The following pages link to William B. Franklin
External toolsShowing 50 items.
View (previous 50 | next 50) (20 | 50 | 100 | 250 | 500)- Battle of Chancellorsville (links | edit)
- Battle of Fredericksburg (links | edit)
- Second Battle of Bull Run (links | edit)
- Battle of Antietam (links | edit)
- George Meade (links | edit)
- Joseph Hooker (links | edit)
- Philip Sheridan (links | edit)
- Society of the Cincinnati (links | edit)
- Army of the Potomac (links | edit)
- First Battle of Bull Run (links | edit)
- Siege of Yorktown (1862) (links | edit)
- Peninsula campaign (links | edit)
- John F. Reynolds (links | edit)
- Battle of Mansfield (links | edit)
- Edwin Stanton (links | edit)
- Colt's Manufacturing Company (links | edit)
- John F. Hartranft (links | edit)
- Battle of South Mountain (links | edit)
- Battle of Harpers Ferry (links | edit)
- Samuel Rhoads (links | edit)
- Hall of State (links | edit)
- Henry Warner Slocum (links | edit)
- Thomas Ustick Walter (links | edit)
- Seven Days Battles (links | edit)
- Second Battle of Sabine Pass (links | edit)
- William Farrar Smith (links | edit)
- Battle of Williamsburg (links | edit)
- Battle of Eltham's Landing (links | edit)
- Battle of Seven Pines (links | edit)
- Battle of Gaines' Mill (links | edit)
- Battle of Savage's Station (links | edit)
- Battle of White Oak Swamp (links | edit)
- Battle of Glendale (links | edit)
- Edwin Vose Sumner (links | edit)
- Darius N. Couch (links | edit)
- Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States (links | edit)
- VI Corps (Union army) (links | edit)
- XIX Corps (Union army) (links | edit)
- I Corps (Union army) (links | edit)
- Maryland campaign (links | edit)
- Orville E. Babcock (links | edit)
- Red River campaign (links | edit)
- Granville O. Haller (links | edit)
- William Buel Franklin (redirect page) (links | edit)
- Thomas L. Rosser (links | edit)
- Harry Gilmor (links | edit)
- History of New Jersey (links | edit)
- 1868 Democratic National Convention (links | edit)
- Battle of Crampton's Gap (links | edit)
- New Jersey in the 19th century (links | edit)