Battles of December 21 summaries plus museums, artwork, and books

Battles of December 21 including descriptions of the battles, geographic locations, associated artwork, and museums where a person can find associated artifacts and artwork.

1. The Fetterman Fight (The Fetterman Massacre)

Date: December 21, 1866

War: Red Cloud’s War

Cause: Tensions rose in the Dakota Territory as the U.S. Army built forts along the Bozeman Trail, trespassing on treaty-guaranteed Lakota hunting grounds. On December 21, a wood train near Fort Phil Kearny was attacked. Captain William J. Fetterman was sent to relieve the train with explicit orders not to pursue the Native American warriors over Lodge Trail Ridge. Disobeying command, Fetterman took the bait of a decoy party led by Crazy Horse and crossed the ridge into a massive ambush.

Result: It was a total victory for the coalition of Lakota, Cheyenne, and Arapaho forces. The entire U.S. detachment of 81 men was wiped out in roughly 30 minutes. It remained the worst defeat of the U.S. Army on the Great Plains until the Battle of the Little Bighorn ten years later.

Paintings & Art

Painting: The Fetterman Fight

  • Artist: J.K. Ralston
  • Year: 1963
  • Note: This large-scale oil painting is considered one of the most historically accurate depictions of the topography and combat of the event.

Painting: After the Fetterman Fight

  • Artist: Z.S. Liang
  • Year: 2008

Museums & Artifacts

Fort Phil Kearny State Historic Site (Banner, Wyoming, USA): Located at the actual site of the fort and near the battlefield, this museum houses an interpretative center with artifacts from the battle, weapons from the era, and detailed dioramas.

National Museum of the American Indian (Washington, D.C., USA): Contains vast collections of Plains Indian artifacts, including items from the Lakota and Cheyenne tribes relevant to the period of Red Cloud’s War.

Location

General: Near Story and Banner, Johnson County, Wyoming, USA.

Coordinates: 44°34′18″N 106°50′50″W

Recommended Book

The Fetterman Massacre by Dee Brown.

2. The Battle of Konya

Date: December 21, 1832

War: First Egyptian-Ottoman War

Cause: Muhammad Ali, the rebellious Khedive of Egypt, demanded control of Greater Syria as a reward for his assistance to the Ottoman Empire during the Greek War of Independence. When Sultan Mahmud II refused, Muhammad Ali sent his son, Ibrahim Pasha, to invade Ottoman Syria and Anatolia. The Ottoman Grand Vizier, Reshid Mehmed Pasha, was sent to stop the Egyptian advance deep within modern-day Turkey.

Result: The battle was a decisive victory for the Egyptian forces. Despite being outnumbered, Ibrahim Pasha’s disciplined modernized army routed the Ottomans. The Grand Vizier was captured, and the path to Constantinople (Istanbul) was left virtually undefended, marking a low point in Ottoman power and forcing the Empire to seek Russian aid.

Paintings & Art

Painting: Portrait of Ibrahim Pasha (The Egyptian Commander)

  • Artist: Jean-François Portaels
  • Year: Approx. 1847
  • Note: While contemporary battle scenes are rare in Western art, portraits of the victorious commander Ibrahim Pasha from this era are held in high regard for depicting the uniform and demeanor of the Egyptian leadership.

Painting: Mahmud II (The Ottoman Sultan)

  • Artist: Unknown (School of Art in Constantinople)
  • Year: Early 19th Century

Museums & Artifacts

Harbiye Military Museum (Istanbul, Turkey): One of the leading military museums in the world, it holds extensive collections of Ottoman weaponry, uniforms, and tents from the 19th century, including items from the reforms of Mahmud II.

Topkapi Palace Museum (Istanbul, Turkey): Houses the imperial treasury and archives, including firmans (edicts) and personal items belonging to Sultan Mahmud II.

Location

General: Just outside the city of Konya, Central Anatolia, Turkey.

Coordinates: 37°52′00″N 32°29′00″E

Recommended Book

Osman’s Dream: The History of the Ottoman Empire by Caroline Finkel.

3. The Capture of Savannah (Culmination of the March to the Sea)

Date: December 21, 1864

War: American Civil War

Cause: Union General William Tecumseh Sherman undertook his famous “March to the Sea” from Atlanta to the Atlantic coast to destroy the Confederacy’s economic and psychological capacity to wage war. Upon reaching Savannah, Sherman besieged the city. The Confederate commander, General William J. Hardee, realized he would be encircled and escaped across the Savannah River on December 20.

Result: On December 21, Savannah Mayor Richard Arnold surrendered the city to Union forces. Sherman occupied the city and famously telegraphed President Abraham Lincoln, offering the city of Savannah as a “Christmas gift.”

