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Messages - DA_26thNC_GP_Pvt_Marmite_

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North & South: First Manassas / Re: Is this mod even alive?
« on: January 20, 2021, 11:22:04 pm »
Fredrick i told you on steam it was dead stop posting
My bad Goomba.

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General Discussion / Re: What IS killing the game?
« on: January 20, 2021, 08:11:52 pm »
To be honest, a lot of people that played Mount and Blade were in their teens and in their early twenties, demographics-wise, but I guess as we get older as we go into college, and into work, we spend less and less time on the game.  People come and go it's life, but for Mount and Blade I am glad that there is at least a community and that this guy is still alive, I feel that there will be dedicated people that will try to keep the communities here alive until Private Servers for Bannerlod, War of Rights, BattleCry will come out. There was a short spike when Covid began, as people had to stay home, but as people started to get used to the lockdowns they had to go back to their routines.

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North & South: First Manassas / Is this mod even alive?
« on: January 19, 2021, 11:49:22 pm »
I stopped playing this game around 2017-2018, and I heard that the DA/UB had disbanded, and everyone left. What has even happened?

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I applied jasdeep118/ErickHarris

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I made a tutorial for my fellow North and South community. OBS is a very good program and its very helpful. here is the link!

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I am recording videos for my regiment, the 52nd New York and today we made a video for the OB event. Hope you guys like it!

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North & South: First Manassas / Tips and Tutorials for Melee
« on: April 20, 2016, 02:04:20 am »
I made a video for tips on how to melee,   Hope you guys enjoy it! Forgive me on the static, OBS acts pretty weird when I record, but my mic is good and brand new!

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North & South: First Manassas / Re: New Troop requests
« on: April 03, 2016, 12:41:49 am »
Unit Name: 11th Pennsylvania



History: The 11th Pennsylvania Infantry Regiment was a Union army regiment that participated in the American Civil War. It had the distinction of being the oldest unit in continuous service from Pennsylvania.The 11th Pennsylvania was recruited from several counties in Pennsylvania as a three-month regiment on April 26, 1861, and sent to Camp Curtin, Harrisburg for training and organization. Phaon Jarrett served as its first colonel, with Richard Coulter as lieutenant colonel and William D. Earnest as major. It was assigned to Robert Patterson's Army of the Shenandoah. The regiment received the nickname "The Bloody Eleventh" at the Battle of Falling Waters, Virginia, July 2, 1861.

The 11th was reorganized as a three-year regiment in the August of the same year at Camp Curtin in Harrisburg. After a few weeks of drill, the regiment was given garrison duty at Annapolis, Maryland. In April, it was moved to Mannassas Junction, where it guarded the railroad. It was again transferred, this time to the Shenandoah Valley, in late May as part of Irvin McDowell's Corps. They fought in the Battles of Cedar Mountain and Second Bull Run.

After the Army of Virginia was merged into the Army of the Potomac, the reconstituted regiment became part of the I Corps. At Turner's Gap at the Battle of South Mountain, the 11th came under light fire only, losing two men wounded. At the Battle of Antietam three days later, it was heavily engaged on the Union right around the West Woods. In this battle, it lost 27 killed, 89 wounded, and two captured.

When the original three-year enlistment period expired in January 1864, many of the men re-enrolled in the regiment at the influence of Brig. Gen. Richard Coulter, a former colonel of the regiment. Because of this, the unit was designated "veteran volunteers." During the reorganization of the Army in the spring of 1864, the 11th became part of the V Corps, as the old I Corps had been disbanded, and surviving units transferred to the V Corps.

The 11th fought in multiple battles in the Eastern Theater, including Second Bull Run, Antietam, Chancellorsville, Gettysburg, Grant's Overland Campaign, the Siege of Petersburg, and the Appomattox Campaign. It was mustered out on July 1, 1865.
 Among the numerous casualties was one that would stand out as an undying remembrance of the unit and its loyalty to the cause. The regiment's beloved mascot, Sallie Ann Jarrett, a brindle American Staffordshire Terrier, traveled everywhere with the unit. "Sallie" was said to have hated three things — Rebels, Democrats, and Women. Her loyalty was undying, for at Gettysburg, after the battle on the First Day was over, Sallie, tired and hungry, ambled out to where her brave comrades had fought and died. She lay down with the dead, until she was found, weak and close to death herself, on July 4, 1863. Her friends nursed her back to health, and she fought with the unit in every battle until she was mortally wounded at Hatcher's Run in February 1865. The men gave her a proper burial, never forgetting the most devoted member of their regiment. Her likeness is forever memorialized on the 11th Pennsylvania monument on Oak Ridge in the Gettysburg National Military Park.

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Confederates / Re: Army of Kentucky [NA/EU]
« on: January 21, 2015, 11:45:58 pm »
What up

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Populares / Re: Legio XI Claudia *WIP*
« on: November 27, 2014, 11:52:21 pm »
Hey James

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