Looking at old black-and-white photos and illustrations, it’s easy to feel disconnected from the places and events they depict. However, standing in those locations and seeing the landscape in full color makes history feel real. When I first visited Shiloh National Military Park, I was struck by how little had changed in 150 years. The…
Author: Michael Kleen
A PROCLAMATION BY THE GOVERNOR OF VIRGINIA
John Letcher, governor of Virginia, 1860–1864. Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division The following proclamation by the Virginia governor, John Letcher (1813-1884), appeared in the Richmond Whig, Thursday, April 18, 1861, as well as other newspapers around the state in response to U.S. President Abraham Lincoln's calling for a volunteer army to suppress the…
Continue reading ➞ A PROCLAMATION BY THE GOVERNOR OF VIRGINIA
Crossing into Conflict: The Union’s First Movements into Virginia in 1861
In the twilight hours of May 24, 1861, Union forces crossed the Potomac into Virginia, marking the first federal invasion of Confederate territory. As troops secured key locations in Alexandria, Colonel Elmer E. Ellsworth, a rising star and personal friend of President Lincoln, led his Fire Zouaves into the city—only to meet a tragic fate…
Continue reading ➞ Crossing into Conflict: The Union’s First Movements into Virginia in 1861
The Potomac Flotilla
In the spring and summer of 1861, James H. Ward and the Union’s Potomac Flotilla faced the daunting task of enforcing a blockade, securing safe passage for friendly river traffic, and countering Confederate shore batteries along the Potomac River. He would not live to see it succeed. At the start of the American Civil War,…
Deep Dive into the Lower Potomac Front
In the late spring and early summer of 1861, all eyes were on northeastern Virginia as both sides contemplated their first moves in a war they predicted would be over in a single climactic battle. The small skirmishes that took place on the road to First Manassas were few in number but received outsized attention…
Accomplishments in 2024
I started this digital encyclopedia four years ago to coincide with the 160th Anniversary of the American Civil War, with a goal to focus on the little-known events in Virginia between April and late July 1861. Since then, it's grown steadily, with original research, photos, maps, and illustrations. Our website offers high quality scans of…
“No Meat Hurt”: Letter from John C. Higginbotham
Portrait of John C. Higginbotham of Buchkannon. West Virginia & Regional History Center, Morgantown, WV Soon after Virginia voted to secede, John Carleton Higginbotham (1842-1864), an 18-year-old student at Lynchburg College, returned home to fight for the Confederacy. His father, William Thomas Higginbotham (1821-1892), was a prominent landowner in Upshur County and owned nearly 10…
Continue reading ➞ “No Meat Hurt”: Letter from John C. Higginbotham
The Fate of Burdsall’s Men
On Friday, July 19, 1861, a seven-man patrol from Captain Henry W. Burdsall's Independent Company of Ohio Cavalry was ambushed along the West Fork of the Greenbrier River, near present-day Durbin, West Virginia, in Pocahontas County. Confederate reports claimed that all but one of the men were killed, but the reality was different. One man…
New Issue of Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper
Frank Leslie's Illustrated Newspaper was published in New York from 1855 to 1922 and produced many volumes of compiled illustrated histories of the American Civil War. Its correspondents and illustrators got close to the action, so close, in fact, that one of their freelance correspondents, James R. O'Neill, was killed during the Battle of Baxter…
Continue reading ➞ New Issue of Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper
Battlelog 1.2 is Now Available
Welcome to version 1.2 of the Spirit of ’61 Battlelog! We proudly announce that this edition contains complete narratives for all 36 military actions in Virginia in the spring and summer of 1861 in one convenient pdf, free to download for all Civil War buffs, researchers, and history nerds alike. Updates and changes from version…