Paintings & Art

Painting: Sherman’s March to the Sea

  • Artist: F.O.C. Darley
  • Year: 1868
  • Note: A famous engraving and print series that depicts the movement of Sherman’s army through Georgia, often used to visualize the campaign that ended in Savannah.

Painting: General Sherman at Savannah

  • Artist: Various 19th Century Illustrators (Harper’s Weekly)
  • Year: 1864-1865

Museums & Artifacts

Savannah History Museum (Savannah, Georgia, USA): Located in the historic Central of Georgia Railway passenger shed, this museum features exhibits on the Civil War and the occupation of the city.

Georgia Historical Society (Savannah, Georgia, USA): Holds the oldest collection of Georgia history, including manuscripts, maps, and artifacts directly related to Sherman’s occupation.

Location

General: Savannah, Chatham County, Georgia, USA.

Coordinates: 32°04′52″N 81°05′28″W

Recommended Book

Southern Storm: Sherman’s March to the Sea by Noah Andre Trudeau.

Books for sale

WarScholar Press

Contact Information

For more “Military History Inside Out” please follow me at www.warscholar.org, on Facebook at warscholar, on twitter at Warscholar, on youtube at warscholar1945 and on Instagram @crisalvarezswarscholar. Or subscribe to the podcast on Apple Podcasts | Google Podcasts | Stitcher | Spotify

Tags: military museum, military artwork, battles, Military History, War History, Battle Art, War Paintings, War Art, Military Art, Museum Visit, Art History, Historical Artifacts, Museum Collection, Battlefield Tours, History Museum, Museum Life, History In Art, Historic Preservation December 20, On This Day, History, Military History, War History, Historical Events, History Buff, World History, Fetterman Fight, Red Clouds War, Lakota History, Bozeman Trail, Battle Of Konya, Ottoman Empire, Egyptian History, Ibrahim Pasha, Capture Of Savannah, Shermans March, Civil War History, Civil War, General Sherman

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Indian Wars – Battle of the Washita River November 27, 1868 – An introduction and timeline of major events

Battle of the Washita River – a fictional image

This podcast episode is a work of historical fiction written to teach listeners, in an entertaining way, about the background and major events that happened during the battle.

Books for sale

Washita: The U.S. Army and the Southern Cheyennes, 1867–1869

WarScholar Press

Contact Information

For more “Military History Inside Out” please follow me at www.warscholar.org, on Facebook at warscholar, on twitter at Warscholar, on youtube at warscholar1945 and on Instagram @crisalvarezswarscholar. Or subscribe to the podcast on Apple Podcasts | Google Podcasts | Stitcher | Spotify

Tags: Indian Wars, Battle, Cheyenne, 7th cavalry, Custer, us army, historical fiction, documentary fiction

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Today in Military History May 6

Today in Military History May 6

Dictionary of Wars

May 6 1856 Explorer and US Navy Officer Robert Edwin Perry born https://amzn.to/3eoPtf7

May 6 1527 – Sack of Rome (War of the League of Cognac)

May 6 1537 – Siege of Cuzco begins (Spanish conquest of Peru)

May 6 1592 – Battle of Okpo begins (Imjin War) (Naval) https://amzn.to/2PTLg9R

May 6 1622 – Battle of Wimpfen (Thirty Years’ War) https://amzn.to/3f21Xs6

May 6 1646 – Newark taken (English Civil War) https://amzn.to/3uqtJVX

May 6 1757 – Battle of Prague (Seven Years’ War) https://amzn.to/3eXBrAh

May 6 1780 – Battle of Leund’s Ferry (American Revolutionary War) https://amzn.to/3urLMee

May 6 1782 – British Nassau surrenders to Spain (American Revolutionary War)

May 6 1813 – Raid at Georgetown and Fredericktown, MD (War of 1812) https://amzn.to/3nOdHCR

May 6 1814 – Battle of Fort Oswego ends (War of 1812)

May 6 1827 – Battle of Phaleron (Greek War of Independence) https://amzn.to/3xO7uLE

May 6 1861 – State of war between North and South made official (US Civil War) https://amzn.to/3eT8zsZ

May 6 1864 – Battle of the Wilderness ends; Battle of Port Walthall Junction begins (US Civil War) https://amzn.to/33pChAg

May 6 1915 – Second Battle of Krithia begins (WWI) https://amzn.to/3xQkMr4

May 6 1941 – The German Greenock Blitz on Scotland begins; Operation Tiger begins (WWII) (Naval)

May 6 1942 – Surrender at Corregidor (WWII) https://amzn.to/3tqmSu8

May 6 1945 – US forces liberate the Ebensee concentration camp; US forces take Pilsen (WWII) https://amzn.to/3emKsnC

More Military History dates and trivia collection

Military History Timeline

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