CLEBURNE SUBJECT OF 10 TH ANNUAL SEMINAR

Similar documents
The Engineers at Camp Parapet

1863: Shifting Tides. Cut out the following cards and hand one card to each of the pairs.

The Bloody Reality of War - Wilson s Creek Image Analysis - Primary Source Activity

C ONFEDERATE GAZETTE. S. D. Lee Institute In Texas CAMP PARTICPATES IN DIVISION REUNION. Confederate Gazette. Volume 19 No.

American History I Unit 5 Crisis and War Day 7 The Civil War (cont.)

For more information, see: Wiley Sword, Mountains Touched with Fire: Chattanooga Besieged, 1863 (St. Martin s Griffin, 1997) and Arthur M.

C ONFEDERATE GAZETTE SOUTHERN HISTORICAL CONFERENCE SET. Camp Marches in Belton. Confederate Gazette. Volume 16 No. 3 August, 2003

RUCKER RANGERS Newsletter

C ONFEDERATE GAZETTE HILLCREST CEMETERY EVENT. Confederate Gazette. 25 th Annual Confederate History Symposium. Volume 16 No.

M S. L U C O U S HIST N O V

Practice & Review: Monday, 5/1

RUCKER RANGERS. Newsletter Published Monthly Aug 2012

The Southern Historical Society Papers VOLUME I. JANUARY TO JUNE, 1876.

Vocabulary. In-Class Note-Taking. Why did Grant attack the town of Jackson? I thought he was trying to attack Vicksburg!

Arkansas Historic Preservation Program Civil War Sites and Battlefields in Arkansas PowerPoint Teacher Notes

Missouri State Archives Finding Aid 3.15

RUCKER RANGERS Newsletter

GOURDIN, ROBERT NEWMAN, Robert Newman Gourdin papers,

C ONFEDERATE GAZETTE CEREMONIES HELD AT BELTON CEMETERY. Confederate Gazette. Program To Be Presented At Moody Schools. Volume 14 No.

Descendants of Lee s Surrender Dedicate Civil War Stamps 150 years to the minute at Historic Appomattox Site

Why is the Treaty at Logstown in 1748 so important? What did it do?

RUCKER RANGERS. Newsletter Published Monthly December 2011 UPCOMING EVENTS. December

Pea Ridge: Civil War Campaign in the West

What caused America to go to war with itself? the most common answers are

CONFEDERATE GRAYS. Officers SPECIAL NOTICE:

The Civil War. The South Breaks Away

RUCKER RANGERS Newsletter

TruthQuest History American History for Young Students II ( ) Maps, Timeline & Report Package

C Knipmeyer, Gilbert ( ), Papers, cubic feet (196 folders), 1 oversize item

RUCKER RANGERS Newsletter Published Monthly July 2014

What A Union army, consisting of 28,000 men fought 33,000 Confederates. 1 st battle of the Civil War. When July 21, 1861 Where Bull Run Creek,

Southern Sentinel COMMANDER S TENT. Cliff Roberts. Fellow Compatriots, Deo Vindice!

HARRIS (NATHANIEL HARRISON AND JAMES W. M.) PAPERS Mss Inventory

President Lincoln Visits Antietam

Confederate Veterans in. Stone Mountain A Perspective on Southern Heritage. Chris Davis

Abraham Lincoln. By: Walker Minix. Mrs. Bingham s 2 nd Grade

Published Monthly August 2016 OFFICERS VISIT OUR WEBSITES. Coffee County Rangers:

Abraham Lincoln and the Upper Mississippi Valley 1 Last Updated Nov 27, Timeline. Lecture 2: Lincoln and the Black Hawk War

The New England Putnams Ohio to Tennessee to Mississippi

BOWEN, JOHN PERRY, PAPERS,

Class Assignment Questions Chapter 17 The Civil War Instructions:

Slavery, the Civil War & Reconstruction The Generals of the Civil War

SC Civil War Sesquicentennial Advisory Board Meeting SC Department of Archives and History 11:00 A.M. September 14, 2010

News from the Stow Historical Society

THE BATTLE CRY PRESIDENT LINCOLN MURDERED 150 YEARS AGO, APRIL 1865

Bowling Banner. Sons Of Confederate Veterans Post office Box 2355 La Plata, MD December Annual Christmas Party!!!

