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President's Letter
SeptemberJanuary, 20092008 P.O. Box 550 • Sharpsburg, MD 21782 • 301.432.2996 • [email protected] • www.shaf.org A Letter from Our President President’s Letter The SHAF board of directors Greetings from SHAF and we wish you the best in 2009. As we close the door on 2008is pleased SHAF members to present can our be newproud of our accomplishments.As summer winds SHAF down hosted and twothe Workleaves Days, begin one to in fall, the Springit must where be time we plantedlogo, over which150 trees graces as part the of covera forscene another restoration Antietam project anniversary.along Antietam This Creek. year’s The Sharpsburg trees also fi lterHeritage pollution Festival and prevent of it fromthis newsletter.entering the creek,We deter which- willultimately expand helps to keeptwo daysthe Chesapeake and will again Bay pollution-free.feature several Our members second Work of SHAF Day, held Novembermined 1, last cleared year aboutto incorporate 250 yards providingof the Piper free Lane lectures. in the very We center hope of tothe meet battlefi you eld. there Removing and we’ll the beold happyfencing, to underbrush into and our trees logo from what this is lane perhaps will allow a walking trail from the Visitor’s Center to connect to the parking lot at the National Cemetery.the single You most may recognizable recall this is spend some time chatting about our favorite historic site. the trail that will complete the trail system from the north end of the battlefi eld to the southernCivil end.War Itbattlefield is also the projecticon, theto which youAnother donated exciting $5,000 to eventhelp construct. -
Siege of Petersburg
Seige Of Petersburg June 9th 1864 - March 25th 1865 Siege Of Petersburg Butler”s assault (June 9) While Lee and Grant faced each other after Cold Harbor, Benjamin Butler became aware that Confederate troops had been moving north to reinforce Lee, leaving the defenses of Petersburg in a vulnerable state. Sensitive to his failure in the Bermuda Hundred Campaign, Butler sought to achieve a success to vindicate his generalship. He wrote, "the capture of Petersburg lay near my heart." Petersburg was protected by multiple lines of fortifications, the outermost of which was known as the Dimmock Line, a line of earthworks 10 miles (16 km) long, east of the city. The 2,500 Confederates stretched thin along this defensive line were commanded by a former Virginia governor, Brig. Gen. Henry A. Wise. Butler”s plan was formulated on the afternoon of June 8, 1864, calling for three columns to cross the Appomattox and advance with 4,500 men. The first and second consisted of infantry from Maj. Gen. Quincy A. Gillmore”s X Corps and U.S. Colored Troops from Brig. Gen. Edward W. Hinks”s 3rd Division of XVIII Corps, which would attack the Dimmock Line east of the city. The third was 1,300 cavalrymen under Brig. Gen. August Kautz, who would sweep around Petersburg and strike it from the southeast. The troops moved out on the night of June 8, but made poor progress. Eventually the infantry crossed by 3:40 a.m. on June 9 and by 7 a.m., both Gillmore and Hinks had encountered the enemy, but stopped at their fronts. -
Author Surname Beginning with “B” Collection Created by Dr. George C. Rable
Author Surname Beginning with “B” Collection created by Dr. George C. Rable Documents Added as of September 2021 Baer, Charles A. “The Diary of Charles A. Baer, Norristown, 1862-63.” Bulletin of the Historical Society of Montgomery Country 7 (October 1950): 197-212. Norristown, Pennsylvania minister Church activities, 197ff Chapel tent, 197 Funeral for soldier killed at Fredericksburg, 198 Lack of serious of members of his class, Lutheran, 198 Dancing, 198 Easter, snow, 199 Meeting on building a new church, 200 Fasting, humiliation, and prayer, 201 Hooker, Chancellorsville, 201 Gettysburg campaign, Confederate invasion, militia enrollment, 204-7 Building the new church, 204ff Barnes, James P. and Patience P. Barnes. “What I Thought at Antietam.” Civil War Times 45 (September 2006): electronic, no pagination. John Rankin, 27th Indiana Infantry, Co. A Antietam General Mansfield Battin, C. Milton. “Diary of C. Milton Battin.” Now and Then 7 (1942-45): 106-110. Quaker, Cuyler Hospital Philadelphia, 107 Food, 107 Dysentery, 107-8 Photographs, 107 Marriage, 108 Home chores, 109 Bauer, Cheryl. “Brother Reuben Wise.” Civil War Times 44 (October 2005): electronic, no pagination. Shakers, South Union, Kentucky Guerrillas Shakers antislavery but not abolitionists Union cavalry Kindness of the Shakers to the soldiers 2 Besselien, T. E. “A Cavalryman’s Crash Course in Medicine.” Civil War Times Illustrated 37 (May 1998): electronic version, no pagination. 