A significant portion of Williamsburg’s historic Civil War battlefield was recently purchased to be secured for preservation. The Virginia Gazette reports the American Battlefield Trust bought the 29 acres in the area of the “Bloody Ravine” from The Colonial Williamsburg Foundation. The land was zoned for commercial used and valued at $2,743,000. Located about 1 mile from the city’s historic area and primarily within the city limits, the land is pristine and looks much as it did 158 years ago when the battle took place, according to the newspaper.
Sunday, December 27, 2020
Saturday, December 26, 2020
2020's top 10 Picket posts: A treasure of artifacts hauled to surface; arson fire at museum, USS Monitor and innovative Colt revolving rifle
Recovered round from Colt revolving rifle (Prairie Grove Battlefield State Park) |
We’ve got a
few items in the works, so we look forward to rolling those and others out in
2021. Thanks so much for your interest – and Happy New Year!
10. MYSTERY TIMBER: Forty years ago, someone walking North Carolina’s Kure Beach found a curved piece of timber pocked with holes and containing a piece of iron. Its donation to the state earlier this year raised questions over whether it belonged to a blockade runner. -- Read more
One of the two Dahlgrens that were cleaned (The Mariners' Museum and Park) |
8. BELOVED ED BEARSS: By the beginning of 2020, it was clear that the legendary Civil War historian, author and mesmerizing guide was no longer able to lead tours. One of his publishers encouraged fans to send Bears letters of appreciation. Bearss (left) died in September at age 97.
7. SAVING THE STRAIN: A tabby structure that survived the federal burning of Darien, Ga., seemed destined for the wrecking ball just a year and a half ago. But an Atlanta-area couple came through, and they are restoring the Adam Strain building in the coastal town. -- Read more
6. PRAIRIE GROVE FIREPOWER: Removal of underbrush at the epicenter of a ferocious battle in northwest Arkansas has allowed archaeologists to recover about 400 Civil War artifacts, including spent bullets fired from innovative Colt revolving rifles. -- Read more
5. USS MONITOR REDUX: Earlier this year, conservators at The Mariners’ Museum and Park in Newport News, Va., removed the last concretion from inside the barrels of the two large turret guns. They used a special drill to remove the hardened mix of sediment and sea life. -- Read more
4. PUZZLE PIECE AT PEA RIDGE: A 140-acre parcel that was the scene of Confederate troop movements and a hospital during the March 1862 battle was bought by a coalition of conservation and historical groups, with plans to donate it to the National Park Service. -- Read more
Inverted fantail of the CSS Jackson (Picket photo) |
2. STAGGERING HAUL OF ARTIFACTS: An estimated 13,601 artifacts brought ashore from the Confederate ironclad CSS Georgia wreck site in Savannah were trucked to Texas for conservation. What’s known about the ship’s design, construction, propulsion, armament and life aboard the "Mud Tub" are detailed in a massive report about the CSS Georgia's recovery. -- Read more
CSS Georgia Dahlgren cannon, bayonet hilt, breast plate (USACE-Savannah) |
Sunday, December 20, 2020
Immigrants deserve much of the credit for winning the Civil War. A Wisconsin museum's new exhibit explores why they took up arms
Exhibit on soldier David Oram (Courtesy Civil War Museum, Kenosha, WI) |
The Library Company of Philadelphia |
Many immigrants had fought in European conflicts and were prepared for combat. Others arrived impoverished, ripe for recruiting – drawn by a bounty (enlistment bonus) and steady military pay.
“Some had families to support, or wives and children awaiting money for passage,” the museum says in an article about the exhibit. “Many men enlisted on the spot, or within days of reaching American soil. Others went to war for draftees who paid them to take their place.”
More than 500,000 immigrants showed uncompromised bravery while fighting for the Union.
Norwegian-born Col. Hans Heg (left), commanded the 15th Wisconsin, a regiment comprising mostly Scandinavian immigrants. David Oram, who came to the United States from Dundee, Scotland, when he was about 8, joined the 24th Wisconsin.