Remember the Alamo! The Making of a Nation Program No. 47 Andrew Jackson Part Two

MY INTEREST IN THE CIVIL WAR. By Allison Caveglia Barash

A DAY WITH V.N. BUD PHILLIPS

Key Characters of the Civil War

NEWSLETTER. Published Monthly December 2015

RUCKER RANGERS Newsletter

RUCKER RANGERS Newsletter

Tarrant County. Civil War Veterans of Northeast Tarrant County. Edward Pompi Deason. Compiled by Michael Patterson

THE SOUTH EAST: CIVIL WAR ORDERS, BEECH ISLAND,SOUTH CAROLINA.

Vol. 38 No. 2 Spring 2018 Williamson County Genealogical Society P.O. Box 585 Round Rock, Texas

Lincoln Timeline

Jefferson Finis Davis ( )

BENNETT PLACE. The End of War

Teaching American History Project. April 1865: Edward Washburn Whitaker and the Surrender at Appomattox by Kathy Bryce

C Stephens, Thomas White ( ), Diaries, , linear feet

The Confederate informant

SCV CALENDAR. SCV Fighting Joe Wheeler Camp

Boone County. and the Revolutionary War. By: Robin Edwards Local History Associate

BROWN, JOSEPH PAPERS,

From Manassas To Appomattox PDF

The Bear Flag Patriots

Shiloh-McCutcheon Cemetery. Shiloh-McCutcheon Cemetery is located southeast of the Williamson County

James H. Merrill and the Cannon by the Door

17th Annual Conference on the Art of Command in the Civil War

The Gray Eagle A biography of Maj. Gen Robert H. Milroy

Amite County Historical and Genealogical Society

DR. GORDON S TOPIC: A FEW WORDS ABOUT GENERAL GEORGE E. LESLEY GORDON

Chapter 11: Out of Turmoil, West Virginia Moves Closer to Statehood

RUCKER RANGERS. Newsletter Published Monthly June 2012

Southern Campaigns American Revolution Pension Statements & Rosters

Memorial Day Mini Study. Sample file

Analysis of Letter from Hugh Blakeney to Elminey Guess Letter dated March, 1865

Conflicts Over Land. Guide to Reading

A friendship on the brink of war

RUCKER RANGERS NEWSLETTER

Civil War. July 7,1861. A. Kennedy, Mayor. Frederick Sasse. John D. Plunkett. R. P. Dolman, Clerk

James City Cavalry. Picket Lines. June 2017 Dispatch Williamsburg, Virginia

OCCGS Civil War Veterans Project. Veteran s Information

Major W.H. Howdy Martin Camp #1241 SONS OF CONFEDERATE VETERANS Athens, Texas

MOREY, JAMES MARSH ( ) PAPERS

TYSON (ROBERT A.) DIARY Mss Inventory

The Civil War Diary Of. Lieut. Francis Asbury Murphy

EDWIN KIDD FAMILY PAPERS Mss Inventory. Compiled By Wendy Cole

Jubal Early Chapter #553 Newsletter

Mark your calendar now and plan to attend the Missouri Department Convention June 6, 7, & 8, 2014 At the Best Western St. Louis Inn St.

The Trail of Tears. Presented to the Saginaw Valley Torch Club March 6, 2018 Danny J. Krebs

THE CIVIL WAR ROUNDTABLE OF THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA BILL HEWITT 9 SEPTEMBER 2014

A Time to Weep. Chapter

Camp Cresset Finley s Brigade Camp #1614 Havana, Florida

THE REBEL YELL Official Journal of the 2 nd Geo. Inc. Including the 4 th Geo. Inf. Co. E, The 2 nd. Geo Artillery Co. C and ships crew CSS Jackson

John Brown Patriot or terrorist?

The Spirit of Henry Clay and Kentucky in the Civil War

General Orders. Godlove s Texas Brigade OUR SPEAKER FRANK O REILLYS TOPIC: RETREATING FROM VICTORY: MALVERN HILL. Vol. 19 No. 6.