2nd South Carolina Cavalry Brandy Station, Stevensburg Colonel Butler wounded Colonel’s foot amputated Bodman, Albert Holmes. “’In Sight of Vicksburg’: Private Diary of a Northern War Correspondent.” Historical Bulletin 34 (1956): 202-21. Correspondent, Chicago Tribune Memphis, delivery of dispatches, 204 General C. -
News and Comment
NEWS AND COMMENT ASSOCIATION NEWS At the invitation of the Historical Society of Western Penn- sylvania, and the history department of the University of Pitts- burgh, the third annual meeting of the Pennsylvania Historical Association will be held in Pittsburgh on April 19 and 20, 1935, in conjunction with the sixth annual History Conference spon- sored by the history department and the extension division of the university. An interesting program of conferences, lunch- eons, and dinners has been planned. Dr. Alfred P. James, professor of history at the University of Pittsburgh, is chairman of the program committee, and Major Ewing and Mr. Franklin F. Holbrook, director of the historical society, serve respec- tively as chairman and secretary of the committee on local arrangements. The program will include the following: "Territorial Expan- sion and National Interest in the Age of Jefferson and Hamil- ton," by Dr. Arthur P. Whitaker, of Cornell University; "Materials on Transportation in the Nineteenth Century Found in Pennsylvania Archives," by Dr. Curtis W. Garrison, Penn- sylvania State Archivist; "Opportunities for Historical Research in Archives in Philadelphia," by Mr. Julian P. Boyd, of the Historical Society of Pennsylvania; "The Treasury and the Administration of Military Affairs in the Colonies, 1754-74," by Prof. Dora Mae Clark, of Wilson College; "The Personality of Provost William Smith," by Mrs. Charles Shuttock Fox, of Bethlehem; "Early Lancaster County Politics," by Mr. Philip Kline, Harrison fellow at the University of Pennsylvania; "The Anti-Masonic Movement in Western Pennsylvania," by Mr. J. Cutler Andrews of the Carnegie Institute of Technology; "The Constitutional Struggle in Pennsylvania, 1776-90," by Prof. -
The Regional Review
THE REGIONAL REVIEW fall Creek falls Recreational Demonstration Area, Tennessee NATIONAL PARK SERVICE REGION ONE Richmond, Virginia JULY 1940 VOL. V - NO. 1 THE COVER Fall Creek Falls Recreational Demonstration Area, near Pike- ville, Tennessee, derives its name from the spectacular plunge made by Fall Creek to the floor of a canyon having sheer rock walls which rise 300 feet. The vertical fall is 256 feet, 89 feet higher than Niagara. Rock- house and Caney Creek Falls are other interesting features of the 16,000-acre area. The draw ing is by Ira B. Lykes. THE REGIONAL REVIEW JULY 1940 VOL. V - NO. 1 M. R. TILLOTSON, REGIONAL DIRECTOR Hugh R. Awtrey, Editor THIS MONTH American Charcoal Making; A Technique Preserved BY JACKSON KEMPER, 3RD Page 3 The American Rifle at the Battle of Kings Mountain BY C. P. RUSSELL Page 15 A Success in Nature Leader Training BY REYNOLD E. CARLSON Page 23 A Student's View of the First Institute BY EDITH SETTAN Page 26 War Underground; The Petersburg Mine BY RALEIGH C. TAYLOR Page 29 Vanderbilt Estate Becomes National Historic Site The CCC and National Defense Publications and Reports Interpreting the Natchez Trace National Parkway THE UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR •NATIONAL PARK SERVICE • REGION ONE •— RICHMOND , VIRGINIA BLAST EUR RACE AT HOPEUELL VILLAGE AS IT APPEARED AROUND 1920 1940 THE REGIONAL REVIEW *_ AMERICAN CHARCOAL MAKING In the Era of the Cold-blast Furnace BY JACKSON KEMPER, 3RD, FORMERLY RESEARCH ASSISTANT, FRENCH CREEK RECREATIONAL DEMONSTRATION AREA, BIRDSBORO, PENNSYLVANIA. Hopewell Village national Historic Site, Pennsylvania, contains a 170-year-old cold-blast furnace which was one of the last of its type to compete with anthracite-fueled hot air furnaces. -
