regiment was organized at Monmouth and was mustered into the U. S. service Aug. 21, 1862. Cos. A, B, C, F and H were recruited in Warren County, D in Mercer, E, G, I and K, in Knox.
A contractor that says its $323 million contract for work on the massive Interstate 294 reconstruction project was improperly terminated has sued the Illinois Tollway. Judlau Contracting, a New ...
The 17th Illinois Infantry was organized at Peoria, Illinois, and mustered into Federal service at Peoria, Illinois, on May 24, 1861, for three years service. [1]The 17th Illinois Volunteers fought at the bloody Battle of Shiloh in Hardin County, Tennessee, in April 1862, with 130 members of the regiment killed and wounded in the two-day battle. [1]