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  1. Daniel Fletcher Webster (July 25, 1813 – August 30, 1862) was an American diplomat and Union Army officer. He was the son of Daniel Webster, the 14th and 19th U.S. Secretary of State.

    • Caroline S. White
    • Colonel
    • 1861-62
  2. Location: Manassas, Virginia. Significance: Civil War Monument. Designation: National Battlefield Park. Amenities. 1 listed. The large granite boulder marks the spot where Colonel Fletcher Webster of the 12th Massachusetts was mortally wounded during the Second Battle of Manassas on August 30, 1862.

  3. The monument to Colonel Fletcher Webster is on the Second Bull Run battlefield along the Chinn Ridge trail at the location where he was mortally wounded. The Chinn Ridge trailhead is at Stop 10 on the Manassas Battlefield Driving Tour.

  4. 12 feb 2024 · Colonel Fletcher Webster fell mortally wounded near here, leading his regiment in support of the canon of Chinn Ridge. The colonel, son of the famous orator and statesman Daniel Webster, commanded the 12th Massachusetts Infantry- a regiment he organized at the outbreak of war in 1861.

  5. Una poetica e una narrativa. I protagonisti di questa stupenda raccolta “poetico-narrativa” sono gli abitanti di Spoon River, un paesino americano immaginario attraversato dal fiume Spoon.

  6. Civil War | Article. Second Manassas: Then & Now. An Interview with Jim Burgess. Chinn Ridge at Second Manassas (Rob Shenk) During its 2010 campaign to save 10 acres at Second Manassas, the Civil War Trust had the opportunity to speak with NPS Historian Jim Burgess about the Manassas battlefield.

  7. Grace (Fletcher) Webster (1781–1828) was the first wife of Daniel Webster. She was with him as he started his law career in Portsmouth, New Hampshire , and then sought to improve their lives by settling in Boston on Beacon Hill .