“GITTIN STUFF” the Impact of Equipment Management, Supply & Logistics on Confederate Defeat
“GITTIN STUFF” The Impact of Equipment Management, Supply & Logistics on Confederate Defeat BY FRED SETH, CPPM, CF, HARBOUR LIGHTS CHAPTER “They never whipped us, Sir, unless they were four to one. had been captured. For four years they had provided equipment and supplies from If we had had anything like a fair chance, or less disparity of Europe to support the Confederacy and its numbers, we should have won our cause and established our armies. Since the beginning of the war, independence.” UNKNOWN VIRGINIAN TO ROBERT E. LEE.1 Wilmington, North Carolina had been a preferred port of entry for blockade-run- ners because Cape Fear provided two entry the destruction or capture of factories and channels, which gave ships a greater oppor- PREFACE farms in the Deep South and Richmond. tunity for escape and evasion. Also, rail fter defeat in the Civil War, known by The lack of rations at Amelia Court House, lines ran directly from Wilmington to A some in the South as “The War of which has been called the immediate cause Richmond and Atlanta.4 Northern Aggression,” Southerners were in of Lee’s surrender, is examined in detail. By the fall of 1864, Wilmington was a quandary regarding their willingness for Most importantly, the article addresses how one of the most important cities in the war. As discussed in the first article of this the inability of its leaders to conduct pro- Confederacy – it was the last operating series, the North had the overwhelming ductive logistics, equipment, and supply port. Confederate armies depended on advantage in industrial capability and man- management led to the decline and ulti- Wilmington for lead, iron, copper, steel, power. -
Reminiscence
76 7601b SttuplkiUll 9talo. certainly all would be well. But it was just at this juncture the clouds began to thicken, the sky grew dark, gusts of wind came up, and the big rain drops began to patter among the leaves of the trees and a heavy storm broke over the town. People sought the friendly shelter of the surrounding doorways and over-anxious and solicitous relatives who had scurried home at the first warning of the oncoming downfall had returned laden with umbrellas which some of them pressed upon their offspring in the new soldier company. As the rain fell the awkward squad raised the umbrellas and the confusion was great. Twice had the gallant captain given the order, but with the crowd pressing down upon the scene, the guards could not keep them back at the point of the bayonet, and the raising of um- brellas by some of the raw recruits the confusion was great and the scene indescribable. Captain Rheinheimer would make one more effort. Draw- ing himself up to his utmost height and in his most stentorian tone of voice he shouted: "LUmbrellas oder no umbrellas, I tell you; Shoulder arms!" REMINISCENCE Daniel De Frehn, of Pottsville, relates the following: It was during a term of court in the seat of justice at Orwigsburg. 'Squire Witman was approached by a fellow lawyer who asked 01b Sdpuglkill galro. 77 him the time of day. The 'Squire felt in his waistcoat pocket for his watch when he discovered it missing and said: "I changed clothes this morning and left my watch in my other vest." After a time he bethought himself again, and being inconvenienced by the want of the chronometer sent a man from court with a message that the bearer should be entrusted with his watch which he had forgotten. -
The Antietam and Fredericksburg
