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    • March 4, 1791

      • After the war, Vermont applied to become a state. It was allowed to do so after it paid 30,000 Spanish milled dollars to New York to resolve the outstanding land claims. Vermont was admitted to the union as the 14th state on March 4, 1791.
  1. St. Albans, Vermont, is the site of the northernmost land action in the Civil War, the St. Albans Raid. On October 19, 1864, Confederate raiders, under the command of Lieutenant Bennett H. Young, robbed three banks, escaped to Canada, were captured, and put on trial.

  2. Jun 13, 2008 · A history of the part taken by the Vermont soldiers and sailors in the war for the Union, 1861-5 : Benedict, G. G. (George Grenville), 1826-1907 : Free Download, Borrow, and Streaming : Internet Archive. Download icon.

  3. Oct 9, 2014 · Vermont in the Civil War : a history of the part taken by the Vermont soldiers and sailors in the war for the Union, 1861-5 by Benedict, G. G. (George Grenville), 1826-1907

  4. Jul 31, 2023 · Vermont became the first state to abolish adult slavery in its constitution in 1777. During the Civil War, the state actively contributed to the Underground Railroad, helping enslaved individuals escape to freedom in Canada. Vermonters also played a vital role in shaping national policy.

  5. Albans became the unlikely site of the northernmost Civil War battle in October 1864 after a Kentucky soldier came up with the idea to harass Northerners along the Canadian border. He hoped Union troops would relocate north, giving relief to exhausted Confederate soldiers farther south.

  6. Soon the Second Vermont Regiment was sent to the war zone, enlisted for three years as part ofthe Army of the Potomac, the largest of all Union armies. On July 21 the regiment fought in the first major battle of the Civil War, along a stream called Bull Run some 25 miles southwest of Washington. The Vermonters were briefly

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  8. Jan 26, 2024 · His most important work was his two-volume history, Vermont in the Civil War (Burlington, 1886 and 1888), which he wrote as the official historian for the State of Vermont. The Benedict Family Papers hold some of the notes and correspondence he used in the preparation of the history.

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