Thursday, November 25, 2010

How Do You Get to Carnegie(Carnegie) Hall? (Ask Michael Aubrecht!)

No, the answer is not the old punchline: "Practice, Practice, Practice."

This is the Andrew Carnegie Free Library & Music Hall near Pittsburgh, PA, with the mission: "to inform, inspire and enrich its diverse communities through library and information services, performing arts and other cultural, educational and community activities."

I'm pleased to share the news that my friend, Michael Aubrecht, will have a screening of his film, The Angel of Marye's Heights, at the Hall on Saturday, November 27, 2010.

Michael is a prolific and respected author and historian, with varied interests and expertise, including baseball, Civil War, American Revolution history, and more.

You can read my interview with him about his TERRIFIC book, Historic Churches of Fredericksburg: Houses of the Holy, here.


The Angel of Marye's Heights
tells the compelling story of a Confederate soldier’s selfless compassion. In the wake of the devastating December 1862 Battle of Fredericksburg, Sgt. Richard Rowland Kirkland risked his life to provide aid and comfort to the enemy—wounded and dying Union soldiers.

The event includes a conversation with writer/producer (and Pittsburgh native) Michael Aubrecht, and a dessert reception.

One showing only. Tickets available at the Library circulation desk. 7:30 p.m. Music Hall $10. Buy $10 tickets online here. Benefits the Capt. Thomas Espy Post No. 153 of the Grand Army of the Republic (GAR) and Right Stripe Media LLC.


BONUS: The Angel of Marye’s Heights DVD Exclusive Pittsburgh Premiere Offer: As an attendee, you are eligible for an exclusive Internet discount from Right Stripe Media. Get “The Angel” on DVD for $12.00. You will receive a special ordering code via email when the DVD (w/ bonus features) is released next month. (*Must register at the event.)

The Post is home to the Carnegie's remarkable "Civil War Room."

The film will also be shown Saturday, December 4, 2010, in the Confederate Relic Room Museum, Columbia SC, 12:00-2:00pm and 3:00-5:00pm. The film screenings will be accompanied by presentations from film director/producer Clint Ross as well as historians Joe Matheson and Tony Ziebol. Details here.

Well done, Michael and...break a leg!

Monday, November 15, 2010

A New Twist on the Civil War? NATURALLY!!

"The trees are loaded with the long grey Southern [Spanish] moss which hangs from the limbs in clusters & sheets from 2 to 10 feet in length (perpendicular) and swings loose in the wind. This gives to everything a sort of dull somber appearance. It looks old, very old..." - Capt. Charles B. Haydon, 2nd Michigan Infantry, Vicksburg, MS, June 20, 1863 (pp. 92-93 of Flora/Fauna)

A couple of weeks ago my family and I had the great pleasure of visiting Iberia Parish, Louisiana. I, too, for the first time, saw the "long gray Southern moss" in its natural habitat, as well as...alligators! I was able to appreciate how Unions soldiers, especially - a thousand or more miles from home - were exposed for the first time to a wide variety of plants and animals they had never seen before. I also wondered what some plants - such as the palmetto I saw on nearby Avery Island - were used for.

Fortunately, I had the answers to those questions - and more - in an exceptional book by Mr. Kelby Ouchley, Flora and Fauna of the Civil War: An Environmental Reference Guide (LSU Press, 2010).

In Flora and Fauna, he discusses the effects of the war on the environment ("as soldiers and refugees tramped across the landscape foraging and waging war," p. 1), the effect of the environment on the conduct of the war (as "barriers, disease vectors, medicines, food, shelter, and raw products..." p. 1) and highlights - in two different sections, one for flora and one for fauna - the role that dozens of species of animals and plants had in the Civil War, and - most interesting - soldier accounts of their encounters with and impressions of their environment.

Mr. Ouchley was a biologist and manager of national wildlife refuges for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service for more than thirty years. He and his wife, Amy, live in the woods near Rocky Branch, Louisiana, in a cypress house surrounded by white oaks and black hickories and writes often on matters of local wildlife at his "Bayou Diversity" blog.