North :^ Carolina 8 STATE LIBRARY. ^ Case K3€X3Q£KX30GCX3O3e3GGG€30GeS North Carolina State Library Digitized by tine Internet Archive in 2011 with funding from State Library of North Carolina http://www.archive.org/details/antietamfredericOOinpalf THE ANTIETAM AND FREDERICKSBURG- Norff, Carof/na Staie Library Raleigh CAMPAIGNS OF THE CIVIL WAR.—Y. THE ANTIETAM AND FREDERICKSBURG BY FEAISrCIS WmTHEOP PALFEEY, BREVET BRIGADIER GENERAL, U. 8. V., AND FORMERLY COLONEL TWTENTIETH MASSACHUSETTS INFANTRY ; MEMBER OF THE MASSACHUSETTS HISTORICAL SOCIETF, AND OF THE MILITARY HIS- TORICAL SOCIETY OF MASSACHUSETTS. NEW YORK CHARLES SCRIBNEE'S SONS 743 AND 745 Broadway 1893 9.73.733 'P 1 53 ^ Copyright bt CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS 1881 PEEFAOE. In preparing this book, I have made free use of the material furnished by my own recollection, memoranda, and correspondence. I have also consulted many vol- umes by different hands. As I think that most readers are impatient, and with reason, of quotation-marks and foot-notes, I have been sparing of both. By far the lar- gest assistance I have had, has been derived from ad- vance sheets of the Government publication of the Reports of Military Operations During the Eebellion, placed at my disposal by Colonel Robert N. Scott, the officer in charge of the War Records Office of the War Department of the United States, F, W. P. CONTENTS. PAGE List of Maps, ..«.••• « xi CHAPTER I. The Commencement of the Campaign, .... 1 CHAPTER II. South Mountain, 27 CHAPTER III. The Antietam, 43 CHAPTER IV. Fredeeicksburg, 136 APPENDIX A. Commanders in the Army of the Potomac under Major-General George B. -
SOCIETY NEWS and ACCESSIONS on November 9, 1936, Professor Samuel E
SOCIETY NEWS AND ACCESSIONS On November 9, 1936, Professor Samuel E. Morison of Harvard University delivered an address before the Society on "Harvard College in the Eighteenth Century." At the conclusion of the illustrated lecture, Mr. Richard Peters, Jr., Recording Secretary of the Society, notified Professor Morison of the CounciPs action in electing him an honorary member of the Society. ARTICLES AND PUBLICATIONS The second volume of Frank H. Stewart*s Notes on Old Gloucester County, New Jersey, calendars the contents of two Gloucester County newspapers, The Columbian Herald and The Constitution. Documents and information drawn from other sources are printed as well, but by far the greater part of the material is taken from the files of these two papers. Lists of wills probated; names of those who were candidates for political office; lists of justices of the peace; records of tavern licenses; tax lists and lists of debtors will aid materially the researches of genealogists. Records of commodity prices; ferry rates; tavern rates; items of information about the manufacture of glass; the raising of silk; the Camden and Woodbury railroad; information about schools and libraries; and poor house reports may be found in this volume. Anthony Wayne a biographical essay by Dr. Henry Pleasants, Jr., designed to give "the citizens of Chester County a brief word-picture of a man who typified all that was upright, fearless and generous"; the same author*s Three Scientists of Chester County, containing sketches of Humphrey Marshall, author of Arbustum -
Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission Guide to Civil War Holdings
PENNSYLVANIA HISTORICAL AND MUSEUM COMMISSION GUIDE TO CIVIL WAR HOLDINGS 2009 Edition—Information current to January 2009 Dr. James P. Weeks and Linda A. Ries Compilers This survey is word-searchable in Adobe Acrobat. 2 TABLE OF CONTENTS Acknowledgements……………………………………………………………..page 3 Introduction by Dr. James P. Weeks………………………………….………...page 4 How to Use this Guide….………………………………………………………page 6 Abbreviations………….……………………..………………………….………page 7 Bureau of Archives and History State Archives Division, Record Groups………………………………..……....page 8 State Archives Division, Manuscript Groups…………………………………...page 46 State Archives Division, Affiliated Archives (Hartranft) ………………………page 118 PHMC Library …………………….……………………………………………page 119 Bureau of The State Museum of Pennsylvania Community and Domestic Life Section……………….………………………..page 120 Fine Arts Section……………………………………….…….…………...…… page 120 Military History Section……………………………….……..…………………page 126 Bureau of Historic Sites and Museums Pennsylvania Anthracite Heritage Museum………………………….……..…..page 131 Drake Well Museum Eckley Miner’s Village Erie Maritime Museum Landis Valley Museum Old Economy Village Pennsylvania Military Museum Railroad Museum of Pennsylvania Bureau for Historic Preservation State Historical Markers Program………………………………………………page 137 National Register of Historic Places and Register of Historical Landmarks……………………………….………………. ………………….…page 137 3 Acknowledgements This survey is a result of the PHMC Scholar-in-Residence (SIR) Program. In 2001, Diane Reed, Chief of the Commission’s Publications and Sales Division proposed that a book be created telling the story of Pennsylvania during the Civil War using the vast holdings of the PHMC. In order to create the book, an overview of the PHMC Civil War holdings was necessary. A SIR collaborative project was funded early in 2002, and Dr. James P. Weeks of the Pennsylvania State University History Department was chosen to create the survey, working with Linda Ries of the Archives staff. -
