Comments: 24
TomBombardier [2012-04-20 17:21:49 +0000 UTC]
Louisiana and many other areas had been Union occupied from the start of the war.
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Caturday2 [2012-03-19 20:21:56 +0000 UTC]
Kentucky never seceded... -.-
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Kristo1594 In reply to Caturday2 [2012-03-19 20:37:40 +0000 UTC]
ohh sorry Oo missed that... xD
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Caturday2 In reply to Kristo1594 [2012-04-10 23:45:10 +0000 UTC]
No biggie, the situation in the border states was rather complicated.
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KM-Mafia In reply to Caturday2 [2012-04-16 13:55:52 +0000 UTC]
Kentucky had both a pro-Union and pro-Confederate governments, each vying for power, but the CSA was never able to secure the state, so it technically remained in the Union.
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Forcedlactationlover In reply to KM-Mafia [2016-12-22 16:43:34 +0000 UTC]
Actually, Kentucky, like Missouri, had a dual government. The Confederacy recognized both as seceded states, and as part of the Confederate States of America, but the Union controlled both state capitals, and most of each throughout the war, and maintained their representation in both houses of Congress.
Also, of course, by 1864, the whole valley of the Mississippi River was under Union control, as was virtually all of Tennessee, and much of Arkansas and Louisiana. (The former adopted a Slavery-free constitution before any other southern state, in 1864.)
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xyz-dbz [2012-03-10 18:32:10 +0000 UTC]
will you do cold war version of it like a counterpart to ussr?
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Kristo1594 In reply to xyz-dbz [2012-03-10 18:39:44 +0000 UTC]
but that will be just a map of the USA Oo
or what do you mean?^^
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Kristo1594 In reply to xyz-dbz [2012-03-10 19:09:52 +0000 UTC]
maybe sometime^^
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MTGEmperor [2012-03-10 17:23:11 +0000 UTC]
hate to be the bearer of more bad news but Georgia's border is a little too south of its 1864 days.
Why, you ask?
The Mason Dixon Line. It extended the border to a river within Tennessee, nowadays.
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MTGEmperor In reply to Kristo1594 [2012-03-10 20:49:09 +0000 UTC]
my sincerest apologies. Not the M-D Line.
There is a constant water problem for Atlanta as well as Georgia and the Tennessee River access was cut off in a 1819 survey.
It can be found here (this history):
[link] (U.S._state)#Boundaries
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Spiritswriter123 [2012-03-10 15:37:30 +0000 UTC]
I Don't think Oregon was a state by 1864
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IntrepidTee [2012-03-10 12:00:21 +0000 UTC]
Beautiful! The size is just gorgeous!
One thing: Why is America spelled with a k?
I was also wondering what program you use.
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