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New On the Bookshelf
Recent Additions to
the Civil War Literature |
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Andersonville's Whirlpool of
Death
By Dr. Max R. Terman
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Henry Wirz
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Soon after his arrival in late
March 1864, Captain Henry Wirz, the new superintendent of
Andersonville, changed the way prisoners were counted and divided
into messes. Under the new system, each detachment was made up of
two hundred seventy prisoners, each of these then had three nineties
and each ninety had three messes of thirty. We were in the second
detachment, second ninety or detachment 2.2.
This recounting and reorganizing of
ten thousand prisoners occurred just when untrained Georgia Reserves
of young boys, old men, and soldiers unable to serve in the field
were replacing regular Confederate infantry soldiers at the guard
posts. During our wood gathering details Sam Parker told us that all
able bodied men were needed for fronts in Virginia, Tennessee, and
other battles erupting throughout the South. Sam said he was worried
that some of the young guards may have short fuses and that we
should be careful.
To add to the confusion and
uncertainty, Rebel sergeants counted and recounted, sometimes taking
all morning. Rations were delayed. Weakened prisoners fainted in the
hot sun and men became sick and death rates increased. Prisoners
became increasingly desperate and tried to escape by any means
possible, mostly by walking away from wood gathering details or by
tunneling under the walls. All of this infuriated Wirz who wanted an
orderly and tightly run prison camp with all men accounted for and
duly recorded.
CONTINUE ARTICLE>>
Note: This article is an
excerpt from
the recently published novel Hiram's Honor: Reliving Private Terman's Civil War
by Max R. Terman and appears here through the courtesy of the author. Private Hiram Terman was captured at
Gettysburg, sent to Andersonville—and survived! What would that have
been like? Based on over ten years of research, Max Terman, Hiram’s
descendant, revisits the camps, battlegrounds, and prisons and
writes as if he were Private Terman of the 82nd Ohio Infantry in
this fact-based, first person account.

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Roundtable News
Updates
from the CCWRT |
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Lincoln Bicentennial Observances
Past Roundtable presidents Mel Maurer and
John Fazio recently appeared on both WCPN (Cleveland public radio) and
WVIZ (Cleveland public television) as part of each stations' observances
of the Lincoln bicentennial. They joined a panel of experts discussing Lincoln, his
importance in American history and his continuing relevance today.
On the WVIZ broadcast, Mel Maurer, portraying Lincoln, answered questions
from the audience in press conference format. Click on the links
below to enjoy these two programs.
Mel and John on WCPN-Radio
"Looking for
Lincoln" on WVIZ-TV
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CCWRT Annual Field Trip
September 24-27
Richmond & Petersburg, Virginia
Our field trip this fall is to Richmond and
Petersburg, VA, September 24-27. If you are planning to go, or thinking about
going, please send an email to Dennis Keating at
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Dennis would like to get a tentative headcount by the end of June.
We strongly encourage you to join this or
any of our field trips.
Touring a battlefield is the best way to learn about any
particular battle and we always have wonderful guides, full of
information. It is also a terrific way to get to know your fellow members.
Dennis has put together a great trip that you will find it interesting,
informative, and fun. Join us in September!
Tentative
2009 Trip Itinerary
2008 Trip Report (Gettysburg)
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Blast from the Past
Articles from the Charger Archives |
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The Last Naval Duel:
The U.S.S. Kearsarge v. the C.S.S. Alabama
By William F.B. Vodrey Note: This article is
adapted from a presentation made by the author to the North Central Ohio Civil War Roundtable
at Bucyrus, Ohio in March 2002.
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Raphael
Semmes
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When the Union sloop of war
Kearsarge and the Confederate commerce raider Alabama clashed
off the coast of Cherbourg, France, it was a last glimpse of
chivalry in what had otherwise become a deadly serious and
unromantic war. On June 19, 1864, was waged the last naval duel of
American naval history: the last time two equally-matched ships
would meet in a prearranged fight to the death.