Both were at the Battle of Chickamauga in September 1863. Oram was seriously wounded and spent six months recovering. Heg became the highest-ranking Wisconsin officer to die in battle.
Heg, 33, died defending the freedoms he found in the United States. “The State has sent no braver soldier, and no truer patriot to aid in this mighty struggle for national unity, than Hans Christian Heg,” the State Journal wrote Sept. 29, 1863, reporting word of his death. “The valorous blood of the old Vikings ran in his veins, united with the gentler virtues of a Christian and a gentleman.”
Early in the conflict, Heg wrote about what motivated he and other immigrants.
(Civil War Museum, Kenosha, WI) |
“More than a third of Wisconsin’s population was foreign-born, giving it the second-highest proportion of immigrants of all states, says Patrick Young, who writes “The Reconstruction Era” and “Immigrants’ Civil War” blogs.
“For
every one immigrant who served in the Confederate army, nine served with the
Union. Many, particularly the Germans, said they did so to end slavery. Without
these men, and their wives who supported their service, it is difficult to see
how the Union could have been preserved,” Young tells the Picket.
A large proportion of those on the Union side were German and Irish, but Poland, Italy and many other countries were represented.
Some 369 immigrants received the Medal Honor for their heroism in the Civil War.
(Courtesy of Civil War Museum, Kenosha, WI) |
In a video posted to the museum’s Facebook page, education coordinator Doug Dammann details the life and service of David Oram, who settled in Racine. He enlisted in August 1862.
Oram rejoined the Union army after he was wounded at Chickamauga, and mustered out in June 1865. He returned home, married and worked for a machine company. Like many Union veterans, Oram was active in the fraternal Grand Army of the Republic – in his case, the Gov. Harvey post.
Oram and his wife, Rosina, attended many events, including the 1915 encampment in Washington, DC, marking the 50th anniversary of the war’s end.
In April 1935, a few months before Oram died at age 94, he was honored at a patriotic and military ball in Race County. Besides Chickamauga, he was a veteran of the battles at Perryville, Stones River and Franklin-Nashville.
David Oram before the Civil War |
“To Our
Comrade David Oram
The last of Abe Lincoln’s boys,
And to his Comrades departed;
Our Boyhood Heroes
To You, We the younger veterans,
Affectionately dedicate this Program.
Ourselves, we dedicate
To Carry On the Work, so well and nobly done
By the Grand Army of the Republic
(Courtesy of Civil War Museum, Kenosha, WI) |
Wednesday, December 9, 2020
Dear mom: Unfiltered letters from three Massachusetts brothers about combat and camp life are featured in new book
Nearly 100 letters written by three Massachusetts brothers have been transcribed and published in a new book, “My Dear Mother: Civil War Letters to Dedham from the Lathrop Brothers.”
The
correspondence by John, Joseph and Julius Lathrop to their mother and three
sisters stretched from December 1861 to a postwar visit to the Antietam
battlefield by John in September 1865.
“The letters tell of the fierce battles, long marches, camp life and the
brothers’ dedication to the Union cause,” says a description by the Dedham
Historical Society & Museum, which transcribed the material. “The letters
are published as written, without corrections or sanitation, but transcribed
using the language of their time.”
A letter written
by Julius to his mother on Feb. 13, 1862, details the taking of Roanoke Island,
N.C., several days before and describes the 24th Massachusetts
Infantry’s role in the capture of more than 2,000 Confederate prisoners.
Brig. Gen.
Ambrose Burnside and his troops secured a vital victory in the Union effort to
put a stranglehold on Southern ports. Rebel forces surrendered after they were
routed from one battery and rushed to the northern end of the island, as
described in the letter.
The corporal
wrote his regiment was supposed to be among the first to land early in the battle but
the steamer carrying troops ran aground. “We had the mortification of watching
all the other regiments pass by us as while we were left lamenting.”
The unit
witnessed the bombardment of the Confederate battery and its line was eventually
formed near hospital buildings. Wounded Federal soldiers cheered the regiment
and its brass howitzer, he wrote.