He was kind enough to answer some questions about himself and the book:

JIM: Please tell me a little about yourself, your education, and your career…why did you pursue wildlife/ecology as a vocation?


KELBY: I am originally from north Louisiana and grew up spending most of my free time outdoors hunting, fishing, camping and prowling about the many swamps, bayous and rivers of this region. My love of these activities naturally led me toward my vocation.

I have a B.S. degree in Wildlife Biology from what is now the Univ. of Louisiana at Monroe and a M.S. degree in Wildlife & Fisheries Science from Texas A&M.

During most of my 30+ years with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service I was a biologist and manager of National Wildlife Refuges in Arkansas and Louisiana.

I have a particular interest in historical ecology and spent a good bit of my career trying to restore historical landscapes (such as reforesting vast expanses of bottomland hardwood swamps that had been unwisely cleared for agriculture).

"When they [Union soldiers] fell back to their main line our boys began dropping like corn before a hail storm, and we never did succeed in reaching the main line, for about fifty yards in front of it they had cut down a lot of thorny locust bushes and it was impossible in face of the hot fire to get through them." - Lt. Henry W. Riddick (Kelby Ouchley's ancestor), 1st Florida Infantry, writing of the Battle of Franklin (TN), Nov. 30, 1864 (p. 57 of Flora/Fauna)

JIM: You dedicated your book to your Civil War ancestors. When did you first learn about them? What do they mean to you? Seventy-Seven Years in Dixie (his great-great-grandfather's privately published memoir) must be a treasure for your family!

KELBY: I learned of my g.g. grandfather Reddick’s book, Seventy-Seven Years, when I was about 10 and given a mimeographed copy of the book by my aunt. This no doubt fired my interest in the Civil War. Many years later while doing family genealogical work, I discovered my g.g. grandfather Ouchley’s role in the war. To me this was more exciting than finding a pirate’s treasure.

JIM: How long have you worked on the book and collected ecological soldier/civilian anecdotes?

KELBY: I started collecting the anecdotes about four years ago because of my interest in historical ecology and because I am enthralled by first person accounts in letters, diaries and journals. At the time I had no plans to write this book. As the collection grew and when I determined that environmental perspectives of the Civil War were rare, the book idea evolved.

JIM: Do you have a “favorite” Civil War-related animal and/or plant?

KELBY: Blackberries and bats for reasons discussed in the book would be my answer. (Blackberries - a member of the rose family(!) - of which there are hundreds of species (!!) have been used for thousands of years for food and for medicine. There are more than 1,200 species of bats; the cave-dwelling mammals produced large quantities of nitre-rich guano (aka "bat poop") which was collected and used for gunpowder production in the Confederate states.)

JIM: Having recently visited south-central Louisiana and seen some plants (palmetto, Spanish moss, bamboo) and animals (alligators!) in their natural habitat for the first time, I can appreciate how Union soldiers must have felt seeing these plants and animals for the first time. In your mind, what is special about the environment of the coastal south?

KELBY: Southern swamps define the environment of the Lower Mississippi Valley. Extremely diverse, they host a plethora of wild plants and animals that evolved with the cyclic pulses of natural annual floods. A given spot on the forested landscape could be powder dry in October and twenty feet deep in March. All life in such areas has to be adaptable.

JIM: In the book, you mention the decline of the chestnut tree due to chestnut blight and the post-war harvesting of cypress; are there other species that we do not see as much as the soldiers and civilians of the Civil War era did?

KELBY: In many areas of the Civil War arena there have been drastic losses in biodiversity. Consider the millions of acres in the South owned by industrial timber companies. Diverse upland hardwood forests have been converted to loblolly pine plantations comparatively sterile in species richness. The same thing has happened to millions of acres of historic longleaf pine forests.

JIM: You mentioned your role in habitat restoration as a "historical ecologist." Have you ever been consulted by battlefields that are trying to restore their appearance to the 1860s? Is that even a good idea?

KELBY: I have not been consulted for this type restoration. My personal opinion is that battlefields should be restored to the ecological conditions at the time of the battle to the degree possible and practical. Such restoration would greatly facilitate visitors’ accurate understanding of the event.

