Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Upton's Hill, or Upton Hill, is a geographic eminence located in western Arlington County, Virginia. Its summit rises to 413 feet (126 m) above sea level and is located in Fairfax County just over the Arlington county boundary and just east of the driveway to Upton Hill Regional Park, near the batting cage.
The preserve is located adjacent to the grounds of Naval Hospital Beaufort. The South Carolina Department of Natural Resources constructed a gravel road to access the site in August of 2020. 26: Fort Fremont Battery: Fort Fremont Battery: May 5, 2010 : Bay Point Rd., 0.3 miles (0.48 km) from Land's End Rd.
Location of Aiken County in South Carolina. This is a list of the National Register of Historic Places listings in Aiken County, South Carolina.. This is intended to be a complete list of the properties and districts on the National Register of Historic Places in Aiken County, South Carolina, United States.
Tabernacle Cemetery Rd., just east of South Carolina Highway 254 34°16′00″N 82°11′02″W / 34.266667°N 82.183889°W / 34.266667; -82.183889 ( Tabernacle Greenwood
The batting cages include nine baseball and softball cages. It is owned and operated by the NOVA Parks agency of Northern Virginia. Upton's Hill played a locally important role during the Civil War, as the Union Army command used the site as its headquarters. A large masonry fort was constructed opposite the road, at the hill's topmost point.
111th Field Artillery Regiment (75 mm) (former 1st Virginia Field Artillery, Headquarters Company and Companies I and M, 4th Virginia Infantry, and detachment from Company A, Virginia Signal Corps) 112th Field Artillery Regiment ( 155 mm ) (former 1st New Jersey Field Artillery less Battery F, Troops B and D, 1st New Jersey Cavalry, and ...
Sep. 4—A burial stone dating to 1794, the oldest in the Middle Village Cemetery in Springfield, received a roadside historical marker Friday, Aug. 30, funded by the private William C. Pomeroy ...
The Battery remained here until the end of May 1863, when they left to garrison Fort Ramsey and Fort Buffalo near Upton Hill, VA (east of Falls Church, VA). By June, they returned to Washington. They left the capital on 28 October 1863, now becoming part of the reserve artillery stationed in Nashville, TN.