Gary Gallagher’s Self Serving Column on Blogging
Just got a chance to read the June 2012 issue of the Civil War Times and in particular Dr. Gary Gallagher’s “Blue & Gray” column on Bloggers. I must admit I found his editorial to be self-righteous and self-serving. This was not a serious take on Civil War blogging. (I think the Civil War Times has done a more serious take on Civil War blogging before, or am I confusing…
Read more...Charles H. Weygant Civil War Diaries
Off and on for the last 6-7 years I have entertained the thought of writing an updated history of the 124th New York Volunteer Infantry. The reason being I am a descendent of Col. Charles H. Weygant who wrote the first and only book length history of the regiment and the regiment has an excellent history that needs updating. I never could wrap my head around the idea of doing…
Read more...Writing and Fighting the Civil War: Soldier Correspondence to the New York Sunday Mercury
As we know Civil War soldiers were some of the most prolific writers in the history of modern warfare (if you want to call the Civil War the first modern war or the last Napoleonic I don’t care!). As a collective they wrote easily hundreds of thousands (maybe millions) of letters home. Some regiments had their own newspapers and published their own pamphlets. But also, countless soldiers wrote home to…
Read more...Civil War Soldiers: The Blue and Gray Will Go Green?
In the March 2012 Issue of The Journal of the Civil War Era there was a series of essays/editorials that dealt with the future of Civil War studies. Stephen Berry, associate professor of history at the University of Georgia, kicked it off with his piece, “The Future of Civil War Era Studies“. In it he offered his “‘top ten’ predictions for how broader professional trends will reshape Civil War historiography.”…
Read more...The Civil War Soldier and Death
Historian and author Dr. Gilpin Faust has written extensively about death and the Civil War. Her book This Republic of Suffering: Death and the American Civil War (Alfred A. Knopf, 2008) explored the impact of death on the Civil War generation. I just recently came across a 2001 article Faust wrote called “The Civil War Soldier and the Art of Dying” published in “The Journal of Southern History,” (Feb., 2001)….
Read more...Turning Points of the Civil War?
In fiction writing there are things called “Plot Points,” these send the narrative in a new and unexpected direction. These story points make up the important parts of the story and bring it ultimately to a conclusion. In history, there are “Turning Points” that send the trajectory of time and space into new and unexpected directions. When looking at the American Civil War we can find many important events and…
Read more...1900 Report Confirming William H. Carney’s Congressional Medal of Honor
The story of Sgt. William H. Carney’s heroic efforts on July 16, 1863, at Fort Wagner, which later earned him a Medal of Honor, is the stuff of Civil War legend; and yet not always told. Though it was not unusual for MOH recipients to not be awarded for some time after the event, for African-American soldiers the struggle to be recognized was almost always arduous if not impossible. The…
Read more...Book Review: The Civil War in the West Victory and Defeat from the Appalachians to the Mississippi
In The Civil War in the West: Victory and Defeat from the Appalachians to the Mississippi Earl J. Hess answers in his conclusion a much debated question, Which theater of operations was more important in the outcome of the Civil War: Western or Eastern? Dr. Hess declares that “The Union won and the Confederacy lost the Civil War largely due to what each did, or failed to do, in West.”…
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