"These bayous and swamps abound with allgators and snakes of the most venomous description. I saw many of the latter swimming about exposed to a heavy fire of six-shooters; but the alligators were frightened away by the leading boat." - British Lt. Col. Arthur Freemantle at Lake Concordia, LA, May 14, 1863 (p. 176 of Flora/Fauna)

JIM: In terms of encounters with “spiders and snakes,” you mention the rarity of snake bites (and certainly, deaths) among the ranks in the war; however, were snake bites (and deaths) common among people in the era, esp. among pioneers, enslaved African-Americans working in fields and paddies, or among Native Americans?

KELBY: My thoughts here are based solely on anecdotal information that I have come across during research. I don’t think that poisonous snakebites have ever been common in North America. I do think that the mortality rate of those bitten was likely higher prior to the development of modern medical treatments. I also think that the fear of snakebite compared to the actual risk was just as disproportionate then as now.

"Upon reaching the hedges it was utterly impracticable to pass them except through the few openings left for convenience by the planter. In doing this the order of battle was necessarily broken...Owing to these frequent interruptions in [our] advance...the ensemble of the movement upon the enemy's position was necessarily broken." - Confederate Maj Gen. J. G. Walker, Battle of Millken's Bend (LA), June 7, 1863 (pp. 197-98 of Flora/Fauna)

JIM: I think people can easily imagine the disruption that battles, camps, and marching armies had on the environment but you also make an interesting point on the reverse: the impact of the environment on the conduct of the war…the “Osage Orange” debacle you mention in the book was very interesting and is reminiscent of the bocage in Normandy in WWII! Geology has rec’d attention in Civil War scholarship recently; do you see an opening for a closer look at Civil War terrain studies more closely tied to forest and plants?

KELBY: This seems to be an area of Civil War research that has received very little attention. Even if efforts are made, I don’t anticipate an abundance of information to come forth at the species level simply because that information does not exist (i.e. we don’t have period floristic surveys of battlefields). There is certainly room for new looks at events based on broader environmental conditions that can be inferred from a variety of sources.

JIM: For my part, the medicinal uses of plants (and animals) was especially interesting. You conclude (p. 198) that – apart from non-native quinine – most plants in the pharmacopeia “had no beneficial effects on diseased or injured patients…” Still, traditional remedies (and pharmaco-mining of fields and forests) remain popular to this day, including some of the ones mentioned in your book (e.g., black cohash is still prescribed by MDs for older women). After quinine, what do you see as the most beneficial medical plant/herb?

KELBY: In Civil War diaries, journals and letters one of the most often mentioned plants was blackberry. It was mentioned a great many times in all regions of the conflict by both soldiers and non-combatants. It was always mentioned in the context of food, but the frequency of blackberry consumption was so extensive that it surely had positive medical benefits in the form of seasonal doses of Vitamin C (the values of which were unknown in that era).

JIM: How do you hope people will use your book?

KELBY: I hope it will stimulate other historians, professional and avocational, to consider the environmental aspects of historical events and in doing so further the understanding of the connectivity of all living things.

Thank you, Mr. Ouchley, for your research, writing the book, and - especially - for your dedication to preserving our wilderness, landscapes, and wildlife!

You can learn more about Kelby and his interests at his Bayou Diversity blog and obtain signed copies of his book by contacting him by e-mail.

Disclosure: A complimentary review copy of the book was provided by LSU Press, for which I thank them.

Friday, November 12, 2010

Period Civil War Pension Ephemera from the "Schmidt Collection" #5 - SQUIRREL HUNTERS!

As a reminder, here are links to previous pension ephemera posts:

#1 - Horse Thieves and Deserters
#2 - Red Tape
#
3 - Pennsylvanian Inquires After His Dead Son
#4 - Ohio Military Home

And now on to the latest installment of Civil War pension items in my collection!

The "Squirrel Hunter" Regiment Pensions

In September, 1862, the threatened invasion of Cincinnati by the rebels under Gen. Kirby Smith, brought out a call from the Governor of Ohio for the citizens of the State to come to the rescue. Thousands of men responded to the call. As these volunteers were equipped with all sorts of firearms, they became officially known as the '' Squirrel Hunters." The timely arrival of these patriots from every portion of the State, doubtless averted the invasion and saved Cincinnati. Before the thirty days for which they were called out had expired most of them had returned to their homes. Still, the "bloodless victory" secured by the ''Squirrel Hunters'' engendered credit for their prompt and patriotic response when danger threatened their State.

