muskits
Yes, they began as floating mines in 1861 by the Confederate Navy and evolved into landmines by 1862. A Brigadier General Rains of the Confederate army had troops to prepare artillery shells with trip wires. On May 4 1862 the first man , a horse rider, was killed by a pressure operated landmine. From 1862-63 Rains mines were in wide use by the Confederate army. As a side note in 1960 5 of his mines were found and were still "very dangerous."
Tennessee...it use to be a confederate state but later joined the union
They used condoms and sperm x.
"They were as tired and depressed as a defeated army."
To safeguard Confederate use of the Mississippi, and to install a Confederate government in Kentucky.
They were stone age hunter/gatherers, who lived in caves and rock shelters.
muskits
Mostly caves and rock shelters.
Mostly caves and rock shelters.
They lived in caves and rock shelters.
Morrison shelters were used inside a householders home. Anderson shelters were designed to be used in the householders garden and there were various types of public shelters which were usually underground.
By separating its army into different sections, so that the enemy would not know where they were.
Depends. Which army?
The Confederate had to build from scratch when the Union didn't. The Confederate Army was inferior in manpower and cannon. Equally significant, the Confederate Navy was decidedly weaker than the Union Navy in nearly all aspects. The one thing they had going is they got some of the best military minds from the Union. Robert E. Lee was a good example. Other than that they had to form an army, train them, get supply lines going, collect weapons,and do all the things required for a fighting force. The Confederate Army was notably better in use of terrain, overall tactics, raiding, use of cavalry, and use of mechanization (trains) to move men and materials. Confederate soldiers were on average much better marksmen than the Union soldiers especially early in the war.
They lived in caves and rock shelters.
Miller