Category: digital history

  • Another Huzzah! and meet Colonel Hall

    As many others have observed, one of the best things about the Web is the great range it covers, and new contacts it brings. What ever else it is, AotW is a honeytrap – drawing people worldwide with interest in the battle. A small but impressive minority of these visitors have something to contribute. It’s always a thrill to hear from them.

    Once such Internet-friend, Mr John Jackson, has been doing marvelous work in researching and documenting Kansans and Kansas in the Civil War. He has twice now suggested obituaries for Antietam soldiers from among his boys, both also Medal of Honor holders.

    A great huzzah for Mr Jackson!

    Last month he pointed me to the musically named Orpheus Saeger Woodward. This week he’s introduced me to Henry Seymour Hall.

    H.S. Hall
    Lt. Col. H.S. Hall, c. 1864

    Hall was awarded the Medal of Honor in 1891 for bravery on two occasions during the War: for continuing to lead his company in the attack while wounded at Gaines’ Mill (June 1862) and for service in rallying troops at Rappahannock Station (November 1863).

    From a farming family in east-central New York state, he was 25 years old and in his final year at Genesee College (later Syracuse University) when War began in 1861. He organized a Company of fellow students–later Co. G–and enlisted with them in the new 27th New York Infantry as Private in April that year. He was almost immediately appointed 2nd Lieutenant and served with the 27th on the Peninsular Campaign. He was promoted to Captain in command of the Company to date from April 1862. It was at that rank that he fought at Crampton’s Gap, Antietam, Fredericksburg, and Chancellorsville.

    He was honorably mustered out as the 27th Infantry’s term of service expired on 31 May 1863, but was back in service just over two weeks later, appointed Captain in the 121st New York Volunteers on 16 June.

    In May 1864 he left to accept a commission as Lieutenant Colonel of the new 43rd Regiment, United States Colored Troops. He was severely wounded in action at the Crater, near Petersburg, on 30 July, losing his right arm.

    While recuperating, he served as a mustering officer in Washington, but was back with the 43rd at Richmond by 3 April 1865. He was also with them at Brownsville, Texas under Sheridan, then on independent duty at Galveston until returning to Washington and mustering out of the Army on 13 February 1866.

    He had been honored, in March 1865, by brevet to Colonel and Brigadier General of Volunteers for his exceptional War service.

    Immediately after the War he returned briefly to New York, but soon moved to a farm he’d bought in Carroll County, Missouri, where he was also active in local politics. Some time later he was in Lincoln, Nebraska, and in 1888 he moved for the last time to Lawrence, Kansas where he lived his last 20 years.

    ______________

    Information above from the (Lawrence) Daily Gazette obituary posted by Mr Johnson, Heitman’s Register, pg. 489, and Hall’s MoH citation. The photograph is from Generals of the Civil War.

  • More digital history rubber

    I’m having a magnificent time with stacks of books I’ve just found rendered online. They’re in a (new?) collection of 19th Century American works transcribed and posted as part of the Perseus project at Tufts, and from the University of Georgia library’s collection of Facsimile Books.

    from ... Uniforms (below)

    I came upon these while looking into a relatively obscure artillery unit, the 6-months 8th Massachusetts Battery and their commander Asa M. Cook.

    The first information I’ve found on the battery is in a capsule history written, on behalf of the State, by T.H. Higginson, late of the 51st Massachusetts and Colonel, First South Carolina, USCT. His two volume Massachusetts in the Army and Navy during the war of 1861-1865 (1895-96) is transcribed and posted at Perseus.

    The battery’s commander at Antietam was Captain Cook, whose image I found in the Photographic History of the Civil War (1911-12) by Francis T. Miller. This is in the Facimile collection as searchable (uncorrected OCR) text and as full page images. You may have this 10 volume set at your local library, we do, but it’s a delight to find it digital.

    But wait, there’s more.

    Let me tempt you with some highlights … (more…)

  • Praise for the USAMHI

    A quick Huzzah! for the fine folks at the US Army’s Military History Institute (USAMHI), Carlisle Barracks, Pennsylvania. I’m sorry to say I’ve never visited in person, but they have been immensely helpful to me over several years by snail and email.