Anthracite and the Irish: Extricating the Irish Immigrant Mining Community from the Molly Maguire Myth, Schuylkill County, Pennsylvania, 1850-1879
ABSTRACT Title of Thesis: Anthracite and the Irish: Extricating the Irish Immigrant Mining Community from the Molly Maguire Myth, Schuylkill County, Pennsylvania, 1850-1879 William Francis Byron, Master of Arts, 1996 Thesis directed by: Peter H. Argersinger, Professor, History The Molly Maguires were a reputed secret society of Irish immigrant mine workers who allegedly terrorized the anthracite coal fields of Pennsylvania from the Civil War until twenty men convicted as Molly Maguires were hanged in the late 1870s. The sensational nature of the Molly trials and executions has spawned a myth concerning the Molly Maguires which has clouded historical understanding of the episode. One of the unfortunate results of the Molly Maguire myth is that the legacy of the nineteenth-century anthracite Irish mining community has been inextricably and wrongly tied to the legacy of the alleged criminal activities of the Molly Maguires. The thesis seeks to draw a portrait of the Irish mining community of one anthracite county, Schuylkill, with as much depth as possible. The thesis first details Irish demographics and culture within Schuylkill County and proceeds to follow the Irish community through the years of the first regional mine workers' union to the destruction of UMBC the union as a consequence of the bitter ''Long Strike" of 1875 . The thesis demonstrates that negative expectations of the Irish conditioned negative perceptions by Schuylkill County's native population. The mass executions of the alleged Molly Maguires were only possible because of the deep anti-Irish sentiment that existed in Schuylkill among the non Irish, from Anglo-Protestant mine bosses to the large Welsh immigrant mining community. -
Jean Berger (1909–2002): a Biographical Chronology
AMERICAN MUSIC RESEARCH CENTER JOURNAL Volume 18 2010 Thomas L. Riis, Editor-in-Chief American Music Research Center College of Music University of Colorado at Boulder THE AMERICAN MUSIC RESEARCH CENTER Thomas L. Riis, Director Laurie J. Sampsel, Curator Eric J. Harbeson, Archivist Sister Mary Dominic Ray, O.P. (1913–1994), Founder Karl Kroeger, Archivist Emeritus William Kearns, Senior Fellow Daniel Sher, Dean, College of Music William S. Farley, Research Assistant, 2009 –2010 K. Dawn Grapes, Research Assistant, 2009–2011 EDITORIAL BOARD C. F. Alan Cass Kip Lornell Susan Cook Portia Maultsby Robert R. Fink Tom C. Owens William Kearns Katherine Preston Karl Kroeger Jessica Sternfeld Paul Laird Joanne Swenson-Eldridge Victoria Lindsay Levine Graham Wood The American Music Research Center Journal is published annually. Subscription rate is $25.00 per issue ($28.00 outside the U.S. and Canada). Please address all inquiries to Lisa Bailey, American Music Research Center, 288 UCB, University of Colorado, Boulder, CO 80309-0288. E-mail: [email protected] The American Music Research Center website address is www.amrccolorado.org ISSN 1058-3572 © 2010 by the Board of Regents of the University of Colorado INFORMATION FOR AUTHORS The American Music Research Center Journal is dedicated to publishing articles of general interest about American music, particularly in subject areas relevant to its collections. We welcome submission of articles and pro - posals from the scholarly community, ranging from 3,000 to 10,000 words (excluding notes). All articles should be addressed to Thomas L. Riis, College of Music, University of Colorado at Boulder, 301 UCB, Boulder, CO 80309-0301.