Transcription:

Volume 16 No. 5 October, 2003 C ONFEDERATE GAZETTE Confederate Gazette Is a monthly publication of the Major Robert M. White Camp #1250 Sons of Confederate Veterans Web Site: www.rootsweb.com/~tx1250 Steve Wooley Camp Commander 14280 Sutton Loop Temple, TX 76504 John C. Perry Newsletter Editor P.O. Box 794 Salado, TX 76571 2003, Major Robert M. White Camp #1250 Sons of Confederate Veterans Temple, Texas Preservation Seminar at Hill College CLEBURNE SUBJECT OF 10 TH ANNUAL SEMINAR The Tenth Annual Texas Civil War Preservation Seminar will be held on Saturday, November 22, 2003 at Hill College in Hillsboro, Texas. Registration will be between 8:30 A.M. and 10:00 A.M. A breakfast will be available between 9:00 A.M. and 10:00 A.M. This years event will focus on the life of Confederate General Patrick Cleburne and will feature an all-star panel of speakers. The seminar is entitled Meteor Brightly Shining: The Life of C.S.A. General Patrick Cleburne. Speakers and their top- A collection of Confederate letters is now on special exhibit at the Milam County Historical Museum in Cameron. The new exhibit went on display on October 1 st and is part of the museum s year long anniversary celebration. The letters are from the William and Ruth Brown Collection and contain first hand accounts from the Seven Days battles, Second ics include: Museum Displays Confederate Letters Ed Bearss: The Failure of the Meteor to Rise, Why Wasn t Cleburne Promoted? Wiley Sword: Cleburne: Tactical Mastermind Jerry Russell: A Life Well Lived: Cleburne, An Overview Thomas Cartwright: The Final Acts: Cleburne at Spring Hill and Franklin Proceeds from the seminar will go toward Civil War battlefield preservation and to support the History Center at Hill College. The seminar includes special activities for Patrons, such as breakfast and lunch with the speakers, tapes of the seminar and preferred seating. Costs for the event : $50 Regular Reservation $125 Patron Reservation $10 Preservation Breakfast* $10 Preservation Lunch* $15 Conference Audio (Continued on page 3) Milam County Displays Collection Manassas, Sharpsburg, and other locations. The collection includes 23 letters from, Pvt. William C. Sparks, Pvt. J. M. Mike Reed, both of Williamson County, Brig. Gen. M. Jeff Thompson from Missouri, Brig. Gen. Jerome B. Robertson of Washington, and Maj. Carroll Rogers. Major Rogers was from Milam County and in 1861 organized the Milam County Grays. The unit would become Company G of the 5 th Texas Infantry. Many of the early letters in the collection recount life in camp and the missing of loved ones back home. The letters from Gen. Thompson are to his wife and describe action in and around Jackson and Vicksburg, Mississippi. A letter dated in, 1862 to Gen. Thompson s (Continued on page 3)

Page 2 Volume 16 Issue 5 CONFEDERATE PROFILE THE SWAMP FOX Some of Thompson s letters to home are currently on display at the Milam County Historical Museum in Cameron By: John C. Perry H e was known as the Confederacy s Swamp Fox. He was one of the most unique in an era of unique personalities. He was a prolific writer and a number of his letters home are currently on display at the Milam County Historical Museum in Cameron. Meriwether Jeff Thompson was born in Harpers Ferry, Virginia (now West Virginia) on January 22, 1826. He was a son of the Harpers Ferry Arsenal s paymaster, Captain Meriwether Thompson and Nancy Slaughter Broadus, a distant relative of George Washington. When Thompson was 12 his mother died and the young boy was sent to Charleston, Virginia to military school. By age 17 Thompson had tried to enlist in the Republic of Texas Navy, but was turned down due to his young age. He also unsuccessfully sought an appointment to the U. S. Military Academy at West Point. Not being able to find a military avocation he drifted westward, eventually ending up in St. Joseph, Missouri. The aggressive young man seemed to have a flair for business. He worked as a merchant, real estate agent, and county surveyor. The flamboyant and persuasive Thompson was elected mayor of St. Joseph at the young age of 22. He was quite successful in business serving as a railroad president, president of the gas M. Jeff Thompson, dressed in his Missouri State Guard uniform works, and the president of a Catholic benevolent society. In 1860, as the mayor of St. Joseph he welcomed the first Pony Express rider to the city. While in St. Joseph he was able to meet his military desires by serving as the colonel of a local militia unit. Thompson was very active as a leader in the prosecession effort in northeast Missouri, including lobbying at the state capitol for secession. When the War Between the States began, Thompson offered his services to the Confederacy; in fact he was on his way to Richmond, Virginia to see what role he could play in the new Confederate government when he was offered a position with the Missouri State Guard. He joined the Missouri State Guards at its inception, elected as a brigadier general. He earned the title of the Confederacy s Swamp Fox early on in the war as the result of his Missouri State Guard operations against the Federals in southeast Missouri. In one incident he led his troops in crossing Mingo Swamp in saddle deep water. He also used dugout canoes to move troops in operation against Union forces in the area. During these operations Thompson was operating only as an officer in the Missouri State Guards. He is often listed as a brigadier general in the Confederate Army, but this is incorrect, his rank was only in his state s militia. Thompson was known as a man that enjoyed theatrical behavior and was fond of strong drink. One compatriot wrote of Thompson, His efforts... were a combination of sense and bombast, of military shrewdness and personal buffoonery. By March of 1862 Thompson and his Missouri State Guard were largely driven out of their home state and operated in Arkansas, Tennessee, and even as far south as Louisiana. While in Louisiana Thompson was operating near New Orleans. His job was to keep Federal forces defending New Orleans so they wouldn t be release to help with Union movements against Confederate forces. With just a handful of men he kept the Federals thinking that he had a much larger force. Some of General (Continued on page 5)