You can read more about the invasion of Cincinnati and the Squirrel Hunters in David E. Roth's great article for the Cincinnati Civil War Round Table here.

As the Squirrel Hunters were not officially enlisted in the Union army during the Civil War, they did not secure discharges or pensions from the federal government. However, the governor of Ohio did supply discharges (see the example below from the "Seeking Michigan" website of the Michigan State Archives) and in 1911, the Ohio legislature enacted a law providing for a single $13 payment to all Squirrel Hunters in appreciation of their service.



The images below are from a collection of papers in my collection to a pension agent acting on behalf of a "Mr. Ballard," a former Squirrel Hunter seeking his $13. The Ohio Commissioner of Patents replied with a cover letter, the necessary Squirrel Hunter pension paperwork (and a return envelope) as well as other United States pension forms.

Enjoy!
(click on images for larger versions)


































































Monday, November 8, 2010

In Which Jim Visits New Iberia - Part the Second - The Encampment

As mentioned in the previous post, the reason my family and I visited the historic Shadows-on-the-Teche in New Iberia, LA, this past weekend was to attend their annual Civil War Encampment. Ms. Catherine Schramm - the Shadows' Director of Educational Services - kindly invited me to come and speak about Civil War medicine.

I gave three different talks, all with different content as they were different audiences:

First, on Friday evening, I gave a talk to area Cub Scouts, Webelos, and Boy Scouts and their families who had gathered for a night of fun and camping at the city park. In my talk - just 10 or 15 minutes - I concentrated on what the Scouts had in common with the Civil War soldier on both sides: the vast majority of their time was spent in camp and not on the battlefield. If anyone of the Scouts could get in a time machine they could save a lot of lives by telling soldiers what they know about how to choose a good campground, why it is important to keep your camp and yourself clean, how to prepare food, etc. I also talked just a bit about Civil War surgery, told them how important and fun it is to study history, and answered some (great) questions from the kids. Thanks to Dr. George Cousin for the invitation! Some Civil War reenactors followed up with great demonstrations of cavalry and infantry drilling and firearms!


Next, on Saturday morning, I gave a talk on 19th-century medicine in general. Thanks to Catherine Schramm, I was able to include excerpts from correspondence and other archival material from the Weeks family that lived in the Shadows before and during the war. In 30 minutes or so, I emphasized the role of women in medical care in the home in the early- and mid-1800s, the scourge of disease among soldiers during the war, myth-busting of conventional wisdom about Civil War surgery, and - in keeping with the theme of this year's encampment - talked a bit about advances in medicine in the post-war/Reconstruction era.


Finally, on Saturday afternoon, just after the skirmish scenario, the soldiers brought a "wounded" drummer boy to the speaking area and I gave another 30-minute talk, concentrating on Civil War surgery. Again - some GREAT questions from the audience!


In between and afterward, I enjoyed watching and listening to the living historians! It was a terrific event!


I took this video of an artillery demonstration:

In Which Jim Visits New Iberia - Part the First - The Shadows

As I mentioned in a previous post, I had the great privilege and pleasure of being invited to give some lectures on Civil War medicine at an annual Civil War living history event in New Iberia, Louisiana.

The event was this past weekend, and having returned, I wanted to share some photographs and reports of what turned out to be a WONDERFUL time for me, my wife, and my youngest son!

The event was sponsored by the Shadows-on-the-Teche National Historic Site.

The Shadows is an historic house and garden owned and operated by the National Trust for Historic Preservation. It was built in 1831-1834 for sugarcane planter David Weeks and his wife Mary C. Weeks. The Teche is a 125-mile long bayou in south central Louisiana.

David and Mary Weeks were wealthy growers of sugarcane and several plantations on almost 3,000 acres. The Shadows was constructed at the height of the Greek Revival style in American architecture. Eight columns on the exterior of the front help to support a second-floor veranda.

