• Thumbnail for Confederate Memorial (Wilmington, North Carolina)
    Confederate veterans association in downtown Wilmington, North Carolina. In August 2021, the City of Wilmington removed it from public land and stored it...
    23 KB (2,679 words) - 08:33, 13 May 2024
  • Thumbnail for Confederate Memorial Day
    Confederate Memorial Day (called Confederate Heroes Day in Texas and Florida, and Confederate Decoration Day in Tennessee) is a holiday observed in several...
    35 KB (2,878 words) - 06:58, 26 April 2024
  • Thumbnail for Wilmington, North Carolina
    Wilmington is a port city in and the county seat of New Hanover County in coastal southeastern North Carolina, United States. With a population of 115...
    140 KB (13,049 words) - 05:04, 19 May 2024
  • List of Confederate monuments and memorials from the North Carolina section. This is a list of Confederate monuments and memorials in North Carolina that...
    48 KB (4,424 words) - 05:38, 16 April 2024
  • Thumbnail for Wilmington massacre
    white supremacists in Wilmington, North Carolina, United States, on Thursday, November 10, 1898. The white press in Wilmington originally described the...
    174 KB (19,958 words) - 11:55, 16 May 2024
  • Thumbnail for North Carolina in the American Civil War
    Monuments in North Carolina, 1865–1929 (2022). Smith, Blanche Lucas (1941). North Carolina's Confederate monuments and memorials. North Carolina Division...
    29 KB (2,341 words) - 01:51, 11 May 2024
  • Thumbnail for Goldsboro, North Carolina
    Raleigh, the state capital, and 75 miles (121 km) north of Wilmington in Southeastern North Carolina. Seymour Johnson Air Force Base is located in Goldsboro...
    35 KB (3,345 words) - 20:41, 23 April 2024
  • Thumbnail for Oakdale Cemetery (Wilmington, North Carolina)
    Oakdale Cemetery is a cemetery in Wilmington, North Carolina that dates from the 19th century. Because existing cemeteries were becoming crowded, a group...
    4 KB (470 words) - 17:17, 31 May 2023
  • Thumbnail for List of monuments and memorials removed during the George Floyd protests
    downtown Wilmington". WECT. Archived from the original on June 26, 2020. Retrieved June 26, 2020. Phillips, Will (June 29, 2020). "Confederate Memorial removed...
    356 KB (14,856 words) - 03:03, 17 May 2024
  • Thumbnail for North Carolina
    at Bennett Place, in what is today Durham. North Carolina's port city of Wilmington, was the last Confederate port to fall to the Union, in February 1865...
    214 KB (19,279 words) - 07:32, 18 May 2024