Fanciful depiction of Union attack at Roanoke Island (Library of Congress)
Other Federal
forces took the battery as the 24th moved up. Lathrop got his first
look at the horrors of war, seeing dead and maimed men, some nearly cut in two
by artillery shots. “I saw … a poor fellow who was shot through the head with a
grape shot. He was still alive though his brains were running out of his wound.”
His letter
home to Dedham, about 10 miles southwest of Boston, asked his loved ones to “excuse
the dirt but, I must tell you this is Secesh paper; of course it can’t be clean.”
Between them,
the Lathrop brothers saw action across the breadth of the war, from Antietam
and Fredericksburg in the east to Port Hudson in the west, the historical
society says.
Julius, who later in the war accepted a commission with the 38th Massachusetts, was a captain when he was mortally wounded on April 23, 1864, in a skirmish at Cane River, La.
A regimental history says Lathrop "has rode in an ambulance the day previous, unable to march; but upon the approach of an engagement, had taken command of his company, and was leading his men when he received the fatal shot." He died a few days later.
John Lathrop |
Joseph Lathrop, who
served in the 43rd Massachusetts Infantry and the 4th
Massachusetts Cavalry before capture late in the war, also survived. He wrote
only one of the letters in the book.
Michael B. Chesson,
editor of “The Journal of a Civil
War Surgeon (2003),” wrote an Amazon review praising the book and the
range of subjects in the letters, from Army life to skulkers and the home
front.
Chesson wrote: “Some of the letters describe close combat as
raw and immediate as a scene from the movie version of 'Cold Mountain.' The
letters span the full range of human emotions, expressed in the characteristic
reserve of old time New Englanders.”
A recording of Julius’ letter is on the Dedham Historical
Society & Museum website. Five other recordings are being uploaded weekly.
The letters were donated to the society in 1928. Volunteers began transcribing them about three years ago, according to the Dedham Patch.
The book includes photographs of the brothers and images of
battlefield maps drawn by John and Julius in their letters. The volume, put out
by Damianos Publishing, sells for $25 through Amazon and the publisher.
Wednesday, November 25, 2020
As workers stabilize tabby building that survived burning of Darien, a scene in the movie 'Glory,' another team finds a Civil War bullet
A view of the archaeological project (Courtesy of Marion Savic) |
While most of
the attention has been focused on the fragile tabby structure, Milan and Marion
Savic -- who bought the Adam Strain and plans to host businesses and a museum
after it is restored – recently brought in an archaeological team to see what’s
under the building and buried on the bluff just behind.
Among the items found was a Civil War-era bullet -- likely an Enfield round. The team found it on a bluff that overlooks water, Marion Savic told the Picket.
The so-called Pritchett bullet was used in the Pattern 1853 Enfield rifle. The Enfield was used by both sides during the conflict, and
the Confederacy imported thousands from England.
Civil War bullet found during archaeological dig (Courtesy of Marion Savic) |
The Adam Strain was used to store
cotton prior to shipment in 1861 and 1862 before the Union naval blockade
clamped down on Georgia’s coast. Darien was
destroyed in 1863 by black troops, under orders from an anti-slavery white
officer. The incident was recounted in the 1989 movie “Glory.” The Strain
survived the fire.
The Picket first wrote in April about efforts to save the
circa 1813 building after decades of deterioration. At one point in a long
campaign to save the Strain, it appeared the beloved piece of history might be
demolished. Made of oyster shell tabby and stucco,
the oldest structure in Darien is beloved by its 2,000 residents.
Support system used during stabilization (Marion Savic) |
On a Facebook page devoted to the project on Broad Street in historic Darien, Savic wrote:
The museum
will include artifacts and information from the dig. It will convey the
Strain’s and Darien’s history -- including shrimping, timber and the story of
thousands of enslaved people who were the backbone of the economy in McIntosh
and neighboring counties.
The Facebook
page has chronicled the journey, with locals and others interested in the
project posting comments and questions.
