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  1. In 1860, Galveston served as a thriving island port and major commercial hub on the Texas gulf coast. With a population of roughly 7,200, it was the largest city in Texas and was responsible for three-quarters of the state's seaborne cotton exports. Trade had enriched the leaders of Galveston, and they, in turn, had introduced a variety of amenities to their island home, including paved ...

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  2. Find the perfect civil war texas galveston stock photo, image, vector, illustration or 360 image. Available for both RF and RM licensing.

    • Lee's Was Just One Confederate Army to Fall
    • Fighting Continued West of The Mississippi
    • Post-War Confusion in Texas

    For one thing, Lee had surrendered only his Army of Northern Virginia to Grant. A number of other Confederate forces still remained active, starting with Gen. Joseph E. Johnston’s Army of Tennessee, the second-largest Confederate army after Lee’s. On April 12 in North Carolina, Johnston and his men received news of Lee’s surrender. The next day, Ge...

    Still, the South wasn’t quite done. Even after those surrenders, after Union troops captured the fugitive Davis in Georgia and after President Johnson declared on May 10 that the South’s armed resistance “may be regarded as virtually at an end,” fighting still continued west of the Mississippi River. Near Brownsville, Texas on May 12, a force of 35...

    On April 2, 1866, President Johnson issued a proclamation stating that the insurrection was over in all of the former Confederate states but one: Texas, which had not yet succeeded in establishing a new state government. Because the Texas economy, land and infrastructure had been impacted far less by the conflict than the rest of the South, many fo...

    • Sarah Pruitt
  3. The Battle of Galveston was a naval and land battle of the American Civil War, when Confederate forces under Major Gen. John B. Magruder expelled occupying Union troops from the city of Galveston, Texas on January 1, 1863. After the loss of the cutter Harriet Lane, the Union Fleet Commander William B. Renshaw blew up the stranded vessel USS ...

    • January 1, 1863(1863-01-01)
    • Confederate victory
    • Galveston, Texas
  4. The Galveston and Texas History Center’s archives include manuscripts, photographs, books, maps, architectural drawings, and more focusing on Galveston from its 1839 incorporation to the present and early Texas from the Spanish colonial period through the Civil War. Located on the 4 th floor of the Rosenberg Library, the Galveston and Texas ...

  5. Mar 30, 2017 · Galveston Beach, Galveston Texas, 1924. Smith Collection/Gado/Getty Images Dorothy Dell Goff a 17 year old from New Orleans won the "Miss Universe" beauty pageant in Galveston, August 15, 1930.

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  7. After the Civil War, The Union Navy sailed into Galveston in June of 1865 with the United States colored troops to hold the city. On June 19th, 1865, General Order Number Three was declared on 22nd and Strand, officially freeing all enslaved people in Texas. The United States military occupied Galveston during reconstruction.