Portal:American Civil War/This week in American Civil War history/12
1862 - New Bern - One of the rare Eastern Theater Union tactical victories in 1862, Ambrose Burnside's three brigade expeditionary force crossed the Neuse River and drove Confederate defenders from this Craven County town for the balance of the war
1862 - New Madrid, Missouri - After a one-day bombardment by siege artillery of the Union Army of the Mississippi, the Confederate forces under Brigadier General John P. McCown abandon the town and move to Island No. 10
1862 - Island No. 10 - Union gunboats and mortars arrive at the island, and the siege of the island begins
1863 - Fort Anderson - D.H. Hill's North Carolinians, unable to break Union barricades in the face of steady Federal naval gunfire, retire after nearly breaching the fort
1861 - Austin - Edward Clark became Governor of Texas, replacing Sam Houston, who was evicted from the office for refusing to take an oath of loyalty to the Confederacy.
1865 - Averasborough - William Hardee's Confederate corps morning assault Henry Slocum's Army of Georgia failed to delay William T. Sherman's pending attack at Bentonville, North Carolina
1863 - Kellyville - Culpeper County, Virginia
1865 - Richmond - The Congress of the Confederate States of America adjourned for the last time.
1863 - Charleston Harbor - The SS Georgiana, said to have been the most powerful Confederate cruiser, was destroyed on her maiden voyage with cargo of munitions, medicines and merchandise then valued at over $1,000,000. The wreck was discovered on the same day and month, exactly 102 years later by then teenage diver and pioneer underwater archaeologist E. Lee Spence.
1865 - Bentonville - By the end of the battle two days later the Confederate forces have retreated from Four Oaks, North Carolina.
1863 - Vaught's Hill -