Once an obscure Civil War outpost, the importance of Cloud’s Mill has resurfaced through original research, offering a rare glimpse into Northern Virginia’s lost wartime landscape. Earlier this year, we completely revised our entry on the Skirmish at Arlington Mills after original research revealed the action actually took place three miles south, at Cloud's Mill.…
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Holding the Line: Robert Rodes’ Stand at Farr’s Crossroads
On July 17, 1861, as Union forces advanced on Fairfax Court House, Col. Robert E. Rodes' 5th Alabama Infantry Regiment engaged in a fierce skirmish at Farr's Crossroads, delaying Col. Dixon S. Miles' division long enough to secure a safe Confederate withdrawal behind Bull Run. While Brig. Gen. Milledge Bonham's retreat from Fairfax was widely…
Continue reading ➞ Holding the Line: Robert Rodes’ Stand at Farr’s Crossroads
Civil War “Firsts” in Virginia and West Virginia
From the first battlefield amputation to the first conventional land battle, Virginia was the stage for many pivotal "firsts" of the Civil War. This article explores these groundbreaking moments, shedding light on the early conflicts, innovations, and key figures that shaped the war's opening chapters. Following the bombardment and surrender of Fort Sumter on April…
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What was the First Land Battle of the Civil War?
While several early skirmishes and clashes claim the title of first land battle of the Civil War, only one engagement truly meets all the criteria of a traditional battle—discover which one and why it stands apart. The claim of being the site of the first land battle of the American Civil War presents a study…
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“Only three or four lost by disease or accident…”: The First Deaths of the First Campaign
Accidental deaths of soldiers often receive less attention than battlefield casualties. However, for these soldiers of the First Virginia Regiment, sworn to fight for the Union, their fates marked some of the earliest losses of the Civil War. Were it not for a handful of brief newspaper articles and a sparse pension file, their stories…
A Costly Lesson at Blackburn’s Ford
Though minor in comparison to the clash that would erupt at Bull Run days later, the fight at Blackburn’s Ford rattled Union confidence and emboldened Confederate troops. With McDowell now seeking another route forward, the war’s first major battle loomed just beyond the horizon. Confederate Brig. Gen. Pierre Gustave Toutant-Beauregard arrived at Manassas Junction on…
In the Shadow of Shuter’s Hill: A Deadly Night on the Picket Line
As June 1861 dragged on with little progress in northeast Virginia, restless Union and Confederate troops found themselves locked in a brief but bloody skirmish near Alexandria. A late-night clash between Pennsylvania infantry and Southern cavalry left men dead on both sides, yet did nothing to alter the course of the campaign. June 1861 passed…
Continue reading ➞ In the Shadow of Shuter’s Hill: A Deadly Night on the Picket Line
The Union’s Failed Gamble to Control Mathias Point
In the summer of 1861, Union forces launched a desperate attempt to secure Mathias Point, a strategic bend in the Potomac River that Confederate troops used to disrupt shipping. What began as a routine landing quickly unraveled into a deadly ambush, claiming the life of Commander James H. Ward and forcing the Union to abandon…
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Rails, Rebels, and Ruin: The 1st Ohio Infantry’s Deadly Encounter at Vienna
In June 1861, a Union reconnaissance mission along the AL&H Railroad took a deadly turn when Confederate forces ambushed a troop train near Vienna, Virginia. The surprise attack exposed the vulnerability of Union operations, forcing a hasty retreat and reinforcing the caution of military leaders as the conflict escalated. By mid-June 1861, the Union’s rapid…
Continue reading ➞ Rails, Rebels, and Ruin: The 1st Ohio Infantry’s Deadly Encounter at Vienna
Confusion and Chaos: The Unplanned Skirmish at Fairfax Court House, 1861
In the early hours of June 1, 1861, Union Lieutenant Charles H. Tompkins led a chaotic and unauthorized cavalry charge through Fairfax Court House, firing blindly in the dark and scattering the poorly armed Confederate defenders. The reckless raid resulted in the death of Captain John Q. Marr, the first Confederate officer killed in action,…
Continue reading ➞ Confusion and Chaos: The Unplanned Skirmish at Fairfax Court House, 1861