One find
during the work was the discovery of Savannah grey bricks behind the walls of a
one-story building that adjoins the Strain. It had been used as a bank and law
offices following the Civil War.
Savannah grey bricks (Courtesy of Marion Savic) |
The Savics,
who have experience in operating retail businesses in metro Atlanta, have turned to an
array of contracted expertise to bring back a building that was at risk of
being toppled by strong winds.
The
stabilization phase is nearly complete. Besides the supports, tie rods and
plates, crews removed the heavy slate roof, relieving stress on the building. Interior
wood framing has been erected throughout the building.
(Courtesy of Marion Savic) |
Restoration
will begin after the building is secure and fully supported. The Strain, which was
burned in the 1863 fire, was repaired and saw a rebirth for several decades
before it was used for storage following World War II and then
shuttered.
The building interior will have the appearance of its
immediate post-Civil War days. Crews will recover the tabby with smooth, white
stucco.
“The end goal
is to have a fully restored tabby building honoring its history. It will look
like it did in the 1800s,” Savic wrote.
The Adam Strain before work began this year. |
Friday, November 20, 2020
John H. Simpson, teen survivor of Sultana explosion, kept the memory alive to his dying day. A monument to men on the vessel is near his grave in Knoxville church cemetery
John H. Simpson (photos courtesy of Gene Salecker) |
The image taken
after the Tennessee boy joined the Union army at age 15 or 16 shows him
gripping a revolver -- perhaps a photographer’s prop – that is wider than his
torso. He wants the viewer to know he is ready for the battle.
In the later
photograph, Simpson’s face is framed by a full white beard. He has led a long
life, but this time he is displaying something else – a postwar Grand Army of
the Republic badge affixed to his coat lapel. He is proud of having served the
United States.
The intervening
years in many ways defined Simpson, who was captured in battle, spent several
months in a prison camp in Alabama and then survived the worst maritime
disaster in U.S. history, the explosion and sinking of the Sultana at war’s end
in April 1865. The vessel was carrying released prisoners back to their homes in the North at war's end.
Memorial sits atop hill at Knoxville area cemetery (Picket photos) |
Simpson helped form the local chapter of the Union veterans group the Grand Army of the Republic and by the late 1880s, according to the Knoxville History Project, was convening meetings of Sultana survivors. These veterans and others around the country lobbied long and hard for a monument in Washington or one in Memphis, Tenn., near the site of the disaster, but those never came to be.
The East
Tennessee chapter, however, was particularly ambitious. On July 4, 1916 -- having given
up on the federal government to come through -- members dedicated a striking Sultana
memorial on a hilltop cemetery belonging to Mount Olive Baptist Church, where
Simpson was a member.
(Courtesy Gene Salecker) |
A 2015 article by the Knoxville History Project gave this description of the ceremony:
“Dozens assembled there … old men in then-unstylish beards and hats, but
also with children, perhaps grandchildren or even great-grandchildren, with
flags flying, to unveil their monument, Knoxville’s last new monument
to be witnessed by actual Civil War veterans -- just as their nation tried to
stay out of another war.”
The Picket has written much about the Sultana over the years, but last month brought the first opportunity to see the memorial in person.
I wanted
to learn more about how it came to be, and I began researching Simpson’s story.
Here’s what I have learned.
He was raring to fight in mid-teens
In 1863, the
younger Simpson and his father Green enlisted in the 3rd Tennessee
Cavalry (Federal), Company I. While there were divided loyalties, East
Tennessee was largely pro-Union and towns across the region sent thousands to
join the cause. The boy likely lied about his age so that he could join up.
Knoxstalgia blogger Mark Knox years ago wrote a couple posts about
his second great-grandfather.
“I suppose no
one will ever know if Green’s enlistment resulted from inspiration at John’s
courageous act of patriotism, or if he simply joined to be able to keep a
watchful eye on his obviously headstrong son,” he wrote.
Hundreds of names are etched on memorial (Picket photo) |
Knox wrote
that his great uncle gave an account of what happened to John during the
fighting.
