Year: 2006

  • McClellan and intelligence

    A recurring theme in the study of George McClellan’s record with the Army of the Potomac is his apparent propensity for overestimating the size and mettle of the opposing force. I really don’t have a good understanding of why this was or what his sources of information were. Except for a nodding acquaintance with Pinkerton (below), I don’t understand his intelligence apparatus at all.

    A. Pinkerton

    I’m now reading Edwin Fishel’s The Secret War for the Union [more at Amazon], and I think there might be some help there. I have to admit I skipped ahead when I first got the book, Sunday last, looking for tidbits on the Maryland Campaign. Fishel has some very fine specifics on events of early September 1862 that I’d read of in summary elsewhere. I appreciate well documented details, though it doesn’t make for light reading in this case. Now that I’ve got a good feeling from the author in my small area of expertise, I’ll go back and begin at the beginning of the book. I promise.

    Side note: I went to school and played music with a Fishel in the early 70’s in Arlington (Va). Great trumpet player. I knew his father, slightly, as a Dixieland bandleader and jazz musician. Had no idea he was a spook. Now I know “the rest of the story”.

    There has been a discussion recently on H-CivWar about Antietam. About whether it was a draw or victory, and some of the common “what-ifs” have made their appearances: if only McClellan had insert cliches here … the usual suspects. (more…)

  • Footnotes in online history

    Back in September, Jeremy Boggs asked how historians use or should use footnotes on the web. A brief discussion of when they’re useful and what they should contain followed.

    Coincidentally, I had just recently finished the database structure and some basic code to process references and citations on AotW for that very purpose. Jeremy’s entry made me think about the subject a little more.

    Not being an academic, I felt unqualified to comment then, but it seems to me that footnoting on the web has nearly the same benefits and requirements as it does in print. So to footnote or not isn’t a tough decision; it just depends on what kind of website you run. Where you put the notes (i.e., bottom, side, tool-tip) and how you jump back from the note to the text again seem minor distinctions as well. Finally, on whether to hyperlink directly to online sources, I do it in the footnote rather than in the body text so as not to lose the reader entirely. (more…)

  • AotW Turns Green

    I laughed this morning, after a double-take, on loading AotW. It’s all green! I’d forgotten about a little code I put in a couple of years back which automatically loads the St Patrick’s day style sheet on March 17th. It looks very odd. But it’s green.

    Happy St Patrick’s Day! Ask the Wild Geese to find you a parade.

    There should be lots of material out there in the blog-o’sphere today. (Other) Civil War junkies will wax eleoquent about Irish Brigades and regiments. As well they should.

    P. Kelly

    Here’s one of ours, LCol Patrick Kelly. He was in command of the 88th New York Infantry at the Bloody Lane at Antietam. Lost his life in action later in the War at Petersburg, Virginia. Saints preserve him.

  • He’s tolerable

    T.J. Goree

    I came upon this picture of T.J. Goree on the Park Service Virtual Tour of Gettysburg the other day. I don’t know why, but I hadn’t noticed his face before. He’s one of “my guys” (a participant on the 1862 Maryland Campaign), you know.

    ________

    I mean to provide at least a quick biographical sketch of all the officers in command of regiments or larger units at Sharpsburg (now expanding to cover the larger Campaign) on AotW. By now we’ve got at least a listing for nearly all of them; about 1,000 men. I’ve recently been “recruiting” from other groups, notably officers mentioned in reports and dispatches, and those in staff jobs on the campaign.

    Lieutenant Goree was one of the latter: an aide-de-camp to MGen Longstreet. His photo was the trigger to do some reading and learn a little about him for the site. I updated AotW with a brief bio on him today.

    His picture was a bit of a shock as I first saw it, though. I had a different face in my mind. I realized later that this was because of the way Goree was portrayed in The Movie: (more…)

  • Just what we need …

    … another blog.

    I’ve started this one, a companion to Antietam on the Web, to catch some of the spin-off that comes from researching, writing, and coding for that site.

    I initially resisted blogging or participating much in other online communities because I’m jealous of my time and energy. I figured if I have time to post on a blog or a board, I should instead do research and write for the website.

    That may still be true, but I find all sorts of good things bubble to the surface as I’m working on AotW – things that don’t get onto the site or necessarily belong there – and there’s nowhere to catch or share them. So here’s such a place.

    We’ll see if anything interesting pops out.