Confederate Gazette Cleburne Seminar (Continued from page 1) Tapes* * Included with Patron Registration Mail your payment for a reservation to: Harold B. Simpson History Center, P.O. Box 619, Hillsboro, TX 76645. For more information, please contact the Harold B. Simpson History Center at (254) 582-2555, Ext. 258. Painting of Patrick Cleburne Camp Dinner Meeting At New Location The Major Robert M. White Camp #1250 will hold its quarterly dinner meeting on Saturday October 18, 2003 at Chuck s Restaurant in Temple at 7:00 PM. T h e meeting will feature author John C. Oeffinger who edited the book, A Soldier s General, The Civil War Letters of Major General Lafayette McLaws (Editors Note: See book review on page 4), published last year by the University of North Carolina Press. Oeffinger will talk about the life of McLaws. This will be the first camp meeting at Chuck's Restaurant. The dinner meeting will be held in a private dining room adjacent to the main restaurant. The restaurant is located at 8205 West Adams Ave. in Temple. West Adams is FM2305 and is also know locally as the Lake Road. T o reach Chucks coming to Temp l e from t h e north on I-35 t a k e the Ada m s Ave exit off I-35. Travel west on Adams for about 6 miles. The restaurant will be on your left after you pass a fire station on your right. If you are coming to Temple from the south on I- 35 take the Adams Ave exit and go west on Adams. Follow the same directions as already listed. Camp Schedule October 7 th : Adopt-A- Highway Cleanup, Meet at 5:45 PM at the Belton McDonald s. October 18 th : Camp s Quarterly Dinner Meeting, 7:00 P.M., Chuck s Restaurant; Speaker: John C. Oeffinger, Editor of A Soldier s General: The Civil War Letters of Lafayette McLaws. October 18-19 th : Ogletree Gap Festival & Reenactment, Copperas Cove, TX November 5 th : Camp Executive Council Meeting, TBA. November 11 th : Regular Camp Meeting, 7:00 P.M., Doctor s Conference Room, Scott & White Hospital, Temple, TX. Speaker: Rocky Sprott, The Battle of Palmito Ranch. November 22 nd : 10 th Annual Texas Civil War Preservation Seminar, Hill College, Hillsboro, TX. Topic: A Meteor Brightly Shining, The Life of Pat Cleburne. December 3 rd : Camp Executive Council Meeting, TBA. December 9 th : Camp s Southern Christmas Party, 7:00 P.M., TBA. Milam Museum (Continued from page 1) wife advised her that her husband had been captured and was a POW at Johnson Island Prison in Ohio. Some period clothing will also be on display found in an old Cameron home. The exhibit will be open from 8:00 AM to Noon Tuesday through Saturday at the Museum Annex on Main Street in Cameron. Page 3 Next Camp Meeting: October 18th at 7:00 PM Chuck s Restaurant 8205 West Adams Temple, TX Speaker: John C. Oeffinger