“My grandfather
often spoke of the tense moments spent waiting for the Confederate attack, and
then suddenly hearing the awful ‘rebel yell’ and seeing the Confederate troops
come charging in on their position with their sabers clashing,” the great uncle
wrote. “Before he had time to react, he was overrun by one of the charging
horsemen. The horse stepped down and smashed his thigh and side. He was soon
after captured and removed to the Cahaba prison for Union soldiers. When I was
a boy, my grandfather still bore the terrible scars on his side and leg from
this occasion.”
The view toward cemetery entrance (Civil War Picket photo) |
“As Confederate-run prisoner-of-war camps go, Castle Morgan
was not considered one of the hellish ones, that is, if you could suffer the
central Alabama heat,” says the Knoxville History Project. “Its death rate was
relatively low. Perhaps the worst they had to deal with was another flood, that
February.”
The 3rd
Tennessee Cavalry POWs were part of a large prisoner exchange in March 1865,
only a few week before the war’s end. They had to travel to Columbus, Ohio, to
muster out of service. They were sent from Cahaba westward to Vicksburg, Ms.,
where they would travel by boat to Ohio.
Harpers Weekly illustration of the disaster |
The overcrowded vessel exploded and caught fire on April 27, 1865, killing
nearly 1,200 passengers and crew.
According to Knoxstalgia, John Simpson ended up
in Nashville, where he mustered out on June 10. His father left the cavalry a
short time later. (I attempted to contact Mark Knox for this blog post, but
have thus far been unable to reach him.)
They wouldn't give up on monument
The Sultana Survivors’ Association was formed
about two decades later. National meetings were held in Toledo, Ohio. Many survivors were from the Buckeye State, but those in the South eventually decided to mostly gather in Knoxville,
meaning there would be two main survivors groups – one in Ohio, the other in Tennessee.
1920 Knoxville reunion; Pleasant Keeble at far left, John H. Simpson second from right (Knox County Public Library, McClung Historical Collection) |
So the Knoxville chapter raised money to have
one built in Tennessee, procuring native marble. Simpson was listed as the promoter.
“The dwindling number of gray-haired survivors -- by then, all were all
pushing 70, or beyond --got together and, without waiting for government help,
established a permanent memorial,” according to the Knoxville History Project.
“Simpson was a member of Mount Olive Baptist Church. He picked that church’s
hilltop cemetery as the site, and it was his prerogative. But it was a pretty
good place anyway, a pretty, quiet spot barely within view of an important
road, Maryville Pike.”
The pink
marble memorial bears the names of 365 Tennesseans who were on the Sultana. Most,
like Simpson, served in the 3rd Tennessee Cavalry. The centerpiece
is a bas-relief of the Sultana, smoke pouring from its smokestacks and the
American flag fluttering.
Patriotic dedication in July 4, 1916 (courtesy of Gene Salecker) |
“Present
among the hundred or so people that attended the unveiling of the monument,
were members of the GAR, the Daughters of America, four survivors from the
Knoxville area, including “Colonel” Simpson, and a representative from the
northern Sultana Survivors’ Association who gave a short speech on behalf of
the aging survivors from the North who could not attend. The beautiful monument
was christened by Rev. W. L. Singleton, pastor of Mt. Olive Baptist Church.”
Visitors to
the memorial today will notice a column jutting from the top. It wasn’t there
in 1916.
“I have been
able to reach up and feel the top of the column or shaft,” Salecker told the
Picket. “There is no hole -- nothing to put flowers in or put a flag pole in.
We believe that it may have been put on the monument to make it look like a
steamboat smokestack.”
Descendants ensure the story lives on
The Association of Sultana Descendants and Friends, which was
organized in 1988, held most of first 14 annual reunions at Mount Olive Baptist
Church, says founder Norman Shaw. A ceremony of some kind always took place
at the memorial.
Bob Warner, son of survivor Pvt. William Warner, at monument in 1997 (G. Salecker) |
John H. Simpson, as president of the Southern contingent of
survivors, was active in affairs pertaining to the Sultana for the rest of his
life. The group met at various locations and by 1921 there were just 14
Tennessee survivors.