    Most recently, I heard from Mr Richard Baker, a Technical Information Specialist at the Institute. I had asked for a copy of a standing portrait photograph of Major Edmund Rice, 19th Massachusetts Infantry. I’d also noticed some confusion in the caption in another picture of the Major–grouped with officers of the 17th Michigan Infantry–published in William C. Davis’ Touched by Fire. In addition to sending me the requested photo, Mr Baker went above and beyond by also finding the original image Mr Davis used, and identifying all the officers therein (Rice; Lt. Harrison Berdan, 5th Michigan Cavalry; Captains Delos Phillips and Benjamin Safford, 17th Michigan Infantry).

    This kind of service is probably the norm at the USAMHI, but it knocked my socks off.
    Huzzah! Huzzah!

    ____________________

    Here’s a scan, by the way, of that portrait of Rice. One tough customer.

    Edmund Rice

  • Where the Digital History rubber meets the road

    Perhaps the title of this post should be Hardcore Digital History.

    Englishman Bill Torrens is working on a project to create biographical sketches for each of the officers below the rank of Brigadier General who served in the Confederate Army of Northern Virginia (ANV) during the American Civil War. He’s been at this for over 25 years. Last October he reported “… this project stretches to 2,146 pages covering 23,112 officers”.

    Simply astounding.

    He’s posted 30 or 40 samples of his work on the Dispatch Depot message board. I’ve found several of these very helpful in my research on the officers at Sharpsburg – breaking open sources and clues on some men I had not been able to find previously.

    One of my favorites of the subjects, because of his poignant death scene, is:

    E.V. Harris

    HARRIS, Edwin Victor

    1st Lieut., Co.E, 49th N.C. Inf.: 25th December 1862. Captain: 22nd March 1864. Killed at The Crater on 30th July 1864:- “Harris and myself had just been congratulating each other on our good fortune in getting through safely when the order to move separated us…At the head of his company, he was following Major Davis along the trenches chatting gaily, when they came to an exposed position on the line. A ball from the enemy passed close to the Major. He turned to warn his men to walk low. Just as he turned a ball struck poor Ed, passing through his neck cutting the great artery. The blood spouted from his neck in a stream as large as one’s finger, and gushed out at his mouth. And now ensued a most tender and affecting scene. The poor fellow seemed at once to realize his condition. He could not speak. But stepping up to Major Davis, he passed his left hand through his arm to support himself from falling, and extended his right hand to tell the Major farewell, while he gave him a look, which Major Davis says he shall not forget to his dying day. It seemed to say: “I am killed, I know you cannot help me, do not forget me, goodbye!” The Major saw he was going fast, the blood spouting from his neck, he urged him to sit down. This he did not seem inclined to do, but tottering to Lieutenant Crawford, of his company, shook hands with him, gave him the same look and fainted from loss of blood. He ceased to breathe as he was carried out.” Had also served in Co.A, 4th N.C. Inf.

    [Pearce, Diary Of Captain Henry A. Chambers, p.210; North Carolina Troops 1861-65, A Roster (c) Historical Data Systems, Inc. ]

    Bill is a local history librarian in Buckinghamshire. Of course the ACW would hardly be local history for him, but British interest in the ACW is not unknown.

    I’d bet Bill’s was not a Digital project at the start, but he’s now to the point of planning to publish his work on CDROM. He has mentioned concerns about “copyright issues” – but I hope that won’t stop him.

    If asked, I’d recommend he parse the text, pop it into some kind of database, and provide search and display tools online, but I think he wants to recoup some of his costs and see some monetary reward for all that hard work. To that end he plans to sell CDs.

    I hope he can find a way to both make money and more widely disseminate the information. But then that’s one of the key challenges in Digital History, isn’t it?

  • Pimping the History web?

    If you’re doing high quality history (or related commentary, technology, criticism, publishing) online, should you also host advertising?

    I don’t think so. I believe advertising detracts in a number of ways, and doesn’t return enough to compensate.

    I’m referring to the ubiquitous Google targeted ads, Amazon, B&N, and other shopping and “affiliate” programs, DVD vendors, and so forth, found on sites related to digital history.

    Hawking your own book(s), by the way, doesn’t count! Nor am I knocking making money on the web for its own sake. God love Capitalism.

    14 of the 38 blogs I read most often – listed at right – have one or more monetizing features on them. More then one-third. This seems like a high proportion for blogs without overt commercial purpose. Is there value here I’m missing?

    Lots of history websites use these strategies, too. Some of them look like simple honey pots – sites designed specifically to drive advert revenue, some are well-meaning amateurs*, but others purport to be serious resources, yet water down their credibility with advertising. (more…)