Page 4 Volume 16 Issue 5 THE BOOK BIN A Soldier s General, The Civil War Letters Of Major General Lafayette McLaws Little known McLaws is exposed in this book Editor s Note: Almost all of us read books on the War Between the States. Please share your thoughts on a book with your fellow camp members. The book can be old or new just write something up and send it to the editor. By: John C. Perry A Soldier s General, The Civil War Letters Of Major General Lafayette McLaws, edited by John C. Oeffinger, University of North Carolina Press, illustrated, maps, footnotes, appendix, bibliography, index, 299 pp., 2002 hardbound, $34.95. N ormally I am not a fan of books that are merely a collection of letters, unless I am doing specific research on a person or a topic. What we have with John C. Oeffinger s book is just that a collection of 95 letters written by Confederate Major General Lafayette McLaws, but this book is different. Many serious students of Confederate military history can tell you much about the commanders in the Army of Northern Virginia (ANV), but the one who they may well stumble on is McLaws. McLaws was a key player in the command structure of the ANV, being a division commander in James Longstreet s Corp. In spite of that there have been no major biographies written on him and finding much information on McLaws is not an easy task. Often a lack of historian writings are due to the death of the individual dur- ing the war, or perhaps he left little in the way of writings. Such was not the case with McLaws. McLaws survived the war and did write often to his wife and many of those letters survived. So why the problem with McLaws? Left: Book cover, Below: War time photo of Major General Lafayette McLaws O e f f i n g e r may have stumbled on the reason why. Seems that McLaws had an atrocious handwriting style. It was so bad that much of what he wrote could not be deciphered until now. McLaws has receded into history due in large part to his poor penmanship, Oeffinger writes. Oeffinger accepted the challenge and translated McLaws letters. Along with the research Oeffinger did on the life of McLaws this book tells McLaw s story, with much of the story being told by McLaws himself. McLaw s was born in Georgia and knew Longstreet while in Georgia. McLaws graduated from West Point in 1842 and then served in the U.S. Army. He was a captain of infantry for nearly ten years prior to the beginning of the War Between the States. McLaws rose rapidly through the ranks once he entered the Confederate Army. He was a major in May of 1861, a colonel in the 10 th Georgia Infantry by June of 1861 and a brigadier general by September 1861. In less than a year McLaws was a major general and a division commander. He served in the Peninsula during the first part of the war seeing, action during the Seven Days fighting. He fought at Sharpsburg, Fredericksburg, Chancellorsville, and Gettysburg. McLaws is perhaps best know for earning the ire of Longstreet. Longstreet became displeased with McLaw at Fort Sanders and at Bean's Station. McLaw was relieved of his command on December 17, 1863. Longstreet also brought charges against him of which McLaws was found guilty. President Jefferson Davis, however disapproved the findings and ordered (Continued on page 6)