The Knoxville History Project says Simpson and Pleasant M.
Keeble, residents of Knoxville’s Vestal neighborhood, were the last two Tennessee survivors. (Keeble often served as scribe for the
group.)
“The two who lived closest to their monument were the last to see it. Simpson, with the kind face and flowing white beard, died first (in 1929 at age 82). Pleasant Keeble, who wore an old-fashioned walrus mustache and still had some dark in his hair, seemed made of iron cable. He decided no further reunions need occur, that the tradition would die with him.”
(Courtesy of Kendra Kirk) |
His comrade, John H. Simpson, is buried at Mount Olive Cemetery, not far from the beloved Sultana monument. Next to him is his wife, Margaret Flenniken Simpson, who died just two weeks after her husband’s passing.
Pastor Kirby Ownby of Mount Olive Baptist says he is unaware of any Sultana descendants currently in the congregation.
The church does keep a history written in 2004. "They Are Not Dead But Sleepeth: The Interments of the NM Cemetery at Mt. Olive" has details of many annual reunions. Simpson was active in all of them, and he would make appearances about the Sultana until his death. A 1901 Knoxville Sentinel article about that year's meeting noted, "the event has proven a success and one of general enjoyment to the survivors and their families there assembled to pay homage to their bravery and perseverance in the Civil War."
Kendra Kirk, a trustee with the church's cemetery committee, said they get inquiries from those curious about the memorial and will provide information. The marble was recently sandblasted, she said.
(Courtesy of Gene Salecker) |
(This post was updated to correct the number of those rescued and who died later)
Thursday, November 19, 2020
Learn more about those who served in USCT during the Civil War
A free virtual presentation about Kansans who served in the US Colored Troops will be given at 3 p.m. CT Sunday, Nov. 22, by historian Wendi Bevitt. -- Details
Tuesday, November 10, 2020
Raising the roof: Gettysburg National Military Park nears completion of exterior work on Warfield house; the interior comes next
Finished mortar tuckpointing is on the left wall (NPS photo) |
James Warfield, one of many free African-Americans in Adams County, and his
family fled as Confederates neared Gettysburg. They were afraid they could be
sent south and enslaved. The blacksmith’s home overlooked much of the July 2-3,
1863, battlefield, including the Peach Orchard, and was in the thick of action.
The park
acquired the property in the 1970s. By then, it had been modernized and
heightened for postwar occupants, losing much of its character and historic
footprint.
Work has included the removal of postwar additions, including aluminum
siding and side buildings. The home’s height has essentially been chopped in
half to its original 1.5 floors, while retaining the original stone walls.
Warfield property before modern additions were removed (NPS) |
-- Non-historic additions to the house were removed
-- A new timber frame roof was constructed and covered with cedar shingles
-- Historic window openings were reestablished and fitted with period correct
sashes
-- Unstable masonry walls were repaired and reinforced
-- House foundation was stabilized and waterproofed
-- Exterior masonry walls were tuckpointed using a mortar matching the color
and texture of the historic mortar
“The final
exterior wall (west wall) to be tuckpointed … is being worked on now,”
Martz wrote in an email. “The interior walls in the second floor (half-story)
still need final repairs. This will be done once the final exterior wall work
is done.
Drawing shows what the house may have looked like during the battle (NPS) |
“Once those two steps are complete, the windows will go in and the
exterior will be ready for winter. At that point, the interior work can begin.
However, no timeline has been established on when or what exactly will be done
with the interior. The overall emphasis has been getting the exterior sealed up
and made weather-tight for the winter months. “
Martz has said the home, once restoration wraps up, will help the park
better tell the story of Gettysburg’s African American community. Warfield
had operated two hearths on his 13 acres and “ran one of the best blacksmith
stands in the county,” according to the book “African Americans and the
Gettysburg Campaign.”
Staffers at Gettysburg National Military Park are chronicling the effort through an online page featuring video, photos and an overview of the project.