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  1. Boyle County, KY | Oct 8, 1862. The largest and last major battle in the Kentucky Campaign, the Battle of Perryville, pitted Gen. Braxton Bragg's Confederate army against Gen. Don Carlos Buell's Union army. While Bragg won the battle tactically, Confederate forces retreated from the battlefield and ended the campaign, leaving Kentucky under ...

  2. Don Carlos Buell was one of the North's most important commanders in the war's early years. His experience is critical to understanding the shifting nature of the conflict."--Mark Grimsley, author of The Hard Hand of War: Union Military Policy Toward Southern Civilians, 1861-1865

  3. Don Carlos Buell. March 23, 1818 – November 19, 1898. Native Ohioan Don Carlos Buell was a Union general during the American Civil War who directed the Department of the Ohio and commanded the Army of the Ohio in the Western Theater. Buell's army helped turn the tide to a Union victory at the Battle of Shiloh (April 6-7, 1862).

  4. Major General Don Carlos Buell stood among the senior Northern commanders early in the Civil War, led the Army of the Ohio in the critical Kentucky theater in 1861-62, and helped shape the direction of the conflict during its first years. Only a handful of Northern generals loomed as large on the military landscape during this period, and Buell ...

  5. Find a Grave Memorial ID: 8602. Source citation. Civil War Union Major General. He graduated from West Point in 1841, was commissioned an infantry officer, serving in action in the Seminole and Mexican Wars. At the outbreak of the Civil War, he was Assistant Adjutant General and was given command of a division in the Army of Potomac in August 1861.

  6. Don Carlos Buell (23. maaliskuuta 1818 – 19. marraskuuta 1898) oli Yhdysvaltain armeijan ammattisotilas seminolisodissa, Meksikon–Yhdysvaltain sodassa ja Yhdysvaltain sisällissodassa Sisällys 1 Lapsuus ja nuoruus

  7. Major General Don Carlos Buell Library of Congress KN: Buell never really understood the Battle of Perryville. He was wrongly convinced that Bragg was timid and almost certainly retreating as well, but also concerned about how slowly his own army was moving toward Perryville.