Confederate Gazette The Swamp Fox (Continued from page 2) Benjamin Butler s officers felt that there were as many as 10,000 Confederates operating around New Orleans, when in fact Thompson had only a couple of hundred men. Often he and his men were surrounded by pursuing Federals but always seemed to be able to out maneuver Confederate Gazette Quiz Questions By George Ballentine Confederate Gazette Quiz for October 2003 issue: The First Shots 1. Aimed the first gun fired in defense of Fort Sumter in Charleston Harbor, South Carolina: a. Abner Doubleday b. Christopher Andrews c. Laurence Baker d. S. R. Curtis 2. South Carolina governor who thought it necessary to seize Fort Sumter no later than Mar. 4, 1861: a. William Gist b. Milledge Bonham c. Francis Pickens d. Robert Alston 3. Former Texas governor who appeared at Fort Sumter under a white flag to unofficially discuss surrender: a. E. V. Sumner b. Louis T. Wigfall c. Benjamin Kelley d. William Bell 4. Said of Fort Sumter, "Our Southern brethren have done grievously wrong... They must be punished and brought back, but this necessity breaks my heart." a. Robert E. Lee b. Abraham Lincoln c. Nathaniel Banks d. Robert Anderson 5. According to legend, fired the first shot at Fort Sumter in Charleston Harbor, South Carolina: a. John Hughes b. Charles Zagonyi c. Edward Ruffin d. Stonewall Jackson Answers: 1. A, 2. C, 3. B, 4. D, 5. C Page 5 Confederate Memorial Hall in New Orleans To Remain! Grave of M. Jeff Thompson in St. Joseph, MO them and escape, yet another reason for the title, The Swamp Fox. Thompson was captured by a Federal patrol near Pocahontas, Arkansas on August 22, 1863. He spent time in prison in St. Louis, Ft. Delaware, before ending up at Johnson Island. He was exchanged almost a year later. Upon his release Thompson joined Sterling Price s forces operating in Arkansas. He, in an unlikely move, assumed command of Shelby s Brigade when Joseph Shelby was promoted to division commander. It was a curious move by Price as Thompson was not an officer in the Confederate military, only an officer in the Missouri State Guard, and he had been given command of one of Price s best units. Apparently Price held Thompson in very high regard. Thompson performed well as a brigade commander at fights at Westport, Mine Creek, and Newtonia. For a period of time Thompson even assumed temporary command of Shelby s entire division. In February of 1865 Thompson was reassigned to command the Northern Sub-Division of Arkansas. Thompson was one of the last Confederate commanders to surrender. He surrendered on May 11, 1865 in Jacksonport, Arkansas. After the war Thompson briefly resided in Memphis then relocated to New Orleans. In New Orleans he served as the state s chief engineer of the Board of (Continued on page 6) Confederate Memorial Hall To Stay It appears that Confederate Memorial Hall Museum in New Orleans has won the right to stay where they have been for the past 112 years. The five year legal battle over ownership rights to the Hall have apparently been resolved. The ownership of the Museum s Hall was challenged by the University of New Orleans Foundation. The agreement was helped by Louisiana Governor Mike Foster when in 2002 he weighed in on the side of the museum, saying the museum would move over my dead body. The museum houses the second largest collection of Confederate artifacts.

Book Bin (Continued from page 4) him back to duty. McLaws was sent to the Southern coast where he fought at Bentonville during the Carolinas Campaign against Sherman. After the war McLaws was in the insurance business, served as a tax collector, and as a postmaster. McLaws letters give the reader excellent insight in McLaws the man. We see a brave fighter s human side as he writes home longing for his family but staying committed to fulfilling his duty. This is an interesting book, and all serious students of the Confederacy need this book to round out ones profiles on Confederate military leaders. Even if one is just a causal reader of War Between the States history I would recommend getting this book, you will enjoy it. One interesting sideline is the book s website. Oeffinger has built an excellent website on the life of McLaws, indeed it is one of the best I have seen. It is well organized, chocked full of information, easy to maneuver, and attractive in appearance. Visit the site at, www.asolidersgeneral.com Unfortunately, there is one major negative point about the website. Oeffinger has set the site up so that one cannot copy anything from it. I do a lot in web surfing on War Between the States sites and it is indeed rare to find one that has this restriction. I collect data on Confederates and if I find something interesting I like to copy it along with the source and put in my files. Forget it with this site, unless you are very computer savvy and know the way to beat his blocking codes, Oeffinger won t let you. Let s all go out and buy the book so that Oeffinger doesn t feel compelled to block complete access to what really is a very well done website! The Swamp Fox (Continued from page 5) Public Works. Poor health caused him to retire and he moved back to Missouri. He died there on September 5, 1876 in St. Joseph. He was buried in Mount Mora Cemetery in St. Joseph, Missouri. Many Confederate sources list Thompson as a Confederate officer. He apparently never held any military position other than as a brigadier general in the Missouri State Guard. During the war Thompson repeatedly petitioned Jef- Sketch of the CSS M. Jeff Thompson meeting its demise ferson Davis for a Confederate Army appointment, but Davis never approved the frequent requests. Thompson was well known in his adopted state of Missouri. Mark Twain used Thompson as a prominent character in his novel, The Gilded Age. Thompson even had a Confederate naval vessel named for him. The CSS M. Jeff Thompson was an old side wheel river steamboat that was converted by the Confederacy into a cottonclad ram. The ship was commissioned in April of 1862 and was assigned duty on the Mississippi River to join the River Defense Fleet. The CSS M. Jeff Thompson took part in the naval action off Fort Pillow in May and during the Battle of Memphis on June, 6, 1862. At that battle the ship was set afire by direct hits from Union gunboats, ran aground, and then blew up. P.O. Box 794 Salado, TX 76571