Over this blog’s 15 years, I’ve written about myriad items belonging to Civil War soldiers and sailors – from swords, hats and frock coats to journals, letters and Bibles.
While each resonated in its own way, one item especially stands out to me. It’s the homespun, brown-and-white checked shirt made for a skinny teen boy from Demopolis, Alabama.
The time and care that went into making it showed that Henry Winston Reese Jr. was dearly loved by his prosperous family. (Click photo to enlarge)
I researched Reese
for a February 2016 post. I learned the University of Alabama student joined
the Confederate army without his parents’ permission and died, barely 17, from
wounds received two months earlier at the Battle of Champion Hill (Mississippi, May 1863).
Living historian and weaver Terre Hood Biederman and Ryan M. Blocker, a curator in the museum collection of the Alabama Archives, were among those with spoke with me about Reese and the shirt, a homemade product demonstrating Southern resolve.
I’ve since heard from a couple descendants, including one who said her family tries to keep the names Reese and Winston going.
The garment, along with Reese’s boots (below, both photos courtesy Alabama Archives), remain on display at
the Alabama Voices gallery at the Museum of Alabama in Montgomery. A pouch,
also donated by the family to the Alabama Department of Archives and History in
1978, has been kept in storage.
Alabama Voices cover’s the breadth of the state’s history, including the Civil War, industrialization, the world wars and civil rights (more about that later).
It’s a near certainty that Reese was not wearing the shirt -- which is likely made from cotton, rather than wool -- when he was mortally wounded while fighting with the 31st Alabama Infantry. But it somehow survived. Curators don’t know whether the shirt was made by a family member or an enslaved person.
I recently reached out to Blocker to ask whether she has learned anything more about Reese or his family. She has not. (Incidentally, I have been unable to obtain an image of Reese.)
I asked
Blocker about the significance of artifacts like the shirt.
“They help us understand and humanize, if you
will, the people who lived long ago. A mother makes a shirt for her oldest
child who is attending school away from home,” she replied in a recent email.
“Her son, an impulsive and idealistic teenager
… goes against the wishes of his parents and joins the army," said Blocker. "Stories like this
are played out time and time again, even in modern times. With this shirt, we
get a glimpse of the lives of those who came before. In that glimpse, we
realize that we are not that different.”
The shirt was likely made from cotton (Courtesy Terre Hood Biederman) |
While similar battle shirts worn by soldiers were commonly made of wool, this shirt
reflects the concept of homespun as a patriotic statement, asserting that the
South could stand alone in producing its needs, Biederman told me this week.
“It is fashionably cut, made for a teen living in the comfort of a college dormitory, not a soldier sleeping rough, and thus is likely made of cotton,” she wrote in an email. “The shirt has been on exhibit since this question was raised, and not available for analysis.”
Artifacts belonged to other Confederate soldiers
The gallery’s Civil War section contains numerous artifacts. Blocker said the story of an Alabama-made sword belonging to 1st Sgt. Socrates Spigener is among those especially compelling. The soldier was born in 1844 in Coosa County and joined Hilliard’s Legion, which became the 59th Alabama
Spigener was killed in Virginia days before the end of the Civil War.
“His sword was picked up from the battlefield and sent home to the family,” said Blocker. (Photos: Alabama Archives)
The family wrote a tribute and pasted it to the scabbard (click photo above to read): "This was the sword of Socrates Spigener, the baby child of Joel and Sylvia Spigener. He was Lieut. in the Confederate War of 1862. He fought bravely and was killed in battle near Petersburg, about the 6th of April 1865.”Blocker said
the archives also has a rare red artillery kepi and its original oil cloth
cover.
The cap belonged
to 1st Lt. Maynard Hassell, State Artillery Company A, Garrity’s Battery. Hassell was born in 1831 in New York and moved to Lowndes County,
Ala., at a young age. He enlisted in 1861.
The officer was killed by a cannonball at Lovejoy Station in Georgia in summer 1864. He was
awarded the Confederate Roll of Honor for his “courage and good conduct on the
field of battle.”
Hassell's kepi and oil cloth cover (Alabama Archives) |
“The kepi was sent to us, along with a small journal, in 2013 as we were completing work on the Voices gallery,” said Blocker. “The gentleman that donated the material was a descendant of Hassell and wanted to make sure the material was returned to Alabama.”
The journal is not a daily notation of his personal experiences; rather, it has extensive notes about payments to soldiers, battles fought and munitions used during the battles.
The struggle for civil rights played out in Alabama
While
Hassell, Reese and Spigener fought to keep the status quo of antebellum
society, the Alabama Voices gallery includes artifacts that tell the story of
the long struggle for equal rights among Black citizens.
Blocker said one of her favorite such items is a collection box from Hall Street Baptist Church in Montgomery. Founded in 1903, the church played an integral role in the 1955-56 Montgomery Bus Boycott by purchasing a station wagon to transport members to and from work and other appointments.
Another standout is a chair and vanity stool from the Selma home of Jean Jackson and her husband, D. Sullivan Jackson, a dentist. (Collection box, chair and stool left, Alabama Archives)
“Dr. Martin
Luther King stayed with the Jacksons and made their home his headquarters during
his visits to Selma. Dr. King and Ralph Abernathy, used the chair and vanity to
put on their shoes for the march to Montgomery. They were photographed seated
in the Jackson’s living room in the Ebony magazine displayed on the stool,”
said Blocker.
Other items in the gallery include a Billy club used by a Birmingham police officer, a Ku Klux Klan robe, shoes worn by Gov. George Wallace when he was shot in 1972 during his presidential campaign and photographs of notable Alabamians, including entertainer Lionel Richie and professional athlete Bo Jackson.
The Alabama Voices Gallery is located on the second floor of the Alabama Department of Archives and History building in downtown Montgomery, 624 Washington Ave. The museum is open open Monday through Saturday, 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. CT. Here is a schedule of gallery closures for renovations.
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