Admiral David Glasgow Farragut
himself, the hero of Mobile Bay, declared, "I had sooner have fought
that fight than any ever fought upon the ocean!"
It has become a cliché, but is true
just the same, to say that the Civil War marked a turning point in
naval warfare. The Civil War saw the world's first battle between
ironclads, the first submarine sink a ship, and the first effective
underwater-mine - then called a "torpedo" - used defensively.
Highlighting the transition through which naval technology was then
passing, both the Kearsarge and the Alabama were equipped
with sails and steam-driven propellers.
As Bruce Catton wrote, "The Civil
War came while one revolution in naval affairs was underway, and it
hastened the commencement of another ... the transition from sail to
steam [was already underway, and] by the time it ended, the
transition from wooden ships to ironclads was well along… by 1865
naval warfare would resemble the twentieth century much more than it
resembled anything Lord Nelson or John Paul Jones had known."
For all those changes, though, the
battle between the U.S.S. Kearsarge and the C.S.S. Alabama hearkened back to a more romantic, more gallant era. Many people
remember the clash of the ironclads Monitor and Virginia, but that
battle was essentially a draw. There was a clear winner in the clash
of the Kearsarge and the Alabama.
CONTINUE ARTICLE>>
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History Briefs
A
small glimpse into the Civil War era |
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The Death of Stonewall
by Mel Maurer
Note: During the 2008-2009
Roundtable season, Roundtable Historian Mel Maurer opened each meeting with
the 'History Briefs' below, each 'brief' providing a small glimpse into a
less-explored corner of the story of the Civil War.
It’s the night of May 2, 1863, just after
9:00 pm. The Battle of Chancellorsville for that day has nearly ended.
It was a great day for General Stonewall
Jackson. He had led his men in one of the great moves of the Civil War - a
surprise end-around Hooker’s army to attack it from the west - setting Lee up
for an eventual victory.
Now, in the moonlight, Jackson rides with
some of his staff in woods along a turnpike, just in front of A. P. Hill’s
brigades, They look for a route by which they might block Hooker’s retreat.
Jackson tells his men: “The danger is all over; the enemy is routed. Go back
and tell A. P. Hill to press on.”
Hill was not far behind. He shouts to his
men, telling them to cease firing – that the men in the front ranks were
firing into their own men. “It’s a lie! Pour it into them boys!” shouts Major
John D. Barry of the 18th North Carolina Infantry. A line of his infantrymen
then opens fire with several volleys into the approaching horsemen, cutting
them apart, sending horses reeling and men bleeding – including Jackson.
The general, riding his horse, Little Sorrel,
is hit three times, his left arm, nearly destroyed, hung limp. Little Sorrel
bolts, dragging Jackson through the rough branches of a tree, which scraps his
face, knocks off his cap and nearly pulls him off the horse. An aide assists
the general at first and then sends urgent word to Jackson’s medical director.
Stonewall had been shot at close range, two
bullets hitting his left arm, one splintering he upper arm to the elbow, and
the other striking the forearm an inch below the elbow. The third bullet
lodged in his right hand. The wounds bled profusely. Shortly after he is
placed on a stretcher, it’s dropped causing a chest contusion.
Jackson is taken to an aid station west of
the shooting on the turnpike where his left arm is amputated. The arm was
buried nearby at Ellwood the J. Horace Lacy House in the Wilderness. He is
then moved by ambulance to recuperate in Richmond - but is too weak to go that
far – so is put up at the Thomas C. Chandler House at Guinea’s Station.
General Lee sends him a note on May 3rd. It
reads: “Could I have directed events, I should have chosen for the good of the
country to be disabled in your stead.”
Lee achieves victory at Chancellorsville on
May 4th with Hooker in full retreat on May 5th. It’s a very costly engagement
for both sides. Even more so for the south when on May 10th, Stonewall
Jackson, with his wife and members of his staff around him dies from
pneumonia.
His last words are: “Let us cross over the
river and rest under the shade of the trees.”
MORE BRIEFS>>

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