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  2. Sibley tent - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sibley_tent

    In accordance with an 1858 agreement with the Department of War, Sibley would receive US$5 for every tent made. However, Sibley resigned from the US Army to join the Confederate States Army after the outbreak of the American Civil War. He received no royalties on his patent. The Union Army produced and used nearly 44,000 Sibley tents during the ...

  3. George Washington's tent - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Washington's_tent

    Their enslaved housekeeper, Selina Norris Gray, kept the tent fabric safe when Union Army soldiers ransacked Arlington House during the American Civil War. [2] The tents were among the Washington artifacts seized by the federal government in January 1862, [1] and the grounds of Arlington House were converted into Arlington National Cemetery.

  4. How did a scrap of George Washington’s tent end up at ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/did-scrap-george-washington-tent...

    ‘The Washington treasures’ and the Civil War. The story of Washington's tents begins in 1778, when his previous tents apparently wore out and needed replacing.

  5. Henry Hopkins Sibley - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henry_Hopkins_Sibley

    Henry Hopkins Sibley (May 25, 1816 – August 23, 1886) was a career officer in the United States Army, who commanded a Confederate cavalry brigade in the Civil War.. In 1862, he attempted to forge a supply route from California, in defiance of the Union blockade of the Atlantic and Gulf ports, while also aiming to appropriate the Colorado gold mines to replenish the Confederate treasury.

  6. 1913 Gettysburg reunion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1913_Gettysburg_reunion

    Panorama of the Great Camp on the Gettysburg Battlefield. The War Department's Great Camp (Gettysburg Encampment, Anniversary Camp, or Veterans Camp) [1]: 40, 71, 87, 91 provided tents and support facilities for the Civil War veterans and extended from both sides of Long Lane on the north to within 500 yd (460 m) of the Bliss House. [22]

  7. Sutler - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sutler

    Sutler's tent at the Siege of Petersburg during the American Civil War. A sutler or victualer is a civilian merchant who sells provisions to an army in the field, in camp, or in quarters. Sutlers sold wares from the back of a wagon or a temporary tent, traveling with an army or to remote military outposts. [1]

  8. Camp Letterman - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Camp_Letterman

    Built sometime after July 8, 1863, [5] it opened on July 22, [6] and was named Camp Letterman in honor of Jonathan Letterman, M.D., the "Father of Battlefield Medicine" who created medical management procedures which transformed not only Civil War-era medicine, but the medical care for thousands of soldiers in subsequent wars, the tents of the ...

  9. Tent - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tent

    Sibley, a conical tent patented in 1856 and used by the US military before and during the American Civil War. Tarp tent; Tipi, a conical design used by some indigenous peoples of North America; Tupiq, a conical design used by the Inuit; Wigwam and wikiup, an often bowed conical and dome tent of North America; Whymper, a ridge tent used for ...

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