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Crawl of outlinks from wikipedia.org started March, 2016. These files are currently not publicly accessible.
Properties of this collection.
It has been several years since the last time we did this.
For this collection, several things were done:
1. Turned off duplicate detection. This collection will be complete, as there is a
good chance we will share the data, and sharing data with pointers to random
other collections, is a complex problem.
2. For the first time, did all the different wikis. The original runs were just against the
enwiki. This one, the seed list was built from all 865 collections.
TIMESTAMPS
The Wayback Machine - https://web.archive.org/web/20160307140302/http://www.soldiersofshockoehill.com/shockoe3_001.htm
The Soldiers of Shockoe Hill
"NEARBY ARE BURIED AT LEAST 661 UNITED STATES SOLDIERS WHO DIED BETWEEN JULY 1861 AND JUNE 1863 WHILE PRISONERS OF WAR
IN THIS CITY. MANY DIED AT CONFEDERATE GENERAL HOSPITAL NUMBER 1 ADJACENT TO SHOCKOE HILL CEMETERY WHICH TOOK IN UNION WOUNDED FROM FIRST MANASSAS (BULL RUN) AND OTHER ENGAGEMENTS.
THOUGH MOST WERE ANONYMOUS, THE NAMES OF 88 OF THE DEAD ARE
LISTED BELOW AS THEY APPEAR IN CEMETERY RECORDS.
THIS MARKER WAS PLACED IN 2002 AT THE REQUEST OF THE MILITARY ORDER
OF THE LOYAL LEGION OF THE UNITED STATES TO REMEMBER THEIR FAITHFUL SERVICE."
The above marker refers to one of the forgotten chapters of Civil War Richmond: the identity and fate of hundreds of Union Army prisoners, who were buried near Richmond's Shockoe Hill Cemetery in the first two years of that war. Recent original research has recovered information that had been lost for more than a century: the soldiers' names, their units, where and how they died, the precise location of their original burial - and even their true final resting place.