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The battlefield sprawls over an area estimated to be 2,000 acres (8.1 km 2) about 6 miles (9.7 km) north of Camden, South Carolina, bounded on the north by Lake Shamokin, and extending south. Flat Rock Rd (S-28-58) passes roughly through the center of the battlefield, and United States Route 521 marks its eastern boundary
The Camden Battlefield is located about 5.5 miles (8.9 km) north of Camden. Approximately 479 acres of the core of the battlefield is owned by the Palmetto Conservation Foundation, and is undergoing preservation in private-public partnership.
The Camden Expedition sites are spread across seven Arkansas counties: Old U.S. Arsenal, Little Rock, Pulaski County [3] Elkin's Ferry, vicinity of Prescott, Nevada & Clark counties [3] Prairie D'Ane Battlefield, vicinity of Prescott, Nevada County [3] Confederate State Capitol, Washington, Hempstead County; Fort Southerland, Camden, Ouachita ...
The 107-acre site is also known as Historic Camden Revolutionary War Restoration, and as the British Revolutionary War Fortifications. Camden contains preserved structures and grounds that are representative of the Southern theater of the American Revolutionary War. The site is managed by a consortium of private donors and local governments.
The Battle of South Mills, also known as the Battle of Camden, took place on April 19, 1862 in Camden County, North Carolina as part of Union Army Maj. Gen. Ambrose E. Burnside's North Carolina expedition during the American Civil War.
Camden Battlefield On U.S. Routes 521 and 601 Site of the Battle of Camden on August 16, 1780 Carter Hill Swift Creek, Kershaw County Plantation complex, Overseers house was built in 1840 City of Camden Historic District Bounded on S by city limits, on E and W by Southern RR. right-of-way, and on N by Dicey Creek Rd.
It preserves a portion of the battlefield of the Battle of Marks' Mills fought on April 25, 1864, in the Trans-Mississippi Theater of American Civil War. The battle was part of the Camden Expedition. [3] The park is one of nine historic sites that make up the Camden Expedition Sites, a National Historic Landmark District. The battle was most ...
The Camden Expedition (March 23 – May 3, 1864) was the final campaign conducted by the Union Army in south Arkansas during the Civil War. The offensive was designed to cooperate with Major-General Nathaniel P. Banks ' movement against Shreveport .