Category Archives: Civil War

Reporters are more lazy than credulous

Lazy, sure. Credulous? Maybe. But by the time I’d been in the news biz for a few years I’d realized that truly worthwhile stories didn’t come waltzing into my arms very often. Yet like a cop issuing speeding tickets, I had a quota to meet.

So what Andrew Ferguson calls the Chump Effect, i.e. reporters taking any old social science “development” at face value, was more often my attempt to stay employed while waiting for a better story to come along.

Editors were, more or less, in the same fix. Making us easy targets for analysts like AF. But what did we care? Pay checks came once a week and, like Ms. O’Hara so wisely put it, tomorrow was another day.

Thanksgiving

It was originally an American tradition, observed in some parts of the country but not in others, until 1863 when President Lincoln made it an official holiday at the end of November.

“It has seemed to me fit and proper that they [our blessings] should be solemnly, reverently and gratefully acknowledged as with one heart and one voice by the whole American People. I do therefore invite my fellow citizens in every part of the United States, and also those who are at sea and those who are sojourning in foreign lands, to set apart and observe the last Thursday of November next, as a day of Thanksgiving and Praise to our beneficent Father who dwelleth in the Heavens.

“And I recommend to them that while offering up the ascriptions justly due to Him for such singular deliverances and blessings, they do also, with humble penitence for our national perverseness and disobedience, commend to His tender care all those who have become widows, orphans, mourners or sufferers in the lamentable civil strife in which we are unavoidably engaged, and fervently implore the interposition of the Almighty Hand to heal the wounds of the nation and to restore it as soon as may be consistent with the Divine purposes to the full enjoyment of peace, harmony, tranquillity and Union.”

Via Lint In My Pocket – Artillery On The Ridge

Syrup cannon

Jo Anzalone, who is descended from a 13th Mississippi Infantry Regiment soldier, took a trip not long ago retracing the unit’s wartime movements.

She carried with her an antique silver syrup pitcher belonging to her Civil War ancestor, Private Jonathan James McDaniel, and posed it at different sites.

Here, the pitcher sits on the business end of a 20-pounder Parrott gun, a rifled cannon used mainly by the Union,  near the Henry House on the Manassas Battlefield in Virginia.

Jo has written a novel about McDaniel, available for free reading here. My own blog saga of the 13th Regiment continues into late July, 1863, here.

Runaway Watch: Herman Cain and Allen West

Well, Colonel West, for sure. Cain, however, seems to be scurrying back to the quarters ahead of the patrols by joining in the WaPo’s manufactured racial-insensitivity scandal against Rick Perry.

Much as I liked Cain, his behavior here is despicable. Could it be Mr. Pizza actually is, in fact, just another Democrat water boy in disguise?

Make Fort Monroe a park

One use of federal tax money I support is the establishment and maintenance of historical parks. Such as the closing of Fortress Monroe (the green area inside the blue moat above at the mouth of the Chesapeake Bay) which the Army has decided to abandon.

Not because I used to spend time there in 1970-71 when I was an Army recruiter and recruiting headquarters was then at Monroe. Nope.

But because, well, among its other historical aspects, the fort that was built when USA was a new republic has the cell where Confederate President Jefferson Davis was imprisoned after the Civil War.

It was also horror writer and poet Edgar Allen Poe’s home when he was an Army artillery sergeant in the early 1800s. There’s just too much history there to let some developer turn it into beachfront condos.

Via To The Sound of the Guns.

Separate tables, please

For generations, Americans basically had one painting/lithograph of Lee’s surrender at Appomattox in 1865. It showed Lee sitting amicably at the same table with Grant. It was Northern propaganda intended to help reunite the country.

Finally, back in the mid-1980s, the print was replaced with this one from participant descriptions of the actual scene and it began to be sold in National Park Service bookstores. It helps explain why North-South animosity endured for more than a hundred years after the war.

Joshua Lawrence Chamberlain at Fredericksburg

Only fair to include this Mort Kunstler painting of Col. Joshua Lawrence Chamberlain (bareheaded with pistol) in the Union defeat at Fredericksburg in December, 1862 since I posted the other, Rebel, one.

Chamberlain, of course, was one of the heroes of Gettysburg, the following July. The stand (and concluding charge) of his Twentieth Maine Infantry Regiment on Little Round Top has long been called key to the 1863 Union victory.