Weeks built the Shadows on the edge of one of his plantations in Iberia Parish (Week's Island). As a "town house" away from the planatation itself, the Shadows was designed for social life and entertainment.

David Weeks never even got to see the finished home as he died in August 1834 in New England while seeking medical attention. Mary Weeks remarried lawyer John Moore but kept her children's inherited property - the home and the family's nearly 200 slaves - separate from that of her second husband, as she was allowed to do under state law.

The household depended very much on slavery and Mary Weeks and her second husband, John Moore, strongly supported slavery and secession. Indeed, Moore was a delegate to the convention in which Louisiana seceded from the Union. During the Civil War, Federal troops occupied the property and officers used the home as headquarters. Mary Weeks died in December 1863 in the Shadows.

You can learn more about the legacy of slavery and the Civil War at the Shadows via their wonderful website, here.

Mary's son, William F. Weeks, sought to restore the mansion and the family's business during Reconstruction, but the family was soon forced to sell of a large part of the property's more than 100 acres to survive.

Mary Weeks's great-grandson, William Weeks Hall, lived in the Shadows from 1922 until his death in 1958. He was very interested in preserving the home and his family's history. He donated a very large archive of family papers that he found in the house, maintained an impressive garden, and eventually donated the house and garden to the National Trust.

Ms. Catherine Schramm, Director of Education at the Shadows, kindly shared some wonderful Shadows archival material - with an emphasis on period medical practices - with me in advance of my presentations and I will write more on that in the future.

Presently, the Shadows is open year-round with guided tours Monday through Saturday, 9 am–4:30 pm (except for major holidays).

For now, enjoy the photographs!
(I've posted even more on my Facebook page! Add me as a friend and enjoy additional postings and photographs that are not on the blog!)






































Thursday, November 4, 2010

"Years of Change and Suffering" Author Donates Rare book Collection to the University of Mississippi!

Neurologist and medical historian D. J. Canale, M.D., is one of the eight contributors to my recent co-edited collection of invited expert essays, Years of Change and Suffering: Modern Perspectives on Civil War Medicine (Edinborough Press, 2009).

You can read my interview with Dr. Canale about "phantom limbs" here and read about his contribution to Years of Change here.


Dr. Canale was in the news recently for his generous donation of a large collection of Civil War books - many of them period medical texts - to the University of Mississippi.


You can read the official press release here and watch a wonderful video below!


It is a pleasure and a privilege to have had the opportunity to work so closely with Dr. Canale.
Well done, sir!

Wednesday, November 3, 2010

Politics and Elections - Quack Medicine Style!

Elections - like those of yesterday, November 2, 2010 - are serious business and voting is a serious right and duty. But now that the elections and voting are over we can take a lighthearted look at them, right?!

Patent/Quack medicines had their finger in every aspect of late 19th and early 20th-century culture, and so it is no surprise they also took advantage of political themes!

Indeed, there were cases where patent medicine makers parlayed their remedies into political careers (or vice versa); a famous example is Louisiana State Senator Dudley J. "Coozan Dud" LeBlanc, who gained a fortune selling his "vitamin supplement" (alcohol apparently being a vitamin?!) "Hadacol" (as well as "Happy Day Headache Powder" and "Dixie Dew Cough Syrup")

Another example of political themes in patent medicine advertising can be seen on these covers of an 1883 issue of Hood's Latest in my collection, published by C.I. Hood & Co., manufacturers of the popular patent medicine, Hood's Sarsaparilla (the most popular among an entire family of Hood's remedies).

The front cover features two prominent politicians of the day: New York Governor Grover Cleveland and Massachusetts Governor Benjamin F. Butler pitching Hood's Sarsaparilla (Mrs. Grover Cleveland got in on the action herself by promoting a kidney and liver cure!) Within a year, Cleveland would be elected as the 22nd President of the United States (and then again as the 24th).

With every elections comes winners and losers, and therefore the short poem that appears in the 8-page Hood's flyer is very fitting:

"Song of the Defeated Candidate"

"Oh! for an ointment
To cure disappointment"

Try Hood's OLIVE OINTMENT!

Enjoy!